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The Mummy Returns

 
Movies:

The Mummy Returns

  • Director: Stephen Sommers
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Movie Type: Adventure Comedy, Creature Film
  • Themes: Mummies, Heroic Mission, Daring Rescues
  • Main Cast: Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, Arnold Vosloo, Oded Fehr
  • Release Year: 2001
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 129 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

This big-budget sequel from writer/director Stephen Sommers navigates much of the same cliffhanger territory as George Lucas and Steven Spielberg's Indiana Jones franchise. It is 1933, eight years after the events of The Mummy (1999). Legionnaire Rick O'Connell Brendan Fraser has married his Egyptologist girlfriend Evelyn Carnahan (Rachel Weisz) and the couple has settled in London, where they're raising their young son Alex (Freddie Boath). The family's domestic tranquility is shattered when the 3,000-year-old mummified corpse of Imhotep (Arnold Vosloo), which has been shipped to the British Museum, is resurrected once again to resume his evil quest for immortality. In the meantime, another ancient threat emerges in the form of the Scorpion King (professional wrestler Dwayne Johnson, aka. the Rock), a mighty warrior frozen in time with his supernatural army. In order to save his family, Rick is forced to seek a mythical pyramid of gold, facing marauding bands of pygmy skeletons, among other hazards. The Mummy Returns co-stars John Hannah, Oded Fehr, and Patricia Velasquez. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast

Patricia Velasquez - Meela/Anck-Su-Namun; Freddie Boath - Alex; Alun Armstrong - Curator; The Rock - The Scorpion King; Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje - Lock-Nah; Shaun Parkes - Izzy

Credit

Tony Reading - Art Director, Giles Masters - Art Director, Industrial Light & Magic - Animator, Megan Moran - Associate Producer, Kate Dowd - Casting, Joanna Colbert - Casting, John Bloomfield - Costume Designer, Cliff Lanning - First Assistant Director, Stephen Sommers - Director, Greg Michael - Second Unit Director, Bob Ducsay - Editor, Kelly Matsumoto - Editor, Bob Ducsay - Executive Producer, Don Zepfel - Executive Producer, Hiro Koda - Fights Choreographer, Alan Silvestri - Composer (Music Score), Nick Dudman - Makeup Special Effects, Allan Cameron - Production Designer, Adrian Biddle - Cinematographer, Sean Daniel - Producer, James Jacks - Producer, Peter Young - Set Designer, Industrial Light & Magic - Special Effects, Peter Glossop - Sound/Sound Designer, Leslie Shatz - Sound/Sound Designer, Steve Dent - Stunts Coordinator, Stephen Sommers - Screenwriter, Harvey Harrison - Additional Cinematography, Harvey Harrison - Second Unit Camera, John Andrew Berton, Jr. - Visual Effects Supervisor, Nick Dudman - Creature Effects, Industrial Light & Magic - Animation Effects, Industrial Light & Magic - Visual Effects

Similar Movies

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade; Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom; King Solomon's Mines; Raiders of the Lost Ark; Young Sherlock Holmes; Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold; Wild Wild West; Lara Croft: Tomb Raider; Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl; Van Helsing; National Treasure; Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
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Album Review: The Mummy Returns
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  • Artist: Alan Silvestri
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: May 01, 2001
  • Type: Soundtrack
  • Genre: Soundtrack

Review

Screenwriter and director Stephen Sommers of the 1999 remake of The Mummy is back for its 2001 sequel, along with the film's principal actors, notably Brendan Fraser. But Jerry Goldsmith, who scored The Mummy, has been replaced for The Mummy Returns by Alan Silvestri. Silvestri takes advantage of the film's period setting as well as its harking back to an earlier era of filmmaking to compose a score reminiscent of many movies in a similar genre. This is one action-adventure score that was not performed on synthesizers by the composer. Rather, Silvestri employs the Sinfonia of London Orchestra and Chorus, which is well-suited to his purposes. From the sound of the score, there can be few quiet moments in the movie, which like its predecessor combines old-time B-movie theatrics with state-of-the-art special effects. Silvestri keeps up with those effects by writing highly dramatic music full of sudden climaxes, martial beats, and big themes. When he has a little breathing space here and there, he evokes Middle Eastern motifs that recall Lawrence of Arabia, and his final theme music has a sweeping melodic feel very much in that vein. But most of the time, he is accompanying eye-popping visuals, and his music is suitably oversized, with the wordless chorus often doubling the tension-filled strings. Silvestri certainly isn't reinventing the wheel here, but rather using tried-and-true movie music methods to support the plot points in what is clearly a large-scale horror-adventure tale. The album concludes with an anachronistic pop/rock song by Live that also uses some exotic motifs. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Legend of the Scorpion King Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (4:55)
Scorpion Shoes Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (4:24)
Imhotep Unearthed Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (4:22)
Just an Oasis Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (1:25)
Bracelet Awakens Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (1:29)
Evy Kidnapped Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (5:55)
Rick's Tattoo Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (1:59)
Imhotep Reborn Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (2:42)
My First Bus Ride Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (7:45)
The Mushy Part Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (2:42)
A Gift and a Curse Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (5:32)
Medjai Commanders Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (2:03)
Evy Remembers Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (4:03)
Sandcastles Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (3:22)
We're in Trouble Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (2:18)
Pygmy Attack Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (3:31)
Come Back Evy Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (3:29)
The Mummy Returns Alan Silvestri Alan Silvestri (7:44)
Forever May Not Be Long Enough (Lyrics) Glen Ballard, Ed Kowalczyk Live (3:57)

Credits

Chris Lord-Alge (Mixing), Glen Ballard (Keyboards), Glen Ballard (Programming), Glen Ballard (Producer), David Bifano (Producer), Scott Campbell (Engineer), Patrick Dahlheimer (Bass), Joe Gastwirt (Mastering), Chad Gracey (Drums), Eric Jordan (Assistant Engineer), Brian Kilgore (Percussion), Ed Kowalczyk (Vocals), Dave Marquette (Assistant Engineer), Mark McKenzie (Orchestration), Dean Parks (Saz), Dean Parks (Oud), Dennis Sands (Engineer), Dennis Sands (Mixing), Alan Silvestri (Composer), Alan Silvestri (Conductor), Alan Silvestri (Producer), Chad Taylor (Guitar), Peter Willison (Orchestra Contractor), William Ross (Orchestration), Penny Bennett (Art Direction), Kenneth Karman (Music Editor), David Slonaker (Orchestration), Carla Leighton (Design), Toby Wood (Assistant Engineer), Jacqueline Tager (Assistant Music Editor), Matt Silva (Mixing), Brian Dixon (Assistant Engineer), Jolie Levine-Aller (Production Coordination), Rachel Cleverley (Production Assistant)
Games: The Mummy Returns
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Game Description

Based on the 2002 film starring Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz, The Mummy Returns is a swashbuckling action-adventure that distinguishes itself by featuring multiple play styles. While advancing through the game's storyline, players will experience four distinct types of action: levels that automatically scroll to the left or right as characters try to avoid being caught by a pursuing entity, one-on-one sword fights, traditional platform levels, and first-person shooting stages. Eleven levels are available to shoot, slice, and run through, each spanning two or three different segments.

The action mirrors the events as depicted in the movie, with the adventure beginning in the Temple of Thebes as Rick and Evy flee from a raging flood. The game then continues to the couple's London mansion, a museum, the streets of London, a desert canyon, jungle, pyramid tunnels, and ultimately the Scorpion King's cavern. Players can experience each level with a different character, from the ham-fisted Rick O'Connell to the enigmatic Ardeth Bay, while avoiding imminent dangers such as scarabs, scorpions, pits, quicksand, and more. Completing levels earns players passwords used to resume progress.
~ Scott Alan Marriott, All Game Guide

Production Credits

Company 1: GameBrains ; Design: Brett Bibby ; Programming: Kevin Choong, KC Tan ; Graphics: Ian Ng, David Khaw, Richard Chean, Chellamai Suppiah ; Audio: Jason Tai ; Concept Art: Sidharthan ; 3-D Reference Art: Johannes RJ ; Tools: Surya Ismail ; Administration: Jean Tan ; Additional Support: Randy Gocke, CL Wong, KC Foo ; Company 2: Universal Interactive Studios ; Producer: Eveline Cureteu ; Associate Producer: Steven Elwell ; Production Coordinator: Nick Torchia, Brian Stephens ; Additional Design and Production Testing: Nick Torchia, Sean Mountain, Josh Gottsegen ; Vice-President of Production: Richard Browne ; Product Marketing: Marcus Savino, Prity Patel, Shannon Diffner ; Company 3: Vivendi Universal Publishing ; Quality Assurance Director: Stuart Hay ; Quality Assurance Brand Manager: James Galloway ; Quality Assurance Project Lead: Michael Caradonna ; Quality Assurance Associate Lead: Willy Guerrero ; Quality Assurance Tester: Alexander Zherdev, Don Carroll, Linda Maier, Mark Jihanian, Robert Gardner, Mayra Orellana, Oleg Gokhman, Carol Wong, Benjamin Chan, Juliet Nimmo, Matthew Sweeney, Earl Reinhalter, Hien Nguyen, William Pham ; Documentation Design and Layout: Mary Wadman
~ Keith Adams, All Game Guide
Wikipedia: The Mummy Returns
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The Mummy Returns

