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  1. Men in Black: International

    Men in Black: International

    PG-132019 · Action · 1h 55m

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  2. Jun 14, 2019 · Reviews. Men in Black: International. Monica Castillo June 14, 2019. Tweet. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. Just because two stars are brilliantly paired together in one movie, it doesn’t guarantee their chemistry will carry over to another.

  3. Jun 14, 2019 · 23% Tomatometer 320 Reviews 66% Audience Score 10,000+ Verified Ratings The Men in Black have expanded to cover the globe but so have the villains of the universe. To keep everyone safe,...

    • (320)
    • F. Gary Gray
    • PG-13
    • Sci-Fi, Adventure, Comedy, Action
    • Neuralyze me, please.
    • Men in Black International Gallery
    • Verdict
    • Men In Black: International Review
    • IGN Recommends

    By Joe Skrebels

    Updated: Apr 28, 2020 10:29 pm

    Posted: Jun 12, 2019 1:00 pm

    Men in Black: International isn’t a reboot, but it acts like one. The original movie’s plot beats are out in full force here: a young recruit is paired with an aloof, experienced agent and immediately gets embroiled in a world-threatening mystery that centres around a landmark built for a World’s Fair. There are chrome guns, cars with red buttons, fist-sized aliens and Frank the Pug. If any of the core characters from the original were actually in this, they’d probably make a quip about how familiar all this is. Yet somehow, in spite of all of that, International manages to fundamentally misunderstand practically everything that made the original film so endearing, and so enduring.

    It should become a fish-out-of-water comedy twice over at this point - American human in an English alien world - but even the promise of seeing how Men In Black operates in a different country is immediately dulled. The HQ looks fundamentally similar, and the only concession to the London setting is that Liam Neeson’s branch head is called High T for no given reason other than the horrible pun. It’s here that Chris Hemsworth’s H joins proceedings, an agent who’s already achieved enough to be heralded alongside J and K from the original films, and seemingly been burned out by hubris.

    It’s telling the biggest laugh in the film is a direct reference to Hemsworth’s work as an Avenger.

    Hemsworth and Thompson are undoubtedly charming together, bringing their Thor: Ragnarok double act into a new setting, right down to the former’s accent. Sadly, the writing doesn’t live up to their talents. M’s given almost no time to be wowed by her new surroundings, giving us no time to connect to her before she’s already a more-than competent agent. H, on the other hand, should be pure comic relief, a slapstick James Bond always succeeding by failing. Sadly, the jokes just don’t work, regularly too obvious or too much of a non-sequitur to land. It’s telling the biggest laugh in the film is a direct reference to Hemsworth’s work as an Avenger.

    And before you know it, the film’s skipped off to Marrakech, where M and H pick up a CGI sidekick, Pawny (played by a spectacularly uninterested-sounding Kumail Nanjiani) for no real reason. The globe-trotting exploits are clearly meant to lend another Bond-like aspect, but really just leave the film feeling unrooted. This series has always felt best when it plays with a known location, showing you how an alien society could work among humdrum real life, transforming the expected into the unexpected. International doesn’t give you a chance to see anything like that for more than a few minutes before the plot’s moved on and left any potential jokes behind.

    More than anything else, International feels soulless. The first Men In Black was pleasingly grimy; its aliens wobbling around under Rick Baker’s exquisite prosthetics, heads exploding in fountains of slime, squid children puking on agents after traumatic tentacle births. At times, it was a gross-out comedy for the Nickelodeon generation. By comparison, International feels as sleek and clean as its weaponry, and loses a lot for it. The satirical bite is gone from the dialogue, the emotional beats artificially saccharine rather than truly sweet. Worst of all, the aliens feel unthreatening, unsurprising, and unremarkable.

    That lack of tension pervades the entirety of International. It feels like Men In Black by numbers, a trudge from one set-piece to the next untidily glued together by weak gags and sharp suits, never getting us to care about its characters or the world-changing stakes. In fact, like the first film’s Bug bad guy, it feels as though something unfamil...

    Review scoring

    bad

    MiB: International tries to invoke the original, but fails to match its key achievements: it isn’t funny or exciting.

    Joe Skrebels

  4. Jun 12, 2019 · The Hollywood Reporter review: Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson headline 'Men in Black: International,' F. Gary Gray's spinoff of the titular franchise, co-starring Liam Neeson and Emma...

  5. Jun 12, 2019 · Film Review: ‘Men in Black: International’. 'Thor: Ragnarok' co-stars Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson take over for Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones in an amusing if uneven spinoff of...

  6. Jun 12, 2019 · The movie was light, silly fun; the stakes were low, the actors charming. By far the most amusing bit was the neuralyzer, the tool the men in black use to erase the memories of witnesses, a...

  7. Jun 12, 2019 · Men in Black International review: Chris Hemsworth, Tessa Thompson team up for bland reboot. Movies. Movie Reviews. Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson reunite for eerily bland Men...

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