The Mummy is an attempt to reboot the adventure franchise and set up a "Dark Universe" of iconic monsters. In this version, Tom Cruise is a military man who accidentally awakens the mummy Ahmanet (Sofia Boutella).
Remember the 1999 film with Brendan Fraser. Of course you do, it is really good blockbuster entertainment that still holds up. That film begins with the story of how Imhotep was cursed. This new version opens with the construction of Crossrail. How exciting!
That is the main problem with the film: it's just not exciting. It definitely tries to be at times, but it just does not manage to be. Aswell as that, it tries to be scary, fun and serious. It fails at all this. If they succeeded at all of them then it would still have the same main problem, and that is that it is tonally all over the place. It keeps on trying to stick with one tone, but never for long enough to actually make an effect. I think that this is in part because of director Alex Kurtzman, best known as a screen writer. Before this he has only directed an episode of Alias and the drama People Like Us, which had a budget of only $16 million, of which it made back $12 million. His hiring perplexes me. The studio was probably looking for someone to push around, so they hired a man who directed a small budget film which failed to make its budget back and received a mixed critical reception. "We did it for the fans!" they cry out, as the film fails to engage properly. If that were so, YOU WOULD HAVE GIVEN BRENDAN FRASER A CAMEO YOU MONEY SUCKING VAMPIRES!
Hold on a second, I just need to calm down... I need to think happy thoughts... Wonder Woman, Fargo, the current series of Doctor Who is pretty good, exams are over, life's going swell. Thanks for bearing with me through that.
Anyway, this is a cash grab if I've ever seen one. This film was made with the sole intention of making money.
You know what's the popular thing right now? Cinematic universes! Add Russel Crowe to give some exposition and give the film its best, if unintentional, scene.
You know what's nostalgically profitable right now? The 1999 version of The Mummy! Let's reboot it, and not have any cast member cameos despite Rachel Weisz still making films and there being a huge internet following for Brendan Fraser.
Ypu know who's hot hot right now? That Tom Cruise is so hot right now! Let's give him a bland, forgettable character and add some "intrigue" to him for the sequel.
You know who has a new following from fan boys after two films? Sofia Boutella! Let's make her mummy nowhere near as memorable as Imhotep, but instead play to her strengths as a physical performer and give her nothing else to do.
You know where a popular place to film is and also has inticing tax breaks? London! Make the majority of the film set there despite it being miles from any sand and the only things remotely Ancient Egyptian are in the museums. But we're not going to show any of that.
You know where is currently politically unstable and problematic? Egypt! No scenes will be set there despite the fact that the movie is BASED ON ANCIENT EGYPTIAN MYTHS SO WE'RE GOING TO MOVE THE TOMB TO IRAQ AND THEN LEAVE AFRICA IMMEDIATELY AND NOT RETURN!
Throw in an unexperienced director the studio can boss around, 6 writers and a big CGI budget and we have ourselves a cash grab on our hands.
To be fair, after Crossrail, the film then tells us Ahmanet's back story (despite the fact that they then explain it naturally again during the story). And they solved the problem of sandless London in an inventive sequence. And when Russel Crowe tries to do a cockney accent it is laugh out loud funny.
Unless the next film in the Dark Universe gets good reviews, or I'm impressed by the marketing, I will not be supporting this franchise designed to make money.
In short: The Mummy is one of the laziest, most panderous attempts to make money recently. But hey, at least the finale didn't take place in China.