Promotional poster
Directed by Stephen Sommers
Produced by Sean Daniel
James Jacks
Bob Ducsay
Written by Stephen Sommers
Starring Brendan Fraser
Rachel Weisz
Freddie Boath
John Hannah
Arnold Vosloo
Oded Fehr
Dwayne Johnson
Patricia Velasquez
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
Music by Alan Silvestri
Cinematography Adrian Biddle
Editing by Bob Ducsay
Kelly Matsumoto
Distributed by Universal Studios
Release date(s) 4 May 2001
Running time 131 mins
Country United Kingdom United Kingdom
Egypt Egypt
Morocco Morocco
Jordan Jordan
Language English
Arabic
Budget US$98,000,000 (est)
Gross revenue Domestic:
$202,019,785
Worldwide:
$433,013,274
Preceded by The Mummy
Followed by The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
The Scorpion King (Spin-off)

The Mummy Returns is a 2001 American adventure film written and directed by Stephen Sommers, starring Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, Oded Fehr, Patricia Velásquez, The Rock (Dwayne Johnson) and Arnold Vosloo. The film is a sequel to the 1999 film The Mummy, which primarily took place in 1926, and is set seven years later in 1933 (one year after the original 1932 film). Filming took place in London, Morocco, and Jordan.

The Mummy Returns inspired the 2002 spin-off film The Scorpion King which is set 5,000 years prior and whose titular character, played by The Rock (Dwayne Johnson), was introduced in this film. It was followed by the 2008 sequel The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor.

Contents

Plot

In the ancient Egyptian city of Thebes in 3067 BC, a warrior known as the Scorpion King led his army to conquer the city. However, the Scorpion King lost the campaign and his army was scattered into the desert of Ahm Shere. One by one they died of heat exhaustion, leaving only the Scorpion King. To survive, the Scorpion King swore an oath to the god of the underworld, Anubis, exchanging his soul for the power to defeat his enemies. Anubis granted his wish, creating an oasis to hide the Scorpion King's pyramid and giving him the Army of Anubis (an endless legion of demonic anthropomorphic jackal-headed warriors) to exact his revenge. The Army of Anubis swept across Egypt, destroying everything in their path, and once their task was finished Anubis claimed the Scorpion King's soul.

About 5,000 years later, in 1933, Evelyn and Rick O'Connell are exploring another pyramid with their son, Alex. Within, they discover the Bracelet of Anubis. As Rick and Evelyn narrowly escape drowning after reading an inscription with the bracelt, Alex encounters three looters who flee after the walls start to collapse. Alex then causes a number of the pillars to collapse, helping his mother and father escape. Back in London, their son Alex puts the bracelet on, providing him with directions to the oasis of Ahm Shere. It being the year of the Scorpion, Alex has seven days to reach the oasis, at which point the Scorpion King and his army will reawaken. Alex is captured by an Egyptian cult who have resurrected Imhotep: their purpose for doing so is to use Imhotep's power to defeat the Scorpion King, which would give him command of the Army of Anubis. The cult, led by Baltus Hafez, the curator of the British Museum, includes a psychopathic warrior named Lock-Nah and Meela Nais, the reincarnation of Imhotep's love Anck-su-namun. The O'Connells set out to rescue Alex, accompanied by Ardeth Bay, and Evelyn's brother, Jonathan. Rick's associate Izzy, an airship pilot from his past adventures, provides transportation.

The instructions are given to Alex in stages, and he leaves clues to the next location for his parents to find, and Ardeth sending a message to a growing army of Medjai, intended to stop the army of Anubis as it awakens. Along the way, the O'Connells learn of their connections to Imhotep and the Scorpion King himself: in a past life, Evelyn was Nefertiri, daughter of Seti I and protector of the Bracelet of Anubis. Rick is a Medjai, trusted to protect Evelyn. Together with their son Alex, who is the path to Ahm Shere, they make up the three sides of a pyramid. In the meantime, Imhotep brings Anck-su-namun's soul back from the underworld and places it in Meela's body, restoring her completely.

As the two groups arrive at the oasis where the Scorpion King's temple lies, the cultists are attacked by mummified pygmies and ambushed by Rick, Evelyn, Jonathan, and Ardeth Bey. The cultists are all killed with the exception of Hafez, their leader. Lock-Nah is then killed by Ardeth, who leaves the group to command Medjai army. Rick saves Alex and manages to get him to the pyramid moments before the bracelet can kill him, and Alex is able to remove it. However, when Jonathan and Evelyn catch up, Anck-su-namun walks into the pyramid courtyard with Imhotep and kills Evelyn. Hafez takes the bracelet and uses it to release the Army of Anubis, whom the Medjai engage in battle.

