Space Jam: A New Legacy

Space Jam: A New Legacy

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Description

When LeBron and his young son Dom are trapped in a digital space by a rogue A.I., LeBron must get them home safe by leading Bugs, Lola Bunny and the whole gang of notoriously undisciplined Looney Tunes to victory over the A.I.’s digitized champions on the court. It’s Tunes versus Goons in the highest-stakes challenge of his life.

Credits: TheMovieDb.

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2,515 comments on “Space Jam: A New Legacy

  1. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  3. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  4. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  5. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  6. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  7. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  8. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  9. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  10. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  11. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  12. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  13. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  14. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  15. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  16. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  17. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  18. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  19. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  20. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  21. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  22. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  23. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  24. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  25. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  26. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  27. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  28. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  29. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  30. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  31. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  32. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  33. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  34. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  35. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  36. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  37. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  38. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  39. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  40. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  41. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  42. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  43. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  44. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  45. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  46. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  47. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  48. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  49. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  50. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  51. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  52. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  53. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  54. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  55. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  56. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  57. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  58. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  59. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  60. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  61. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  62. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  63. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  64. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  65. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  66. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  67. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  68. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  69. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  70. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  71. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  72. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  73. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  74. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  75. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  76. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  77. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  78. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  79. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  80. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  81. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  82. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  83. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  84. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  85. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  86. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  87. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  88. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  89. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  90. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  91. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  92. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  93. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  94. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  95. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  96. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  97. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  98. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  99. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  100. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  101. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  102. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  103. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  104. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  105. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  106. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  107. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  108. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  109. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  110. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  111. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  112. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  113. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  114. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  115. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  116. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  117. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  118. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  119. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  120. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  121. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  122. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  123. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  124. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  125. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  126. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  127. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  128. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  129. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  130. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  131. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  132. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  133. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  134. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  135. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  136. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  137. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  138. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  139. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  140. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  141. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  142. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  143. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  144. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  145. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  146. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  147. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  148. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  149. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  150. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  151. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  152. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  153. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  154. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  155. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  156. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  157. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  158. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  159. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  160. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  161. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  162. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  163. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  164. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  165. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  166. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  167. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  168. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  169. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  170. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  171. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  172. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  173. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  174. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  175. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  176. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  177. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  178. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  179. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  180. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  181. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  182. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  183. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  184. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  185. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  186. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  187. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  188. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  189. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  190. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  191. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  192. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  193. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  194. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  195. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  196. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  197. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  198. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  199. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  200. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  201. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  202. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  203. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  204. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  205. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  206. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  207. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  208. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  209. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  210. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  211. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  212. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  213. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  214. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  215. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  216. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  217. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  218. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  219. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  220. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  221. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  222. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  223. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  224. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  225. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  226. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  227. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  228. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  229. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  230. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  231. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  232. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  233. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  234. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  235. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  236. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  237. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  238. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  239. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  240. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  241. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  242. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  243. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  244. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  245. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  246. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  247. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  248. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  249. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  250. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  251. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  252. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  253. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  254. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  255. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  256. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  257. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  258. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  259. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  260. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  261. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  262. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  263. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  264. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  265. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  266. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  267. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  268. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  269. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  270. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  271. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  272. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  273. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  274. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  275. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  276. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  277. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  278. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  279. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  280. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  281. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  282. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  283. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  284. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  285. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  286. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  287. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  288. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  289. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  290. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  291. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  292. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  293. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  294. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  295. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  296. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  297. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  298. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  299. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  300. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  301. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  302. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  303. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  304. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  305. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  306. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  307. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  308. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  309. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  310. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  311. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  312. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  313. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  314. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  315. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  316. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  317. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  318. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  319. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  320. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  321. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  322. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  323. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  324. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  325. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  326. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  327. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  328. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  329. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  330. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  331. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  332. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  333. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  334. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  335. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  336. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  337. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  338. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  339. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  340. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  341. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  342. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  343. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  344. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  345. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  346. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  347. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  348. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  349. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  350. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  351. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  352. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  353. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  354. