![]() There is a slice of intriguing social commentary here, with Bird (back writing and directing) seemingly keen on examining the emotional labour that keeps a family together. ![]() Incredible, stretchy mom Helen/Elastigirl, invisible eldest daughter Violet, super-fast middle son Dash and the multitalented and aforementioned Jack – attempting to stop a runaway vehicle of destruction before it hits City Hall, mostly succeeding.Īfter witnessing the family’s derring-do and the public’s warm reaction to the antics, telecommunications mogul and superhero superfan Winston Deavor (voiced with just the right amount of enthusiastic smarm by Bob Odenkirk) offers the Parrs a unique opportunity: Allow him to market the family’s heroics for a captivated audience and help convince the federal government to reconsider its ban on those with “special abilities.” But to offer a friendlier, less-destructive face for this initiative, Deavor wants to test-run his plan with Elastigirl alone – leaving the alpha Mr. The film’s kick-off set-piece finds the clan – strongman father Bob/Mr. Although it’s been 14 years since writer-director Brad Bird’s The Incredibles hit theatres, the sequel picks up not two minutes after the events of the first: The Parr family, having shed any government-bred stigma over their superpowers, are back to fighting evildoers in their 1960s-ish all-American metropolis.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |