HOME MOVIES VIDEO/DVD MUSIC TV GAMES
New in Print
The Mummy Returns

RATED PG-13
DISTRIBUTED BY
Universal Pictures
DIRECTED BY
Stephen Sommers (The Mummy, Deep Rising)
STARRING
Brendan Fraser as Richard 'Rick' O'Connell; Rachel Weisz as Evelyn Carnahan O'Connell/Princess Nefertiri; John Hannah as Jonathan Carnahan; Arnold Vosloo as High Priest Imhotep; Oded Fehr as Ardeth Bey; The Rock as Mathayus the Scorpion King
REVIEWED BY
Bob Smithouser

SHARE

E-Mail This Article Print This Article
Share This Article on Your Facebook Page
Post This Article to Your MySpace Page
The Mummy Returns

What promises to be a sequel-driven summer began with a $70 million opening weekend for The Mummy Returns . Equally violent and more spiritually bankrupt than the original, this installment finds trigger-happy adventurer Rick O’Connell and darling Evelyn married with an 8-year-old son. The year is 1933. The plot? Bad guys want to wake the dead and bring unspeakable evil into the world (today they’d just release a Marilyn Manson CD). Can these devils be stopped?

The O’Connells’ first order of business is to find their son, kidnapped by old nemesis Imhotep as part of a quest to resurrect and control an army of jackals. The special effects come fast and furious. Rotting, reanimated corpses. Waves of scorpions, flesh-eating scarabs and voracious pygmies. Collapsing tombs. It’s a headache-inducing, visceral barrage that seems determined to keep audiences from pausing long enough to realize how ridiculous it all is. Nonstop violence includes stabbings, shootings, dismemberment and Imhotep sucking the life out of people.

Worse than the body count is the film’s theology. Reincarnation is a central story point as visions of a past life lead Evelyn to realize that she was the princess Nefertiri. Power comes from sorcery and occult chants (a reference to the "good book" leads one hero to consult a book of the dead in order to bring another back to life).

In the climax, Rick and Evelyn’s marriage is more than affectionate; it proves to be a formidable, selfless force. Nice thought. If only it hadn’t been shrouded by 2 hours of darkness.
Sign up for the Plugged In eNewslettereNewsletter Get movie reviews on your cell phoneMobile Subscribe to our monthly print magazineMagazine

What's Inside the July Issue of Plugged In?
What's Inside the July Issue of Plugged In?
Subscribe Now!
Get a Gift When You Subscribe Now!

New Online
Up Front That Hough 'n' Puff Girl
Read Our Latest Up Front Article
Movie Review The Dark Knight
Read Movie Review
Video/DVD Review College Road Trip
Read Video/DVD Review
Music Review Mariah Carey
Read Music Review
TV Review Wizards of Waverly Place
Read TV Review
Game Review Call of Duty 4
Read Game Review



Brio & Beyond
Designed for teen girls ages 16 to 19, this monthly magazine is winning hearts for God's kingdom. It's the perfect step up for readers of "Brio" magazine.

HOME | MOVIES | DVD | MUSIC | TV | GAMES
UP FRONT | ABOUT US | CONTACT US | EN ESPAÑOL
FAMILY.ORG | RESOURCES | DONATE
Copyright © 2008 Focus on the Family • All rights reserved • Int'l copyright secured
'Shining a Light on the World of Popular Entertainment' is a service mark of, and
'Plugged In' is a registered trademark of Focus on the Family
(800) A-FAMILY (232-6459) • Privacy Policy/Terms of UseSite Map