Subject: doctorlit reviews The Incredibles 2
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Posted on: 2019-11-10 22:32:47 UTC

Yeah, I finally watched this. It was good. Spoiler warnings for The Incredibles and The Incredibles 2.

The original Incredibles stands out for leaning so heavily on the family dynamics between the main characters, and the villain having an interesting and not completely misguided philosophy that leaves you thinking after the movie. The Incredibles 2 followed up on that quite well.

Since Bob was the Super in the original movie who was most desperate to return to his glory days of crime-fighting, I like that this movie engineered things in such a way as to force him to stay home while Helen, who was more reluctant to return to crime-fighting and cared more about protecting the family, gets roped into superheroics instead. While Bob initially gets overwhelmed trying to take care of the family solo, I’m glad they avoided the cliché of everything descending into chaos because the dad doesn’t know what to do, and instead have Bob rise to the challenge, despite not being able to utilize his main advantage of strength in that context. (Although I guess he does fail at fixing the problem he caused for Violet, but I appreciate that this forced Violet to overcome her shyness even more and take care of matters on her own.)

I’m actually a bit confused about Jack-Jack. Based on the end of The Incredibles I thought the rest of the family had observed him using powers to attack Syndrome, and therefore knew he had powers. Plus, wouldn’t the babysitter have told someone about the weird stuff Jack-Jack was doing while she was watching him? Plus, why would they have kept Jack-Jack’s suit with them to have it present at the Underminer attack if they weren’t aware he had powers? But this movie pretty clearly shows everyone being surprised at Jack-Jack’s powers. Seems weird.

But let’s get to the best part, the villain. Unfortunately, since Evelyn was introduced immediately after her brother, when we heard his surname, I immediately put them together in my mind as “Evelyn Deavor” which is of course basically “evil endeavor” so I immediately spoiled the reveal for himself. Usually I’m not smart enough to do that to myself . . . oh well. Evelyn makes an excellent successor to Syndrome, in that her philosophies are basically valid, but she tries to express them in destructive ways that prioritize her ideal over the safety of others. Aside from her critique about the existence of superheroes making people more helpless and incapable of taking care of themselves, I especially agreed with her point about the overabundance of television screens in society making people complacent to sit in their home and watch the world from a far, only experiencing life vicariously.It’s interesting that for both Incredibles films, Pixar has opted to use villains who threaten the concept of superheroes on an abstract level, rather than more traditional villains who threaten the whole world and must be stopped by the heroes out of basic morality. It makes for much higher stakes that way.

One minor nitpick that I can’t overlook: after Evelyn has trapped Helen in the frozen room and deactivates her hypnosis goggles, Helen knows the screen in the goggles is the source of the mind control. At the end of her monologue, Evelynn communicates with both words and the motion of the remote control that she’s about to turn the screen back on. Helen could have easily shut her eyes in that moment and feigned being hypnotized for a while until she had a chance to turn on Evelyn. Oh well. At least that gave the kids a chance to full-on rescue the parents.

—doctorlit, screen-slaved?

"Baby want num-num spoiler?" "Baby want num-num spoiler?" "Baby want num-num spoiler?" "Baby want num-num spoiler?" "Baby want num-num spoiler?" "Baby want num-num spoiler?"

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