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  355. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  356. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  357. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  358. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  359. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  360. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  361. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  362. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  363. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  364. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  365. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  366. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  367. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  368. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  369. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  370. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  371. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  372. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  373. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  374. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  375. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  376. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  377. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  378. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  379. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  380. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  381. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  382. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  383. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  384. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  385. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  386. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  387. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  388. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  389. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  390. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  391. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  392. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  393. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  394. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  395. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  396. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  397. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  398. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  399. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  400. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  401. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  402. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  403. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  404. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  405. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  406. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  407. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  408. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  409. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  410. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  411. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  412. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  413. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  414. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  415. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  416. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  417. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  418. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  419. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  420. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  421. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  422. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  423. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  424. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  425. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  426. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  427. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  428. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  429. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  430. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  431. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  432. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  433. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  434. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  435. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  436. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  437. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  438. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  439. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  440. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  441. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  442. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  443. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  444. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  445. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  446. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  447. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  448. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  449. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  450. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  451. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  452. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  453. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  454. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  455. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  456. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  457. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  458. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  459. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  460. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  461. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  462. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  463. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  464. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  465. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  466. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  467. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  468. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  469. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  470. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  471. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  472. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  473. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  474. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  475. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  476. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  477. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  478. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  479. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  480. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  481. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  482. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  483. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  484. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  485. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  486. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  487. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  488. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  489. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  490. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  491. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  492. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  493. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  494. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  495. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  496. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  497. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  498. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  499. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  500. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  501. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  502. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  503. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  504. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  505. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  506. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  507. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  508. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  509. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  510. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  511. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  512. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  513. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  514. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  515. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  516. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  517. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  518. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  519. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  520. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  521. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  522. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  523. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  524. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  525. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  526. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  527. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  528. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  529. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  530. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  531. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  532. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  533. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  534. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  535. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  536. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  537. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  538. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  539. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  540. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  541. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  542. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  543. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  544. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  545. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  546. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  547. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  548. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  549. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  550. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  551. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  552. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  553. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  554. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  555. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  556. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  557. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  558. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  559. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  560. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  561. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  562. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  563. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  564. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  565. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  566. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  567. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  568. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  569. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  570. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  571. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  572. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  573. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  574. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  575. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  576. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  577. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  578. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  579. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  580. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  581. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  582. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  583. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  584. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  585. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  586. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  587. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  588. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  589. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  590. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  591. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  592. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  593. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  594. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  595. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  596. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  597. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  598. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  599. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  600. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  601. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  602. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  603. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  604. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  605. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  606. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  607. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  608. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  609. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  610. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  611. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  612. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  613. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  614. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  615. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  616. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  617. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  618. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  619. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  620. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  621. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  622. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  623. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  624. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  625. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  626. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  627. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  628. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  629. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  630. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  631. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  632. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  633. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  634. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  635. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  636. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  637. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  638. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  639. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  640. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  641. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  642. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  643. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  644. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  645. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  646. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  647. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  648. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  649. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  650. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  651. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  652. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  653. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  654. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  655. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  656. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  657. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  658. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  659. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  660. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  661. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  662. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  663. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  664. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  665. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  666. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  667. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  668. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  669. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  670. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  671. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  672. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  673. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  674. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  675. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  676. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  677. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  678. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  679. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  680. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  681. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  682. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  683. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  684. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  685. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  686. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  687. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  688. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  689. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  690. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  691. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  692. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  693. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  694. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  695. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  696. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  697. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  698. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  699. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  700. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  701. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  702. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  703. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  704. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  705. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  706. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  707. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  708. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  709. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  710. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  711. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  712. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  713. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  714. