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Austin Powers
When the original "Austin Powers" was released
in 1997, it didn't make that great deal of an impression
and was never really expected to, but it garnered many positive
reviews, had low drop-off box-office rates each week, and
became a pop-culture phenomenon once it hit video stores.
Now we have "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me,"
which will be sure to go down as one of the few sequels
to do better financially than its predecessor (if the sold-out
crowd I saw it with is any indication). The terms, "Yeah,
baby, yeah!" and "let's shag, baby," have
been ingrained in most moviegoers' minds due to the original,
and when was the last time a movie created its own vernacular,
and audiences followed?
Getting off to a brisk, but disappointing start, this film
continues where the first left off, with Austin Powers (Mike
Myers) and Vanessa Kensington (Elizabeth Hurley) on their
romantic honeymoon. Within five minutes time, it is discovered
that Vanessa was a dreaded fembot all along, a henchman
of Dr Evil's (Myers). Realizing he's a single man again,
Austin doesn't take too much time grieving before he learns
that Dr. Evil has created a time machine, gone back to 1969
when Austin was cryogenically frozen, and stolen his "mojo."
In hot pursuit, Austin time travels back to the swingin'
'60s himself, meets up with beautiful and "randy"
CIA agent Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham), and together
they set out to get his "mojo" back. But that's
not all, as Dr. Evil also is plotting to destroy Washington,
D.C. if his demands (several billion dollars) aren't met.
"Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me" has,
thankfully, created the same atmosphere that the mildly
successful first one set up. From the first frame to the
last, it is apparent that we've stepped back into the world
of Austin Powers, but that doesn't mean that the new movie
is as good, and it isn't. For one thing, the whole prologue
is a gigantic betrayal of both Austin Powers fans and Elizabeth
Hurley. Making her turn out to be a fembot will, from now
on, seriously put a damper on the way people watch the original,
because now we know that she didn't even actually care about
him at all, but was on the "evil side." It also
creates a noticably large plot hole: If Vanessa Kensington
was a fembot, then her mother, Mrs. Kensington (played by
Mimi Rogers in the original), also had to have been, and
this little fact is not dealt with at all in the uneven
screenplay, by Mike Myers and Michael McCullers. If Hurley
didn't want to appear for more than a brief cameo, the filmmakers
surely could have thought of a stronger way for her to go
out.
The new characters are a memorable, if underused, bunch.
Taking over the romantic interest role from Hurley, Heather
Graham is energetic and has proven to be a fine actress
(see 1997's "Boogie Nights" or 1989's "Drugstore
Cowboy" for proof), but here doesn't get to stretch
her acting muscles, and her relationship with Austin feels
a little more forced than that of Vanessa and he. The bright
spot in the film is Mini Me (Verne J. Troyer), a clone of
Dr. Evil, only 1/8 his size. Troyer is often hysterical
and even cute, and his relationship with Dr. Evil is actually
a sweet one. Going for a "Nutty Professor"/Eddie
Murphy type of deal, Myers has given himself a third role,
as Fat Bastard, a repugnant Scot who weighs a "metric
ton" and, at one point, has a disgusting roll in the
hay with one of the female characters. In the wasted department
are the two femme fatales, Ivana Humpalot (Kristen Johnston)
and Robin "maiden-name's-Spits" Swallows (Gia
Carides), who show up, do their thang, and quickly disappear.
With "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me,"
what you see is what you get. There is certainly no deep
meanings behind anything that occurs within the 95-minute
running time, and it has a fast pace so your mind won't
wander too much. The fact that a third "Austin Powers"
movie will probably be coming out at this time in 2001 is
a given, but after seeing his second adventure, you have
to wonder how many times the same jokes can be played out
before they start to overstay their welcome. Having Austin
say "yeah, baby, yeah!" was amusing the first
time around, but it isn't here. And judging from this not-bad,
but lackluster first sequel, Myers should start brainstorming
his ideas now for the next installment. A little bit of
variety and originality may very well come in handy in the
future.
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