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Ultimately, this is a kids'-property superhero movie about teens getting power from ancient aliens and battling someone named Rita Repulsa (Elizabeth Banks, taking large bites of the scenery). The filmmakers do not forget to have fun with it.
This film seems to fulfill its promise of having The Breakfast Club (1985) vibes, focusing on the emotional dynamics between the protagonists that, ends up becoming ballast. [Full review in Spanish]
April 07, 2017
David Sims
A winning and cartoonish coming-of-age tale about supermodel-pretty misfit kids bonding in the belly of an alien spaceship.
The new Power Rangers doesn't disappoint. Sure, the final fight scene could have been 10 minutes longer, but the character development here is worth the wait. And we still get plenty of action in the final half hour.
What this Power Rangers does -- unlike the show -- is explore the complexities of our core team: They're imperfect but perfect enough to be selfless and save the world.
Ultimately, this is a kids'-property superhero movie about teens getting power from ancient aliens and battling someone named Rita Repulsa (Elizabeth Banks, taking large bites of the scenery). The filmmakers do not forget to have fun with it.
A product filled with nostalgia, which updates an old formula and seems to work at times.It's not the movie of the year, nor do I think that was aiming to be it. [Full review in Spanish]
At once awful and awfully amusing, this ramshackle franchise reboot fuses bad acting, worse writing and enough spunk to make the whole thing seem charming in its monumental stupidity.
It reinvents the franchise in a bold and mature way, while never losing sight of the campy fun that made Power Rangers so beloved to begin with, and for that alone, that makes this movie a worthwhile surprise.
Power Rangers' saviour is its own knowingness, its own touch of self-reflective cynicism; though the key here is that it never launches itself into the full meta-attack we've come to expect in a post-Deadpool era.
Power Rangers won't have you seeing red, feeling blue or in the pink. It's just nostalgic fun that would have improved with a better villain and less on-screen merchandising.
What this Power Rangers does -- unlike the show -- is explore the complexities of our core team: They're imperfect but perfect enough to be selfless and save the world.
The only one who manages to shine is Elizabeth Banks as Rita Repulsa; the actress - active and sarcastic - moves with determination and willing to destroy this repertoire of clichés seen over and over in action films. [Full review in Spanish]