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  715. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  716. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  717. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  718. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  719. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  720. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  721. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  722. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  723. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  724. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  725. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  726. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  727. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  728. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  729. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  730. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  731. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  732. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  733. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  734. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  735. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  736. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  737. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  738. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  739. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  740. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  741. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  742. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  743. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  744. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  745. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  746. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  747. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  748. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  749. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  750. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  751. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  752. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  753. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  754. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  755. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  756. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  757. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  758. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  759. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  760. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  761. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  762. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  763. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  764. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  765. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  766. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  767. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  768. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  769. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  770. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  771. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  772. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  773. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  774. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  775. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  776. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  777. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  778. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  779. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  780. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  781. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  782. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  783. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  784. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  785. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  786. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  787. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  788. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  789. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  790. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  791. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  792. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  793. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  794. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  795. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  796. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  797. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  798. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  799. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  800. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  801. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  802. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  803. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  804. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  805. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  806. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  807. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  808. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  809. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  810. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  811. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  812. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  813. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  814. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  815. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  816. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  817. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  818. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  819. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  820. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  821. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  822. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  823. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  824. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  825. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  826. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  827. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  828. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  829. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  830. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  831. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  832. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  833. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  834. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  835. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  836. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  837. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  838. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  839. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  840. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  841. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  842. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  843. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  844. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  845. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  846. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  847. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  848. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  849. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  850. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  851. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  852. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  853. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  854. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  855. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  856. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  857. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  858. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  859. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  860. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  861. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  862. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  863. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  864. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  865. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  866. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  867. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  868. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  869. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  870. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  871. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  872. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  873. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  874. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  875. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  876. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  877. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  878. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  879. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  880. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  881. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  882. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  883. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  884. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  885. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  886. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  887. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  888. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  889. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  890. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  891. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  892. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  893. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  894. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  895. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  896. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  897. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  898. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  899. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  900. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  901. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  902. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  903. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  904. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  905. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  906. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  907. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  908. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  909. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  910. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  911. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  912. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  913. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  914. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  915. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  916. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  917. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  918. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  919. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  920. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  921. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  922. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  923. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  924. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  925. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  926. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  927. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  928. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  929. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  930. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  931. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  932. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  933. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  934. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  935. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  936. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  937. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  938. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  939. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  940. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  941. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  942. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  943. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  944. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  945. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  946. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  947. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  948. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  949. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  950. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  951. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  952. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  953. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  954. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  955. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  956. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  957. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  958. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  959. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  960. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  961. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  962. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  963. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  964. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  965. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  966. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  967. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  968. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  969. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  970. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  971. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  972. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  973. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  974. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  975. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  976. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  977. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  978. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  979. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  980. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  981. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  982. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  983. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  984. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  985. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  986. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  987. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  988. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  989. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  990. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  991. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  992. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  993. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  994. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  995. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  996. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  997. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  998. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  999. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1000. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1001. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1002. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1003. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1004. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1005. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1006. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1007. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1008. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1009. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1010. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1011. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1012. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1013. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1014. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1015. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1016. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1017. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1018. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1019. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1020. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1021. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1022. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1023. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1024. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1025. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1026. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1027. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1028. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1029. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1030. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1031. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1032. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1033. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1034. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1035. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1036. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1037. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1038. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1039. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1040. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1041. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1042. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1043. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1044. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1045. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1046. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1047. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1048. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1049. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1050. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1051. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1052. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1053. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1054. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1055. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1056. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1057. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1058. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1059. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1060. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1061. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1062. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1063. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1064. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1065. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1066. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1067. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1068. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1069. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1070. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1071. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1072. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1073. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1074. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1075. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1076. