A rogue artificial intelligence kidnaps the son of famed basketball player LeBron James, who then has to work with the Looney Tunes to win a basketball game.A rogue artificial intelligence kidnaps the son of famed basketball player LeBron James, who then has to work with the Looney Tunes to win a basketball game.A rogue artificial intelligence kidnaps the son of famed basketball player LeBron James, who then has to work with the Looney Tunes to win a basketball game.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 5 nominations
Ceyair J Wright
- Darius James
- (as Ceyair J. Wright)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the first Looney Tunes full length theatrical film to not have June Foray voicing Granny, following her death four years prior.
- GoofsWhen LeBron and Dom drop into the Warner 3000 Serververse, LeBron asks him if he's okay, and he says, "I'm fine, Dad.", but his lips never move.
- Quotes
Daffy Duck: Sam, shoot the ball!
[Yosemite Sam literally shoots the ball with his two guns, then Daffy, who turns his head in the reverse direction]
Daffy Duck: Let's try that again, shall we?
- Crazy creditsThe closing credits contain photos of the Looney Tunes interacting with the real world.
- ConnectionsEdited from Chuyện Tình Thế Chiến (1942)
- SoundtracksGhetto Supastar (That Is What You Are)
Written by Wyclef Jean, Pras Michel, Barry Gibb (as Barry Alan Gibb), Robin Gibb (as Robin Hugh Gibb), Maurice Gibb (as Maurice Ernest Gibb), James Brown, Ron Lenhoff (as Ronald Lenhoff), Bobby Byrd, and Ol' Dirty Bastard (as Russell Jones)
Performed by Pras Michel (as Pras) feat. Ol' Dirty Bastard and Mya
Mya appears courtesy of Interscope Records
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Contains a sample of "Get Up, Get into It, Get Involved"
Performed by James Brown
Courtesy of Republic Records
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Courtesy of 20th Century Studios
Featured review
In 1996, the original Space Jam "had something", so to speak. Seeing Michael Jordan on the big screen interacting with the Looney Tunes was a first-of-its-kind sort of experience, and despite the ridiculous concept it worked perfectly. Sadly, this long-await sequel captures absolutely none of that magic or fun.
For a very basic overview, Space Jam: A New Legacy sees Warner Brother's sentient artificial intelligence Al G. Rhythm (Don Cheadle) hatch a plan inside the "server-verse" to finally get the recognition he feels he deserves. Central to that mission? Abducting LeBron James and family to play in a high-stakes basketball game that pits father against son. Along the way, James must root out the old Looney gang for the epic court contest.
I will readily admit that nostalgia for the original got me into the theater to see this sequel. Absolutely no doubt about that. However, I will not concede that the same nostalgia is preventing me from giving this one a better rating than 3/10. "A New Legacy" is just a bad movie, plain and simple, for numerous reasons...
-Whereas Michael Jordan just had to show up and be himself in the original, here LeBron James is given the emotional heavy-lifting tasks. Predictably, it does not go well. He cannot believably convey a single emotion.
-A lot of people are criticizing the decision to showcase so many WB properties (Harry Potter, Superman, Batman, Matrix, Game of Thrones, etc.) in this film. That didn't so much bother me, and I actually enjoyed the concept of a tongue-in-cheek poking fun at those topics. But it all comes crashing down when the finished product looks suspiciously like an algorithm-created property that the plot was trying to skewer!
-The "Looney Tunes playing basketball" concept is no longer new (by virtue of the '96 effort), and nothing is done to spruce that avenue up whatsoever. Same old gags just replayed again. Also, the way we interact with athletes is so different now that James simply cannot command the cultural cache that MJ once did. Just having him physically present isn't enough like it may have been in the mid-90s.
Overall, "Space Jam: A New Legacy" is a clunker, no two ways around it. It isn't the worst film I've ever seen (it got me to chuckle a few times), but it is almost completely devoid of any real emotion or fun, in stark contrast to its predecessor that is still considered one of the most fun films ever made.
For a very basic overview, Space Jam: A New Legacy sees Warner Brother's sentient artificial intelligence Al G. Rhythm (Don Cheadle) hatch a plan inside the "server-verse" to finally get the recognition he feels he deserves. Central to that mission? Abducting LeBron James and family to play in a high-stakes basketball game that pits father against son. Along the way, James must root out the old Looney gang for the epic court contest.
I will readily admit that nostalgia for the original got me into the theater to see this sequel. Absolutely no doubt about that. However, I will not concede that the same nostalgia is preventing me from giving this one a better rating than 3/10. "A New Legacy" is just a bad movie, plain and simple, for numerous reasons...
-Whereas Michael Jordan just had to show up and be himself in the original, here LeBron James is given the emotional heavy-lifting tasks. Predictably, it does not go well. He cannot believably convey a single emotion.
-A lot of people are criticizing the decision to showcase so many WB properties (Harry Potter, Superman, Batman, Matrix, Game of Thrones, etc.) in this film. That didn't so much bother me, and I actually enjoyed the concept of a tongue-in-cheek poking fun at those topics. But it all comes crashing down when the finished product looks suspiciously like an algorithm-created property that the plot was trying to skewer!
-The "Looney Tunes playing basketball" concept is no longer new (by virtue of the '96 effort), and nothing is done to spruce that avenue up whatsoever. Same old gags just replayed again. Also, the way we interact with athletes is so different now that James simply cannot command the cultural cache that MJ once did. Just having him physically present isn't enough like it may have been in the mid-90s.
Overall, "Space Jam: A New Legacy" is a clunker, no two ways around it. It isn't the worst film I've ever seen (it got me to chuckle a few times), but it is almost completely devoid of any real emotion or fun, in stark contrast to its predecessor that is still considered one of the most fun films ever made.
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Space Jam: A New Legacy
- Filming locations
- Ohio Mansion, Akron, Ohio, USA(LeBron James's house)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $150,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $70,592,228
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $31,053,362
- Jul 18, 2021
- Gross worldwide
- $163,692,228
- Runtime1 hour 55 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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