| In Short: | Ridiculously enjoyable, at any age. I love being a Turtle... fan. |
| Recommended? | Yes, yes, yes! |
| RAPHAEL | Amazing, guys, and I thought all the really good dungeons were in Europe. |
And you thought your teenage years were hard. The surging
hormones, the constant peer pressure, the conviction that
[insert suitable cringe-inducing clothing trend] was a great
look. But, hey. At least you weren't a mutant. Probably not a
ninja. And definitely not a turtle.
For those who missed the comics, the cartoon, the original
movie, the sequels, the live action series and the recent
animated film (plus, uh, the last few decades) there are these
turtles, they're mutant, they're ninja and they're teens. Their
names are Leonardo (blue), Raphael (red), Donatello (purple) and
Michaelangelo (yellow), and they have a Master (a rat called
Splinter), a human pal (a reporter called April O'Neil) and an
arch-nemesis (a lunatic called The Shredder.) As a TMNT
fan who came to the original comics via my love of the cartoon
series, I was at first resistant to the differences between
them. The origin of Master Splinter (in the comic, a
rat-turned-human, in the cartoon, a human-turned-rat), the
occupation of April (in the comic, a scientist, in the cartoon,
a reporter), and the fact that there didn't seem to be any Lord
Krang ("Shreeeeeeddderrr!") However, I soon got into the two
worlds of Turtles-dom, and as other writers beside creators
Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird started writing for Raph, Mike,
Don and Leo (never called such in the cartoon), the Turtles
became less dark, less of a parody of other comics, and more of
a parody-able property all of its own. (Anyone else remember
Samurai Pizza Cats?)
And then there came Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie
(as opposed to, y'know, The Quadratic Theorem). More faithful to
the comic book than the cartoon ever was, the movie showed a
grittier, cooler, more fleshed out, less moral-of-the-episode
prone Turtles gang. And Elias Koteas was in it! After defeating
therein Shred Head and his evil gang of misguided minions,
though, the Turtles have since taken refuge in April's New York
apartment, as their native sewers are unsafe from the menace of
the naughty kung fu Foot Clan.
Now, this April (Paige Turow) is a whole new one since the last
movie, and she’s a brunette. A brunette! Just like in the
original comics (but without the terrible perm). And yet, as in
the cartoon and not in the comics, April is a news reporter
here. TMNT continuity baffles me.
But to the movie.
Things open with the Green Machine having ordered pizza -- again
-- and their delivery boy witnesses a robbery in progress. Cutie
Keno (Ernie Reyes Jr.), being no slouch in the ninja department
and unusually civic-minded, attempts to put a stop to it, but
gets in a little over his head... and that's when the Turtles
show up to kick some bad guy butt, befuddle Keno senseless, and
pick up their dinner. Hey, an amphibian adolescent's gotta eat,
right?
Meanwhile, the object of their joint affection is reporting on
chemical company TGI's pledge to clean up its toxic wastes,
which on the surface seems little more than the usual "pollution
is wrong, kids, so don't do it!" Captain Planet motif that has
crept into many a kid flick of the last few decades, but
actually is quite the plot point. 'Cause, y'know, some of that
toxic stuff is the secretive ooze from the title, and has quite
a lot of bearing on the rest of the movie. As in, there'd be no
movie without it.
Elsewhere, cutie Keno figures out that his rescuers are shacking
up with April (and the rat), and ends up being their little
human sidekick. And in other not-so-breaking news, it turns out
that The Shredder isn't quite so defeated as he seemed at the
triumphant end of the last movie. And after getting his hands on
a vial of the titular ooze, he does something with it that
reveals its jealously-guarded truth to the world -- he mutates a
wolf and an, er, snapping turtle into giant mega-killing beasts!
The vicious creatures (babies, though, and not teens) are set
upon an innocent street as a lure for the Turtles, and when
Raphael is captured, the others go to rescue their erstwhile
rebel. Of course, they walk straight into a trap, which produces
my most favorite TMNT moment ever...
Leo: "It's quiet"
Mike: "Yeah, a little too quiet."
Leo: "It's Raph!"
Mike: "Yeah, a little too Raph."
Mikey. Is. Cool. Not since the days of the Turtles cartoon, and
Raphael lines like "If we don't rescue April soon, this is gonna
turn into a two-part episode!" have I been so amused by... well,
talking turtles. Anyway. Doing battle with Baby Mutant Dumb-Ass
Beasties (and applying some esoteric formula created by a guy
almost perpetually wearing a white lab coat – so, he's a
scientist), the Turtles then find themselves in the infamous
Club Scene. You know the one I'm talking about. The Vanilla Ice
Club Scene. The one in which the onetime rapper exhorts "Go
ninja, go ninja, go!" as the Turtles, cutie Keno, and a handy
fire extinguisher manage to kick, punch, and groove their way to
victory over their adversaries -- animal, vegetable and mineral
"Super Shredder" alike. All is saved, the Turtles are famous,
and the world is safe for pizza-consumption once more. It's all
just good, clean, improbable yet pretty darn amusing fun. So
watch. Enjoy. Laugh.
Oh, yeah. And cowabunga. Or whatever.


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