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1077. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1078. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1079. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1080. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1081. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1082. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1083. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1084. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1085. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1086. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1087. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1088. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1089. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1090. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1091. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1092. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1093. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1094. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1095. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1096. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1097. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1098. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1099. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1100. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1101. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1102. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1103. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1104. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1105. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1106. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1107. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1108. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1109. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1110. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1111. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1112. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1113. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1114. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1115. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1116. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1117. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1118. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1119. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1120. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1121. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1122. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1123. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1124. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1125. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1126. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1127. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1128. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1129. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1130. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1131. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1132. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1133. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1134. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1135. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1136. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1137. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1138. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1139. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1140. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1141. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1142. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1143. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1144. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1145. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1146. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1147. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1148. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1149. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1150. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1151. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1152. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1153. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1154. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1155. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1156. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1157. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1158. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1159. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1160. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1161. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1162. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1163. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1164. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1165. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1166. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1167. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1168. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1169. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1170. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1171. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1172. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1173. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1174. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1175. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1176. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1177. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1178. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1179. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1180. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1181. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1182. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1183. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1184. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1185. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1186. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1187. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1188. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1189. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1190. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1191. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1192. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1193. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1194. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1195. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1196. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1197. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1198. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1199. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1200. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1201. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1202. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1203. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1204. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1205. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1206. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1207. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1208. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1209. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1210. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1211. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1212. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1213. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1214. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1215. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1216. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1217. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1218. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1219. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1220. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1221. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1222. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1223. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1224. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1225. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1226. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1227. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1228. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1229. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1230. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1231. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1232. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1233. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1234. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1235. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1236. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1237. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1238. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1239. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1240. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1241. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1242. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1243. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1244. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1245. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1246. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1247. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1248. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1249. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1250. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1251. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1252. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1253. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1254. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1255. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1256. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1257. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1258. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1259. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1260. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1261. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1262. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1263. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1264. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1265. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1266. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1267. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1268. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1269. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1270. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1271. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1272. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1273. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1274. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1275. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1276. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1277. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1278. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1279. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1280. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1281. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1282. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1283. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1284. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1285. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1286. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1287. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1288. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1289. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1290. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1291. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1292. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1293. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1294. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1295. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1296. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1297. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1298. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1299. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1300. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1301. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1302. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1303. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1304. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1305. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1306. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1307. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1308. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1309. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1310. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1311. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1312. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1313. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1314. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1315. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1316. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1317. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1318. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1319. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1320. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1321. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1322. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1323. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1324. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1325. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1326. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1327. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1328. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1329. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1330. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1331. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1332. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1333. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1334. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1335. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1336. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1337. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1338. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1339. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1340. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1341. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1342. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1343. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1344. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1345. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1346. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1347. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1348. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1349. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1350. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1351. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1352. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1353. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1354. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1355. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1356. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1357. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1358. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1359. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1360. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1361. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1362. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1363. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1364. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1365. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1366. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1367. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1368. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1369. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1370. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1371. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1372. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1373. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1374. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1375. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1376. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1377. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1378. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1379. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1380. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1381. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1382. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1383. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1384. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1385. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1386. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1387. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1388. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1389. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1390. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1391. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1392. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1393. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1394. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1395. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1396. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1397. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1398. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1399. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1400. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1401. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1402. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1403. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1404. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1405. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1406. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1407. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1408. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1409. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1410. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1411. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1412. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1413. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1414. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1415. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1416. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1417. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1418. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1419. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1420. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1421. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1422. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1423. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1424. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1425. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1426. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1427. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1428. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1429. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1430. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1431. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1432. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1433. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1434. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1435. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1436. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1437. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1438. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1439. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1440. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1441. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1442. