It's back to the magic/cursed game Jumanji in Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle. This movie has teens transported to a video game jungle -- in new bodies.
The movie starts in 1996, when some kids find the Jumanji board game and one says no one plays board games anymore, returning to his video game. The game magically transforms into a game cartridge, and the boy disappears.
Jump to the present, and four teens have gotten detention. Spencer (Alex Wolff) is a thoughtful student and nervous hypochondriac who got busted for writing papers for Fridge (Ser'Darius Blain), a football player who used to be good friends with Spencer. Bethany (Madison Iseman) is a high school popular beauty who couldn't stay off her iPhone. And Martha (Morgan Turner) is a quiet thinker who speaks out against gym class. While the four are stuck cleaning a room, they find the Jumanji game (now a video game console) and find themselves zapped into the world of the game.
The teens are now the video game characters, with their skills and weaknesses. Spencer (Dwayne Johnson) is the muscular leader with no weaknesses. Fridge (Kevin Hart) is a zoologist who's slower and weaker, plus he carries everyone's stuff in his backpack. Bethany (Jack Black) is now a pudgy male -- but she still can't deal with not having a phone. And Martha (Karen Gillan) is a beautiful martial artist in a skimpy outfit. Their mission: Find the magic gem stolen by evil explorer Van Pelt (Bobby Cannavale, who has little to do but look menacing) and return it to its place in a giant statue. Each teen has three lives, and when they die they fall from the sky to continue the game. NPCs show up, with limited reactions and often repeating the same lines over and over. And the four run into Alex (Nick Jonas), the teenager who got sucked into the game back in 1996 and has been trying to get out ever since.
Despite enough cursing to get this movie a PG-13 rating, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle feels a lot like a kids' movie. The teens start as strangers or former friends who grow to be good friends, and their characters' skills let them work together to complete the game. A lot of the humor comes from the stars acting atypically (Dwayne Johnson constantly scared, Jack Black effeminately) or video game cliches brought to life, and the movie doesn't give any surprised or take any real chances. This is a cute movie, but not terribly funny or exciting.
Overall grade: C
Reviewed by James Lynch
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