Article 5CNZ7 The Intergalactic Adventures of Max Cloud review – video game send-up is virtually pointless

The Intergalactic Adventures of Max Cloud review – video game send-up is virtually pointless

by
Cath Clarke
from Technology | The Guardian on (#5CNZ7)

This affectionate spoof of early 90s gaming scores high in nostalgia, but lags without comedic heavy-hitters

Here is a throwaway space spoof, an affectionate send-up of the naffness of early 90s video games, that lovingly recreates the vintage details with its production design and fight choreography, but is troublingly low on scripted gags. It plays out in two dimensions: virtual and real life. Inside a computer game, explorer Max Cloud is an intergalactic hero, a preposterous macho knucklehead in latex, sturdily performed by actor and martial arts expert Scott Adkins, who has appeared in a few of the Marvels. I did wonder if an actor with the comic chops for some megaton silliness might have done some heavier lifting here.

Meanwhile, in actual Brooklyn, teenage gamer Sarah (Isabelle Allen) is hooked on the Max Cloud video game. After a fight with her dad she is mysteriously teleported into the game - and into the body of a minor character, chef Jake (Elliot James Langridge). You might consider this a waste of a female lead - putting her into the body of a male actor - but there she stays for most of the movie. For any chance of making it back to her real life she must complete the game with the help of her friend playing in her bedroom (Franz Drameh). John Hannah is painfully unfunny as ultra baddie Revengor, who wants to destroy planet Earth over a past snub.

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