Close Menu
Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Jump to Category…
    • All Events
    • Club Dates
    • Comedy
    • Exhibits
    • Film
    • Fundraisers
    • Learning
    • Literati
    • Outings
    • Other
    • Specials
    • Sports
    • Stage
    • Trivia
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Demo
    • CNY Events Calendar
      • Add My Event
      • Advertise On Calendar
    • News
      • News
      • Business
      • Sports
    • Arts
      • Art
      • Stage
      • Music
      • Film
      • Television
    • Lifestyle
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Fashion
      • Travel
    • Opinion & Blogs
      • Things That Matter (Luke Parsnow)
      • New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)
    • Photos
    • Special Editions
      • 2019 Spring Times
      • 2019 Winter Times Edition
      • 2018 Holiday Times
      • 2018 SALT Awards
      • 2018 Best of Syracuse
      • 2018 Autumn Times
      • 2018 SNT Student Survival Guide
      • The 2018 Arts Issue
      • 2018 Summer Times
    • Family Times Magazine
    • CNY Community Guide
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Home»Arts»Film»Silly Slapstick Can’t Save Awful ‘Mall Cop 2’
    Film

    Silly Slapstick Can’t Save Awful ‘Mall Cop 2’

    Mark BialczakBy Mark BialczakApril 20, 2015No Comments3 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Paul Blart
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The burly guy still loves a Segway and security guard work.

    He takes his pre-college daughter, perilously built like him, to a convention in Las Vegas.

    How bad could Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 really be? Very. And I usually like the lovable goofiness of Kevin James.

    Not this time, fellow Long Island guy. James again has co-writing credits with Nick Bakay on this follow-up to the 2009 comedy that hauled in $146 million at U.S. theaters because, well, people needed to feel good by watching buffoonish Blart save a New Jersey mall from evil clutches.

    Directed by Andy Fickman this time around (instead of Steve Carr), the sequel does not stray too far from the original premise. Some of the same stars return, too, but for frighteningly short cameos. His girlfriend and mother, played by Jayma Mays and Shirley Knight, are summarily dismissed in the first, oh, 90 seconds through the devices of divorce and death since the last movie.

    Thankfully, Raini Rodriguez is back as much-suffering daughter Maya, because her manner of handling the sequel’s best plot points — an acceptance to UCLA and her reluctance to tell her suffering pop about it as well as attention from Wynn hotel and casino worker Lane (played thoroughly happy but slightly dumb by David Henrie) — are the best thing about this movie.

    The rest of it is cookie-cutter slapstick, playing off actor James’ puffy frame and ability to move surprisingly well with it, and character Blart’s hypoglycemia with a tendency to go comatose. But he’s not funny dancing around on stage wearing wings with the startled members of the stage production. And he’s not funny suddenly face down on the hotel lobby floor, then struggling like a fish out of water to snag some sugar in a disgusting manner.

    Bad guys with a serious crime caper in execution abound throughout the Wynn, and because this is the site of the annual security guard convention, so too do comrades help Blart attempt to thwart said campaign.

    Unfortunately, the man with the evil plan is played by Neal McDonough, who looks so very familiar because he’s acting exactly like all those bad-acting characters you’ve seen him smirking through on many TV roles. (I most remember him coming on and doing bad deeds to my ladies of Desperate Housewives a half decade ago.)

    And more unfortunately, the funniest thing about the security crew was the ridiculous haircut on Saul Gundermutt, with the added insider’s wink-wink that Gary Valentine played James’ Doug Heffernan’s brother for eight years on TV’s The King of Queens.

    It’s too bad that it’s all so lame. I still want to like James, but I can’t forgive him for co-writing such a silly mess.

    Go Home

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Mark Bialczak

    Related Posts

    Finding Auditions in Upstate New York: Top Tips for Parents of Aspiring Child Actors

    October 10, 2024

    Greetings from Bikini Bottom: Tom Kenny, East Syracuse’s favorite cartoon voice, continues SpongeBob SquarePants legacy

    June 27, 2019

    Capitolfest 17 programs an August weekend of buried cinema treasures

    June 26, 2019

    Schlock Therapy: Drive-in movie maven brings redneck cinema tour to Syracuse

    May 8, 2019

    Troubled biopic on Big Easy jazz cornetist Buddy Bolden finally hits movie houses

    May 1, 2019

    Handle With Scares: Hitchcock, Spielberg, more at annual Salt City Horror Fest

    April 10, 2019

    Comments are closed.

    • CNY Events Calendar
    • Club Dates
    • Food & Drink
    • Destinations
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Family Times
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Community Code of Conduct
    • Staff/Contact Us
    • Careers
    • SALT Academy Applications & Awards Process
    • Family Times
    • CNY Tix
    • Spinnaker Custom Products

    Syracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.