‘Cars 2’: Franchise gets up to speed


‘CARS 2’

Grade: B

Credits: The voices of Larry the Cable Guy, Owen Wilson, Michael Caine, Emily Mortimer, John Turturro and Eddie Izzard; directed by John Lasseter and Brad Lewis

Running time: 1:44

Rating: G

Movie

Cars 2

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Star racecar Lightning McQueen and the incomparable tow truck Mater take their friendship to exciting new places in "Cars 2" when they compete in the first-ever World Grand Prix to determine the world's fastest car. But, the road to the championship is filled with plenty of potholes, detours and hilarious surprises when Mater gets caught up in an intriguing adventure of his own: international espionage. Torn between assisting Lightning McQueen in the high-profile race and towing the line in a top-secret spy mission, Mater's action-packed journey leads him on an explosive chase through the streets of Japan and Europe, trailed by his friends and watched by the whole world.

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By Roger Moore

Orlando Sentinel

By Pixar’s own standards, “Cars,” the scenic animated amble on the backroads of the Roadrunner’s desert Southwest, was the company’s worst film. Laugh-starved, lacking much in the line of action, it was a triumph of toy sales and product tie-in (NASCAR) over motion picture.

“Cars 2” overcompensates for those “Get off the fast track” mid-life crisis musings, but does so in an often funny and action-packed “James Bond goes racing” comedy. They turn more of the story over to the comic relief, the dopey tow truck Tow Mater, and get a sillier, more kid-friendly movie out of it.

In a Bond-style “opening gambit,” we a scheme involving deep sea oil rigs, a mystery pursued by Her Majesty’s Secret Service. Agent Finn McMissile (Michael Caine) drags the inexperienced Holley Shiftwell (Emily Mortimer, Caine’s “Harry Brown” co-star) along on the chase.

Mater (amusingly voiced by Larry the Cable Guy) is still in Radiator Springs, longing for those occasional visits from his stock car racer pal, Lightning McQueen. He’s a drawling hick of an embarrassment to McQueen (Owen Wilson), but at least he goads the Piston Cup champ into entering a world grand prix race series sponsored by Sir Miles Axlerod (Eddie Izzard), who is promoting his new alternative fuel “Allinol.”

But as McQueen and his road crew get into the racing and into a feud with a snotty Formula 1 champ (John Turturro, doing his broadest-funniest Italian accent), Mater is mistaken for a fallen American agent and sucked into intrigues with the Brits.

“You obviously have plenty of experience in the field,” McMissile observes.

“Well, I do live right next to one,” Mater drawls back.

Somebody is plotting to ruin this racing series, and at every turn, infamously ugly “lemons” from the automotive past (AMC Gremlins and Pacers, Yugos called “Hugos” here) are car-napping our heroes and causing wrecks in “Tow-kyo,” Italy and London. What might their motives be, and who could be their boss?

Bad guys must be foiled, Mater must figure out where his competence lies and Lightning has to realize that “Whoever finds a friend, finds a treasure.” Vintage Pixar messages.

And as in the first “Cars,” “Cars 2” is jammed with homages to vintage motoring — from Mini Coopers to Fiats, a Rolls Royce to a NASCAR Monte Carlo. This is a cartoon for the “Top Gear” dad to drag the kids to. But unlike the first “Cars,” the kids won’t mind this time. This Pixar product is better than the toys they sell along with it.