BEFORE: I had to use my other skip day on Friday, since I was called in early on Friday to be at the theater for some repair work, somebody had to get the sprinkler maintenance guy the key to unlock the sprinkiers so they could get their annual check. Thankfully this did not mean turning on the sprinklers and getting all the festival stuff wet, he could do the check without that. Look, I don't have to understand how these works, I only need to show up and get these guys what they need and sign their paperwork on behalf of the theater. But then I was there four hours early for a long festival day, six screenings in three blocks, starting at 2 pm. But this was my last day at the festival, and I should get some good money for this in about a month. I'm hurting right now because a month ago I was off for a week which turned into two weeks off when my mom passed. I don't get much family leave with my two jobs, I think the stadium paid me for one day I missed to attend the wake. C'est la vie -
I could have stayed up late on Thursday and watched this movie, but I wanted to ensure I would be there at 10 am and could then work a 12-hour-plus shift. Guests on Friday included Matthew Broderick and Ben Stiller for an anniversary screening of "The Cable Guy", then we had George Whipple appearing at a screening of a documentary about his career, and then Carmelo Anthony for the same reason. In between there was Joseph Fiennes doing a Q&A after a soccer film (timely), and I spotted Norm Lewis entering a screening, and also NY1 anchor Pat Kiernan, who has done almost as many movie cameos as Radio Man. So no movie Friday, but I'll have to watch one every day until Father's Day, and then keep that up until the end of the month. I can do it, if not I'll just have to double up somewhere.
Frankie Muniz carries over from "Agent Cody Banks" and so do four or five other people. (Sorry, Angie Harmon, you got replaced...)
THE PLOT: With his new CIA handler, Derek, Cody has to retrieve a mind-control device before the world's leaders fall under the control of a diabolical villain.
AFTER: The first "Cody Banks" film must have made a lot of money, because they RUSHED the sequel into production, they didn't want to wait for all of the stars or even the director of the first film to be available, they wanted to get the sequel out the following year, and that's really not what's best for a sequel. Like the "Star Wars" films used to come out every THREE years, and of course they were a lot more work, but they also had more people working hard to make the films gooder. I don't think anyone like that was working hard like that on this one, the goal was to get this done fast. Why they didn't even take time to write a new story, they just stole the plot of the first "Naked Gun" movie and made the villain commission a mind-control device and similarly included a Queen Elizabeth look-alike. Hell, that movie had come out 16 years before, and nobody who was a teenager in 2004 was likely to have seen it.
They also borrowed the TONE of the "Naked Gun" movies, where it's just so ridiculous that you couldn't possibly take it seriously, even if you tried. The first "Cody Banks" film played like some kind of James Bond Jr. but somebody here pictured him more like a teenage Frank Drebbin. It's not really what kids wanted to see, I think. Then there's a ton of bad acting here, like Frankie Muniz is fine, and so are the other actors who carried over from the first film, but then all of the kids who play in the international youth orchestra, woof, they're all terrible, not one of them can act believably. It's almost painful when actors are trying TOO hard to be sincere, when really all they have to do is just stop trying and be themselves. "Big Fat Liar" came from the studio and director that made a lot of those horrible Nickelodeon shows in the 1990s, but this one FEELS like it, and that's worse.
Nothing's really funny here, nor is it fun. Why would anyone make a comedy that is neither fun or funny? Sending Cody Banks back to spy camp at the beginning makes no sense, he already completed his training, why does he have to go back to camp? It's bad enough that he's been lying to his parents about his training, his "scholarship" to different schools to cover his assignments, why are we continuing the lie if his parents won't even let him have a pocket-knife at home? And now they're going to just let him go off to London on some kind of fake musical scholarship? I'm not even sure that's legal, for a teenager to go to another country and be enrolled in a school if his parents don't live there.
This is another film that takes place during a G7 summit, I've seen already quite a few of them this year. But this was back in 2004, apparently before the G7 summit had any security at all, because the villains just kind of walk right in, don't they? And then there's a big inconsistency about how the microchips are implanted, one of the villains is this mad dentist who drills a hole in people's teeth to insert the chip - but how the hell did they get those world leaders to agree to have dental work done DURING A COCKTAIL PARTY? This makes zero sense, it almost appears like the world leaders are ingesting the chips as they're eating snacks, but that would have been even harder to set up, assuming there would be some kind of security on the snacks being served during an international summit. Also, which is it, are the chips consumed with the snacks or drilled into people's teeth?
Also, big problem with trying to use mind control on the U.S. President. For that to work, the President would have to have a mind to control in the first place. HEY-yo!
NITPICK POINT: Cody is given a pack of explosive Mentos mints - they blow up without even adding the Diet Coke to them (this must have been trending at the time, or was this before people knew about Mentos in Diet Coke?). But they use this explosive to get the mind control chip out of Cody's tooth, but they only need a fraction of one mint - wouldn't cutting into the Mentos with a knife make it explode?
NITPICK POINT #2: Cody's new handler, Derek Bowman, is rewarded for the successful mission by being put in charge of the CIA summer camp. Great, but what about Kumar, the other agent who drove Cody around London and turned his taxi cab into a communications office when needed? Everybody just kind of forgot about him, I guess. Not cool.
Notice there was never a "Cody Banks 3" movie made, that should tell you something right there. I rarely regret my choices here at the Movie Year, but this may be one of those rare times. Well, at least this is GONE from my list now, maybe I can have a few drinks and forget this ever happened. Did anyone else know that Madonna (yes, that one) and Jason Alexander worked together to produce the films in this franchise? It seems like an odd pairing, unless Madonna just didn't think that enough family films were being made for her own kids to watch, or something.
Directed by Kevin Allen
Also starring Anthony Anderson (last seen in "G20"), Hannah Spearritt, Cynthia Stevenson (last seen in "Agent Cody Banks"), Daniel Roebuck (ditto), Keith David (ditto), Connor Widdows (ditto), Anna Chancellor (last seen in "Hysteria"), Keith Allen (last seen in "The Others"), James Faulkner (last seen in "Wake Up Dead Man"), David Kelly (last seen in "The Wrong Man"), Santiago Segura (last seen in "Jack and Jill"), Rod Silvers, Jack Stanley, Joshua Brody, Sarah McNicholas, Philip Pedersen, Paul Kaye (last seen in "Pan"), Harry Burton, Julian Firth (last seen in "The Lost King"), Martyn Ellis, Damien Hirst, Mark Williams (last seen in "Tristram Shandy"), James Dreyfus (last seen in "Notting Hill"), Henry Miller, Masato Kamo (last seen in "United 93"), Patti Love (last seen in "The Long Good Friday"), Sam Douglas (last seen in "Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre"), Alfie Allen (last seen in "Boogie Woogie"), Leilah Isaac, Keiron Nelson, Theora Toumazi, Keshini Misha, Atim Laber, Carly Minsky, Chris Bodell, Javkhaa Chuluunbaatar, Sammy Razack, Leonard C. Jones (last seen in "Homefront")
RATING: 2 out of 10 bowls of "chocolate surprise"
