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The New Mutants

No wonder this “X-Men” meets “Shutter Island” rip-off got delayed.

As you Marvel fans know, “The New Mutants” has constantly been pushed back for two years. It didn’t want to be overshadowed by other big releases, and this COVID-19 kept pushing movies back. Well, it finally sees the light of day this weekend.

I was on a family vacation in Boothbay, Maine, and we took a pit stop by Gloucester, Massachusetts. I was able to find an opened local movie theater to review “The New Mutants,” and I was not impressed. This is supposed to take place in the X-Men universe, where the set-up splices “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” with “Shutter Island,” and it fails in all movies.

For one thing, the main and only doctor in the facility is Dr. Cecilia Reyes (Alice Braga) has to put on a nice girl act, when really she’s a Nurse Ratched working for the Essex Corporation, which abuses young mutants into becoming killing machines. You’re obviously not fooled by her kind nature. Her acting here is so droll, that you feel like you’re reliving “After Earth” again with all those moods and tones being lifeless.

For another thing, the mutants are especially “Harry Potter,” “Percy Jackson,” and “Animal House” characters, who interact with each other for the first time, fool around in the second act, and finally come together to battle a demon bear and escape Reyes’ clutches.

I suppose Williams does keep her character in line with her connection to Danielle, and the movie does respect their characters’ lesbianism. I mean, I have heard about superhero movies wanting to let women be free and independent with their interests and choices. I’m glad movies and shows are considerate about the LGBT community these days.

But “The New Mutants” fails to deliver on the genre. The last “X-Men” movie “Dark Phoenix” was a real borefest and a bad conclusion to the franchise. This one, co-written and directed by Josh Boone (“The Fault in Our Stars”), tries and fails to begin one. The characters are formulaic and recycled, the demon effects are shabby, and the narrative never goes anywhere. And if you wanted to see a demon bear, you should see Pixar’s “Brave.” Now that was thrilling compared to this CGI monster.

⭐️1/2

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