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1443. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1444. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1445. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1446. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1447. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1448. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1449. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1450. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1451. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1452. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1453. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1454. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1455. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1456. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1457. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1458. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1459. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1460. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1461. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1462. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1463. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1464. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1465. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1466. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1467. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1468. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1469. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1470. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1471. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1472. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1473. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1474. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1475. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1476. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1477. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1478. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1479. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1480. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1481. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1482. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1483. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1484. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1485. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1486. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1487. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1488. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1489. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1490. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1491. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1492. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1493. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1494. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1495. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1496. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1497. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1498. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1499. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1500. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1501. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1502. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1503. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1504. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1505. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1506. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1507. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1508. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1509. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1510. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1511. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1512. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1513. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1514. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1515. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1516. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1517. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1518. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1519. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1520. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1521. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1522. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1523. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1524. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1525. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1526. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1527. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1528. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1529. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1530. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1531. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1532. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1533. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1534. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1535. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1536. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1537. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1538. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1539. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1540. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1541. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1542. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1543. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1544. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1545. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1546. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1547. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1548. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1549. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1550. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1551. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1552. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1553. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1554. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1555. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1556. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1557. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1558. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1559. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1560. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1561. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1562. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1563. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1564. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1565. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1566. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1567. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1568. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1569. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1570. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1571. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1572. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1573. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1574. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1575. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1576. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1577. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1578. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1579. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1580. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1581. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1582. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1583. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1584. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1585. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1586. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1587. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1588. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1589. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1590. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1591. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1592. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1593. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1594. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1595. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1596. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1597. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1598. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1599. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1600. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1601. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1602. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1603. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1604. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1605. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1606. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1607. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1608. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1609. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1610. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1611. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1612. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1613. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1614. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1615. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1616. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1617. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1618. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1619. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1620. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1621. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1622. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1623. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1624. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1625. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1626. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1627. Filipe Manuel Dias Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1628. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1629. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1630. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1631. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1632. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1633. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1634. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1635. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1636. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1637. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1638. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1639. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1640. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1641. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1642. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1643. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1644. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1645. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1646. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1647. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1648. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1649. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1650. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1651. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1652. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1653. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1654. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1655. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1656. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1657. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1658. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1659. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1660. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1661. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1662. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1663. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1664. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1665. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1666. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1667. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1668. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1669. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1670. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1671. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1672. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1673. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1674. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1675. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1676. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1677. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1678. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1679. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1680. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1681. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1682. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1683. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1684. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1685. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1686. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1687. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1688. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1689. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1690. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1691. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1692. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1693. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1694. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1695. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1696. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1697. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1698. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1699. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1700. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1701. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1702. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1703. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1704. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1705. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1706. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1707. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1708. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1709. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1710. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1711. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1712. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1713. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1714. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1715. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1716. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1717. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1718. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1719. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1720. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1721. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1722. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1723. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1724. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1725. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1726. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1727. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1728. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1729. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1730. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1731. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1732. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1733. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1734. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1735. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1736. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1737. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1738. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1739. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1740. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1741. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1742. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1743. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1744. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1745. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1746. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1747. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1748. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1749. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1750. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1751. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1752. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1753. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1754. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1755. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1756. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1757. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1758. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1759. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1760. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1761. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1762. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1763. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1764. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1765. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1766. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1767. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1768. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1769. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1770. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1771. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1772. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1773. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1774. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1775. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1776. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1777. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1778. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1779. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1780. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1781. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1782. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1783. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1784. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1785. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1786. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1787. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1788. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1789. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1790. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1791. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1792. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1793. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1794. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1795. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1796. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1797. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1798. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1799. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1800. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1801. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1802. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1803. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1804. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1805. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1806. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1807. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1808. