Super smart, super funny, super current, super classic and super cutting, The LEGO Batman Movie is a super sequel to The Lego Movie, that perfect piece of pop pizazz. Lego B is also the funniest Batman movie ever. Hell, it may be the best Bat movie ever, given its carte blanche to satire the comic’s full history, with special attention paid to the Adam West TV series I was weaned on as a young Boomer. Boom! Pow!!
The Lego Movies are now bona fide cultural phenomena. They alchemized an iconic toy franchise with iconic cultural figures, catalyzing the admixture with rapid-fire irony and ample star-power. More please!
The Lego Movie that started the series introduced Batman as a farcical übermensch who toys with our superhero dreams – Buzz Lightyear with issues. Batman is the focus this time, and his issues have grown.
He denies his feelings, but we don’t, especially about this supremely funny takedown of a boyhood hero.
In short, The LEGO Batman Movie is super boffo. No assembly required, no kids either. It’s too great a movie to be wasted solely on children. After all, who doesn’t have feelings about Batman? Don’t deny it.
The huge voice cast includes big names in tiny roles, e.g., Channing Tatum as Superman and Zoë Kravitz as Catwoman. But the main stars make the movie, especially given how hard it is for voice actors to stand out.
Will Arnett’s Batman stands with Tim Allen’s Buzz Lightyear in the mini-pantheon of satirical superheroes. I’d dubbed him the best Batman since Michael Keaton for his performance in The Lego Movie. Now he fully explores the Bat-issues in what is a superstar-making performance for Arnett. “There is no us.”
Lego B is a stellar film that speaks more to adults than kids, though it is an off-the-hook great kiddy flick.
Chris McKay, the new director for this sophomore Lego Movie, does a bang-up job, albeit just a touch off the perfection achieved by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller in The Lego Movie. Lord & Miller also wrote their movie, a singular accomplishment.
Fantasy? It’s a superhero cartoon populated by Lego people living in Legoland, for goodness sakes.
Fantasy aside, The LEGO Batman Movie is unintentionally ironic in addition to all its intentional irony. It presupposes a Hillary Clinton presidency, given the overt homage to It Takes a Village and the main plot arc taking down an imperious and isolated alpha-male. Whoddathunk she would’ve lost? It’s doubly ironic that Steven Mnuchin – President Trump’s Treasury Secretary – gets a prominent producer’s credit.
Regarding Wick’s Review
This is definitely going on my to-watch list!