'aladdin': will smith is the live-action movie's best special effect

'aladdin': will smith is the live-action movie's best special effect

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Did _Aladdin_ just get woke? Looks like it. It’s an inspired choice to cast Guy Ritchie’s live-action version of Disney’s 1992 animated hit with persons of color. That’s Will Smith as the


Genie, embodying the character Robin Williams brought to hilarious vocal life in 1992 and doing the role proud. Mena Massoud who plays Aladdin, has roots in Egypt. Naomi Scott, who plays


Princess Jasmine, is of Indian descent. Nasim Pedrad, as her handmaiden, Dalia, was born in Iran. And Marwan Kenzari, as villainous Jafar, is partly Tunisian. An Arabian nights fantasy


filled with brown-skinned actors? Will wonders never cease? That the movie itself is a treat, beyond its good intentions, is icing on the cake, though clichés and ethnic stereotyping still


sneak in. Ritchie, best known for action pulverizers like _RocknRolla_ and _Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels_, doesn’t pull out the heavy ammo in this family-friendly, PG enterprise. But


he does give the story a kineticism that helps when you’re trying to match what animation can do. That’s mostly a losing battle, but the impulse is solid. The actors help enormously.


Massoud, so good on TV’s_ Jack Ryan_, is a live-wire as Aladdin, who swings through the streets of Agrabah like an acrobat while singing the Alan Menken/Howard Ashman-Tim Rice score. His


“One Jump Ahead” has a swirling energy you won’t find in the musical version currently on Broadway. Aladdin does have a problem: He yearns for Jasmine, a princess far beyond his pay grade.


You won’t recognize Jasmine from her cartoon origins. She no longer dreams only of love; she’d like to succeed her father the sultan (Navid Negahban) and make decisions for her country. She


even gets a new song, “Speechless,” with lyrics from _La La Land_ Oscar winners Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. And Scott makes the most of it. How do these two opposites come together? The


Genie, of course. Smith plays him human-sized and later as the CG-enhanced marvel that pops out of a lamp when Aladdin gives it a rub. Genie has only three wishes to grant, and you can’t


wish for more wishes. For starters, Aladdin wishes to be a prince worthy of wooing Jasmine. And Ritchie pulls out all the stops in “Prince Ali,” a circus-like production number. Smith,


however is the movie’s best special effect. He brings a Fresh Prince sass to the role and wisely never tries to imitate the inimitable Williams. Putting his own spin on Genie’s big song,


“Friend Like Me,” Smith is a comic blast. His scenes with Massoud have a scrappy charge that lift the mood when the plot mechanics get heavy. EDITOR’S PICKS And they do weigh things down at


midpoint when Ritchie and co-screenwriter John August lose their spark to get care of franchise business. The romance angle works fine, especially when Aladdin and Jasmine ride a magic


carpet (love that CG carpet) and duet on the Oscar-winning “A Whole New World.” But ginning up a love story for Genie and Jasmine’s maid seems like padding. And never once do you think that


Jafar is evil enough to hold back a happy ending. Still, every time _Aladdin_ drifts into bland or the songs take on the static feeling of a Broadway musical that’s been running too long,


Ritchie and the actors spring soaring, tumbling, freewheeling surprises that feed our rooting interest. Did we really need another live-action remake of a Disney classic? Maybe not. But


what’s there goes down easy.