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1809. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1810. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1811. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1812. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1813. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1814. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1815. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1816. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1817. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1818. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1819. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1820. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1821. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1822. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1823. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1824. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1825. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1826. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1827. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1828. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1829. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1830. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1831. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1832. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1833. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1834. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1835. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1836. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1837. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1838. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1839. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1840. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1841. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1842. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1843. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1844. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1845. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1846. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1847. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1848. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1849. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1850. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1851. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1852. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1853. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1854. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1855. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1856. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1857. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1858. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1859. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1860. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1861. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1862. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1863. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1864. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1865. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1866. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1867. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1868. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1869. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1870. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1871. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1872. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1873. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1874. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1875. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1876. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1877. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1878. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1879. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1880. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1881. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1882. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1883. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1884. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1885. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1886. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1887. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1888. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1889. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1890. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1891. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1892. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1893. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1894. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1895. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1896. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1897. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1898. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1899. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1900. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1901. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1902. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1903. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1904. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1905. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1906. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1907. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1908. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1909. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1910. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1911. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1912. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1913. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1914. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1915. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1916. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1917. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1918. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1919. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1920. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1921. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1922. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1923. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1924. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1925. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1926. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1927. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1928. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1929. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1930. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1931. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1932. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1933. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1934. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1935. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1936. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1937. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1938. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1939. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1940. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1941. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1942. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1943. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1944. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1945. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1946. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1947. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1948. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1949. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1950. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1951. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1952. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1953. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1954. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1955. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1956. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1957. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1958. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1959. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1960. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1961. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1962. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1963. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1964. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1965. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1966. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1967. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1968. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1969. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1970. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1971. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1972. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1973. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1974. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1975. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1976. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1977. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1978. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1979. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1980. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1981. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1982. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1983. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1984. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1985. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1986. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1987. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1988. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1989. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1990. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1991. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1992. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1993. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1994. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1995. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  1996. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  1997. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  1998. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  1999. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2000. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2001. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2002. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2003. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2004. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2005. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2006. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2007. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2008. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2009. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2010. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2011. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2012. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2013. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2014. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2015. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2016. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2017. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2018. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2019. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2020. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2021. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2022. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2023. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2024. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2025. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2026. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2027. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2028. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2029. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2030. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2031. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2032. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2033. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2034. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2035. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2036. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2037. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2038. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2039. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2040. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2041. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2042. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2043. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2044. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2045. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2046. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2047. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2048. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2049. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2050. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2051. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2052. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2053. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2054. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2055. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2056. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2057. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2058. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2059. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2060. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2061. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2062. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2063. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2064. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2065. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2066. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2067. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2068. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2069. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2070. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2071. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2072. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2073. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2074. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2075. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2076. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2077. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2078. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2079. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2080. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2081. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2082. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2083. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2084. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2085. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2086. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2087. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2088. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2089. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2090. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2091. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2092. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2093. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2094. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2095. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2096. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2097. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2098. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2099. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2100. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2101. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2102. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2103. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2104. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2105. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2106. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2107. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2108. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2109. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2110. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2111. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2112. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2113. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2114. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2115. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2116. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2117. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2118. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2119. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2120. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2121. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2122. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2123. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2124. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2125. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2126. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2127. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2128. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2129. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2130. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2131. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2132. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2133. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2134. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2135. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2136. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2137. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2138. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2139. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2140. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2141. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2142. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2143. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2144. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2145. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2146. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2147. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2148. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2149. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2150. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2151. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2152. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2153. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2154. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2155. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2156. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2157. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2158. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2159. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2160. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2161. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2162. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2163. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2164. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2165. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2166. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2167. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2168. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2169. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2170. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2171. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2172. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2173. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2174. