5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

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Let’s look at why The Mummy 2017 with Tom Cruise isn’t as bad as people say it is along with why its bad reputation is deserved.

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5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

The 2017 version of Universal’s infamous original monster movie title The Mummy is only ever really discussed for its failure to start the studio’s ‘Dark Universe’ based around their most iconic characters from the genre, despite the fact that it was the second movie to do this.

Though not what it was needed to be, The Mummy 2017 wasn’t as much of a flop as its remembered as being and a number of its decent qualities have become overshadowed by its shortcomings. Here’s why the movie isn’t as bad as people say it is along with why its bad reputation may be deserved.

10 Is: A Disappointingly Small Scale

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

Oddly enough for a movie called The Mummy, the story spends very little time in Egypt, or anywhere comparable, and, instead, sets the majority of its action sequences somewhere around Surrey, England. Which doesn’t really spell rip-roaring adventure to most people.

Even when the movie reaches the streets of London for its third act, the sets and locations feel quite limited and the color palette is remarkably grey and monotonous.

9 Isn’t: Tom Cruise Has Still Got It

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

There are few movie actors left in the business who have the star power of Tom Cruise and, at age 54, he still brought some much-needed charm to The Mummy.

Not only could Cruise sell moments of tension and action, but his all-around enthusiasm for the process energizes the wearier aspects of the movie in a way that few actors possibly could have.

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8 Is: Generic Screenwriting

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

Despite some very talented screenwriters working on the project, The Mummy fails to stand out from the blockbuster crowd and this is mostly its own fault.

The popular MacGuffin of a magic rock is introduced almost immediately in the movie and a predictable course of events feels secondary to the movie’s desire to flesh out a fictional universe that audiences will never actually get to see.

7 Isn’t: Stunts

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

Tom Cruise’s dedication to stuntwork on his own movies is well documented and The Mummy is no different. Having the lead actor actually get inside as many of the action shots as they can brings a lot to a movie and it helps this one feel like more of a romp.

Though a lack of originality holds it back, The Mummy is a movie that’s always trying to be entertaining in an almost slapstick kind of way and the physicality of the action adds a lot of personality to the comedy.

6 Is: Tasteless Updates to the Story

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

For a movie presenting so many distinct time periods and cultural icons, you’d think The Mummy would present at least one of them in a satisfying way.

Aside from sidelining Egypt, and needlessly adding medieval English history to the mix, the movie makes the particularly tasteless choice to set its opening action sequence in modern-day Iraq with a force that is, while stereotypically faceless and nameless, essentially ISIS.

5 Isn’t: A Combined Monster Universe Isn’t a Bad Idea

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

While The Mummy often fails to frame it in an appealing way, the central idea of the movie isn’t a bad one. Universal alone had been doing monster team-ups and crossovers for just shy of three-quarters of a century before the movie came out.

The movie’s idea to unify everything through what would almost certainly be its Nick Fury figure, Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde and a S.H.I.E.L.D.-like organization with its own potential to spin-off and become evil, there are some entertaining promises made. Even if they’re only just that.

4 Is: It Borrows Very Heavily from Much Better Things

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

Arguing over how original the story really is is something that you could do with every version of The Mummy, from the original in 1932 to everything that it’s inspired since. But the 2017 version chooses much more poorly with extra cultural references and they often end up contradicting the tone of the movie.

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The Mummy wants to be a horror movie in an atmospheric kind of way rather than by showing anything overtly horrific or grotesque but it also wants to be an Indiana Jones movie, which, of course, balanced its joyful qualities with more graphic imagery. It’s overwhelming visual similarities to the Uncharted series of video games (which were, themselves, already heavily inspired by The Mummy movies) also feels like an aesthetically-confused choice.

3 Isn’t: It Brings Horror To a Non-Horror Audience

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

Not everyone watches movies in the same way and people don’t always have the same access to movies. The Mummy goes for as wide an audience as it can because it wants to reach the most amount of people and make the most amount of money, yes, but it actually succeeds in bringing classical horror aspects to audiences who ordinarily wouldn’t get to see them.

Aside from Cruise’s name bringing his own kind of audience, The Mummy was a financial hit in China, a country famous for its stringent censorship laws surrounding, amongst several other things, the horror genre and the supernatural.

2 Is: It Puts the Cart Before the Horse

5 Reasons Why The Mummy 2017 Isn’t As Bad As People Say It Is (& 5 Reasons It Is)

So much of what makes people remember the 2017 version of The Mummy as a bad movie is that it set itself such an unnecessarily high bar for success.

Audiences were definitely holding it up to, at least, the first two Stephen Sommers Mummy movies but the gigantic budget and shared universe were both its own choice yet both feel wasted. They transform it into something that audiences actively root against rather than for.

1 Isn’t: A Pervading Sense of Humor

Stories of production troubles on The Mummy are easy to believe but, no matter how things really went down, what the cast and crew were able to pull out of the movie is a light tone and some comedic chemistry from its actors.

Cruise is a big star with a knack for making sure his movies are driven by him but not all about him. He creates entertaining dynamics with a wide variety of talented actors that he’s paired with and allows what’s best about them to really shine in the movie, even if it isn’t for every long.

Link Source : https://screenrant.com/reasons-tom-cruise-dark-universe-mummy-movie-2017-good-bad-underrated/

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