Pitch
Perfect 3 ** / *****
Directed
by: Trish
Sie.
Written
by: Kay
Cannon and Mike White based on the book by Mickey Rapkin.
Starring:
Anna
Kendrick (Beca), Rebel Wilson (Fat Amy), Brittany Snow (Chloe), Anna Camp
(Aubrey), Hailee Steinfeld (Emily), Ester Dean (Cynthia Rose), Hana Mae Lee (Lilly),
Kelley Jakle (Jessica), Shelley Regner (Ashley), Chrissie Fit (Flo), Elizabeth
Banks (Gail), John Michael Higgins (John), John Lithgow (Fergus), Matt Lanter (Chicago),
Guy Burnet (Theo), Alexis Knapp (Stacie), DJ Khaled (DJ Khaled), Troy Ian Hall
(Zeke), Jessica Chaffin (Evan), Moises Arias (Pimp-Lo), Derek Mehn (Sunburst), Ruby
Rose (Calamity), Andy Allo (Serenity), Venzella Joy (Charity), Hannah Fairlight
(Veracity).
Pitch Perfect 3 is not a very
good movie. That probably isn’t too surprising – I didn’t think the first two
Pitch Perfect movies weren’t very good either. But Pitch Perfect 3 is a kind of
a fascinating example of what happens when a franchise is still popular – so money
can still be made from it – but they don’t really have any story left to tell.
All the main characters have aged out of University – therefore, they have no
reason to still be hanging out together, and certainly no reason to still be
doing their acapella singing together. They do have a little fun coming up with
an excuse as to why they still do – a USO tour for one last hurrah. The film
pretty much decides to play almost as a greatest hits collection – it delivers
the same type of scenes (like the riff-off) and brings back all the popular
characters (including John Michael Higgins and Elizabeth Banks as the clueless
media members), a show that goes poorly, then shows that go well, etc. But that
only takes up so much time, so the movie adds an odd subplot – about Fat Amy’s
dad (John Lithgow, who does the kind of Aussie accent you expect someone to do
when they didn’t know they supposed to do one until the first day of shooting) –
being a gangster. This gives an excuse for some action scenes – and pads out
the plot.
To be fair, the makers of Pitch
Perfect 3 know what fans of the series want, and do their best to deliver that.
And to be even more fair, it’s still true that star Anna Kendrick is still an
utter delight to watch, Rebel Wilson is still capable of delivering some laughs
(a few in the aren’t fat people funny when they fall down vein that left a bad
taste in my mouth in Pitch Perfect 2 – but not quite as many), and the rest of
the cast have some moments that can be fun (my favorite moment came when the
two girls in the group who never ever talks about get mentioned). The acapella
performances lack the kind of fun spark of the unexpected they had the first
time around, but they’re still fun – and the riff off is, of course, a
highlight.
It does kind of seem to me though
that Pitch Perfect 3 was made more as a background movie than something you
actually engage with though. It’s something to throw on Netflix when you’re
folding laundry, or doing your taxes, where you can look up during the musical
moments, and then ignore it for the rest of the time. Everyone involved is
going through the motions – and while that can be fun for a while, it doesn’t really
add up to much of a movie. The series is over now – and that’s for the best.
There was no more blood in this stone.
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