Imhotep's powers are stripped from him by Anubis, forcing him to fight the Scorpion King as a mortal. Rick enters the temple as Imhotep summons the Scorpion King, now in the form of a half-human, half-scorpion monster. Imhotep feigns allegiance to the King, who then focuses his wrath on Rick, killing Hafez when he stumbles in. Meanwhile, Jonathan distracts Anck-su-namun while Alex uses the Book of the Dead to revive his mother. Evelyn engages in a battle with Anck-su-namun. At the same time, Ardeth and the remains of the Medjai army defeat the first wave of Anubis warriors, only to encounter the full force of Anubis' army moments later.

Rick's battle is going badly, but sees a series of illustrations on the walls depicting a person sharing the mark on his wrist. The illustrations reveal that the Scorpion King can be killed by the Spear of Osiris, which Jonathan has been carrying throughout the film. Although Jonathan's attempt to throw the spear results in Imhotep catching it and nearly delivering the blow himself, Rick is able to intercept it and stab the Scorpion King himself. He orders him (and his army) back to the underworld, turning both the Scorpion King and the Army of Anubis into sand.

Rick and Imhotep race to escape the now-collapsing temple. A chasm leading to the underworld appears, and Rick and Imhotep fall in, barely managing to cling onto the edges of the opening. Evelyn enters the room and manages to save Rick, but Anck-su-namun is unwilling to do the same for Imhotep. Shocked and heartbroken, Imhotep willingly casts himself into the chasm; meanwhile, as she flees, Anck-su-namun accidentally falls into a pit of flesh-eating scorpions. The family climbs to the top of the pyramid and meet up with Izzy. They escape unharmed and with a massive diamond that Jonathan pulled from the top of the pyramid. The film ends with the group setting off into the sunset, a grateful Ardeth bidding them farewell from afar, and Jonathan and Izzy arguing over who should keep the diamond as they leave.

Cast

Rick O'Connell (Brendan Fraser) battles Imhotep (Arnold Vosloo) in the pyramid of the Scorpion King.
Actor Role
Brendan Fraser Rick O'Connell
Rachel Weisz Evelyn Carnahan O'Connell/Princess Nefertiri
John Hannah Jonathan Carnahan
Arnold Vosloo High Priest Imhotep
Oded Fehr Ardeth Bay
Dwayne Johnson Mathayus The Scorpion King
Freddie Boath Alex O'Connell
Patricia Velásquez Meela Nais/Anck-su-namun
Alun Armstrong Baltus Hafez
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje Lock-Nah
Shaun Parkes Izzy Buttons
Bruce Byron Red
Joe Dixon Jacques
Tom Fisher Spivey
Quill Roberts Shafek
Aharon Ipalé Pharaoh Seti I

Reception

The film was a box office hit in 2001, earning more money than the first movie. Previously, Stephen Sommers directed Deep Rising, The Jungle Book, as well as The Mummy. His next film was Van Helsing in 2004.

Critical reaction was mixed. The Mummy Returns currently holds a 47% "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 131 reviews.[1] Metacritic reported, based on 31 reviews, an average rating of 48 out of 100.[2]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film two stars (out of four), saying that "The mistake of The Mummy Returns is to abandon the characters, and to use the plot only as a clothesline for special effects and action sequences."[3] James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave the film two and a half stars (out of four), calling it "hollow, lightweight entertainment—not unpleasant, but far from the summer's definitive action/adventure flick.[4]

Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times gave the film a positive review, praising its "constant plot turns, cheeky sensibility and omnipresent action sequences."[5] Todd McCarthy of Variety praised "the nonstop action of the final hour," saying that it "bursts with visual goodies."[6]

Joe Morgenstern of the Wall Street Journal gave the film a negative review, saying that it "has all of the clank but none of the swank of the previous version."[2] Charles Taylor of Salon.com was also not impressed, calling The Mummy Returns "everything the first Mummy was fun for not being."[7]

Box office

The Mummy Returns proved to be even more successful than the first installment; on its opening day the film earned $24,134,667. The films grossed $202,019,785 in the United States and Canada box offices and $230,993,489 elsewhere, totaling in $433,013,274 worldwide.[8]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack to The Mummy Returns was released on May 1, 2001 by Decca Records. It contains the score composed and conducted by Alan Silvestri, and the song "Forever May Not Be Long Enough" by the rock band Live. The version featured on the soundtrack differs slightly from the album version of the song.

Video game

The Mummy Returns video game was released on the PlayStation 2 on October 4, 2001 and Game Boy Color on May 11, 2001. On the PlayStation 2 version, the player can choose to play as Rick, with the game ending similar to the movie, or Imhotep, with him taking control of Anubis's army.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Games. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Game Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Mummy Returns" Read more

 

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