
JUNGLE 2 JUNGLE (PG)
Director: John Pasquin
Stars: Tim Allen, Sam Huntington, Martin Short, Lolita Davidovich, JoBeth Williams, David Ogden Stiers, Bob Dishy.
Running Time: 105 minutes.
Based on a little known French farce entitled Un Indien Dans La Ville (aka Little Indian, Big City), this disappointing Disney produced family oriented comedy reunites tv's popular Home Improvements star Tim Allen with John Pasquin, the director of 1994's surprise hit The Santa Clause. However, the pair seem unable to recapture that magic with Jungle 2 Jungle, a fairly brainless and lacklustre comedy lumbered with a title that is almost as clumsy as most of its attempts at humour. Even with their frantic reworking of the age old plot about a man who rediscovers his essential humanity through the son he never knew existed, Pasquin and Allen seem unable to inject much life, imagination or originality into the rather stale and uninspired material.
Allen's wise-cracking performance is typical of what
audiences have come to expect of him, and he is
perfectly suited to his role here as Michael Cromwell,
a self-centred, stressed out, workaholic New York
stock broker. Cromwell is all set to marry his vapid
fiancee Charlotte (Lolita Davidovich, from Blaze,
etc), but a small hitch develops when he attempts to
get his ex-wife (JoBeth Williams, from Wyatt Earp,
etc) to sign the divorce papers. She is a noble doctor
who walked out on him thirteen years earlier to
devote her life to healing the natives in a remote
South American village somewhere on the Amazon.
When Sam arrives at the village she informs him that
the strange teenage white boy running around the
jungle in little more than a loin cloth is his son. Worse
still, the chief of the tribe has decided to send Miki
back to New York to gather fire from the Statue of
Liberty as some sort of bizarre test of his manhood.
Somewhat reluctantly, Michael takes Miki back to
New York for a brief visit, exchanging one jungle for
another (thus the title), setting the scene for yet
another feeble, terribly clichéd, formulaic and
predictable variation on the old fish out of water
story. Miki (an engaging performance from newcomer
Sam Huntington) spends a lot of time running
around New York in a loin cloth, urinating in door
ways and on pot plants, climbing buildings and
generally making Cromwell's life more stressful than it
was before. Eventually though, Cromwell bonds with
his new found son despite the fact that his
well-ordered life is crumbling around him, and
becomes more human.
Like Crocodile Dundee, Jungle 2 Jungle centres
around the inevitable clash of cultures, but the film is
laboured and uneven, and fails to inspire many
laughs. You know you're in trouble when the film's
best moments revolve around a comatose cat and an
animatronic tarantula. The subplot involving the
fluctuating price of coffee shares and a Russian
gangster (MASH's David Ogden Stiers) is rather ham
fisted and ultimately irrelevant to the overall film
itself.
Allen's wonderful deadpan delivery and a few great
one-liners are the few really positive aspects of this
disappointing farce. He manages to bring a touch of
vulnerability and decency to his role as the hapless,
stressed out executive learning about the
responsibilities of fatherhood, and his strong presence
carries the material. Perennial second string comic
Martin Short contributes some physical humour as
Cromwell's hyper partner, but his incessant mugging
almost belongs to a completely different movie
altogether.
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission
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