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szdaily -> Movies -> 
Now You See Me 2
    2016-06-24  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    Voices: Jesse Eisenberg, Mark Ruffalo, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco, Daniel Radcliffe, Lizzy Caplan, Jay Chou Director: Jon M. Chu

    A GOOD magician never reveals his secrets, but what about a shameless one? Doubling down on the giddily ridiculous tone of its predecessor, “Now You See Me 2” is interesting, but the film’s rampant, cheeky cleverness ultimately proves tiresome.

    Once again chronicling the exploits of a team of illusionists, this sequel is obsessed with deceiving viewers into believing one reality and then pulling the rabbit out of the hat to delight and startle us, always at the ready to explain how it achieved the feat.

    Taking place about a year after the first film, “Now You See Me 2” reunites Atlas (Jesse Eisenberg), McKinney (Woody Harrelson) and Wilder (Dave Franco), a group of world-famous magicians known as the Horsemen who stage high-profile illusions to expose corrupt magnates and millionaires.

    With Isla Fisher’s Henley no longer part of the team, they are joined by Lula (Lizzy Caplan), who alongside the Horsemen’s secret FBI liaison Dylan Rhodes (Mark Ruffalo) must work together to retrieve a powerful computer chip stolen from a wealthy, eccentric inventor (Daniel Radcliffe) that can access any laptop or mainframe on the planet.

    Replacing Louis Leterrier, who directed the first instalment, Jon M. Chu brings some of the high-energy irreverence that distinguished his work on “Step Up 2: The Streets” and “Step Up 3D.” To be sure, “Now You See Me 2” requires an almost musical-like choreography, considering that the action set pieces often revolve around deception and verbal trickery, and Chu invests the proceedings with a film-ish artificiality that enjoys its own absurdity.

    There can be significant pleasures in surrendering to the movie’s endless rounds of how-did-they-do-it misdirection, especially since actors like Eisenberg and Ruffalo exude just the right balance of smarts and sarcasm. (And old pros such as Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman provide casual, reliable gravitas as shadowy side characters.) At its best, “Now You See Me 2” acknowledges its own superficiality while delivering its big illusions with just barely enough authenticity to keep us engaged.

    Working from a script by Ed Solomon, who co-wrote the first movie, Chu and his ensemble try to turn “Now You See Me 2” into a breezy action comedy during a summer-movie season usually populated with humourless epics. The intention is never more apparent than during the reveal of McKinney’s loopy twin brother Chase — whom Harrelson plays with utter goofiness — or the impishness of casting Radcliffe (somewhat fun as a villain) in a movie about magic, letting viewers make the obvious connection to his most famous role as a very different kind of wizard.

    But more often than not, “Now You See Me 2” devolves into mild jokes and vaguely self-aware jabs at its own clichés. During the film’s extended excursion to China — no doubt to cater to that booming theatrical market — the characters’ unfamiliarity with local customs and language becomes a wan running joke.

    The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen. (SD-Agencies)

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