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2175. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2176. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2177. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2178. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2179. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2180. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2181. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2182. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2183. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2184. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2185. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2186. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2187. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2188. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2189. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2190. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2191. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2192. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2193. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2194. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2195. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2196. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2197. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2198. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2199. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2200. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2201. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2202. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2203. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2204. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2205. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2206. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2207. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2208. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2209. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2210. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2211. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2212. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2213. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2214. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2215. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2216. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2217. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2218. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2219. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2220. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2221. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2222. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2223. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2224. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2225. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2226. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2227. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2228. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2229. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2230. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2231. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2232. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2233. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2234. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2235. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2236. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2237. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2238. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2239. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2240. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2241. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2242. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2243. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2244. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2245. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2246. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2247. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2248. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2249. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2250. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2251. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2252. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2253. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2254. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2255. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2256. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2257. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2258. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2259. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2260. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2261. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2262. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2263. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2264. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2265. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2266. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2267. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2268. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2269. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2270. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2271. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2272. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2273. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2274. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2275. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2276. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2277. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2278. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2279. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2280. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2281. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2282. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2283. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2284. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2285. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2286. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2287. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2288. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2289. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2290. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2291. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2292. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2293. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2294. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2295. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2296. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2297. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2298. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2299. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2300. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2301. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2302. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2303. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2304. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2305. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2306. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2307. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2308. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2309. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2310. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2311. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2312. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2313. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2314. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2315. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2316. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2317. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2318. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2319. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2320. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2321. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2322. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2323. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2324. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2325. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2326. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2327. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2328. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2329. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2330. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2331. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2332. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2333. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2334. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2335. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2336. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2337. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2338. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2339. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2340. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2341. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2342. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2343. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2344. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2345. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2346. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2347. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2348. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2349. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2350. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2351. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2352. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2353. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2354. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2355. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2356. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2357. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2358. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2359. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2360. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2361. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2362. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2363. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2364. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2365. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2366. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2367. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2368. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2369. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2370. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2371. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2372. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2373. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2374. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2375. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2376. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2377. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2378. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2379. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2380. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2381. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2382. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2383. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2384. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2385. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2386. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2387. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2388. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2389. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2390. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2391. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2392. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2393. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2394. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2395. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2396. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2397. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2398. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2399. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2400. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2401. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2402. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2403. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2404. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2405. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2406. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2407. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2408. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2409. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2410. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2411. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2412. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2413. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2414. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2415. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2416. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2417. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2418. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2419. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2420. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2421. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2422. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2423. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2424. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2425. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2426. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2427. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2428. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2429. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2430. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2431. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2432. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2433. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2434. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2435. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2436. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2437. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2438. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2439. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2440. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2441. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2442. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2443. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2444. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2445. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2446. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2447. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2448. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2449. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2450. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2451. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2452. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2453. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2454. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2455. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2456. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2457. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2458. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2459. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2460. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2461. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2462. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2463. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2464. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2465. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2466. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2467. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2468. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2469. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2470. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2471. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2472. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2473. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2474. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2475. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2476. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2477. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2478. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2479. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2480. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2481. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2482. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2483. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2484. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2485. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2486. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2487. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2488. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2489. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2490. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2491. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2492. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2493. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2494. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2495. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2496. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2497. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2498. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2499. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2500. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2501. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2502. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2503. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2504. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2505. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2506. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2507. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2508. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2509. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2510. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2511. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply
  2512. joshjensen02 on

    A very creative alternate to the original. The story line is all original and updated with current times. Lots of great puns and looney jokes. Better than what I expected. However nobody can be Michael Jordan

    Reply
  2513. Peter89Spencer on

    Pros:
    – Kong and the Iron Giant gave eachother a fist bump!
    – It featured many characters from Warner Bros.
    – Porky Pig roasting Al-G Rhythm in a rap battle
    – Gabriel Iglesias and Zendaya provided the voices of Speedy Gonzales and Lola Bunny, respectively
    – It was better than the first film
    – LeBron James!
    – There could a be a possible Space Jam spin off titled Wonder Bunny!

    Cons:
    – They never showed the Pepe Le Pew scene.
    – I was hoping the Tune Squad would play against villains of Warner Bros.; Wicked Witch of the West, Sauron, Pennywise/It, Agent Smith…
    – I was expecting a surprise twist, where Al-G Rhythm turns out not to be a bad guy but was actually helping LeBron understand his son more. The writers should’ve done more.
    – Cringing moments

    Reply
  2514. CinemaSerf on

    This has to be in the running for turkey of the year. It’s such a shameless example of bad storytelling, bad acting, and product placement that they might as well just have given you a goodie bag as you (prematurely) left the cinema replete with your Warner Brothers tattoo. It’s centres around the son of LeBron James being kidnapped by an evil AI. The only way he can be rescued is by LBJ and his new bestie “Bugs Bunny” putting together a team that can win a basketball game against team selected by the AI. That’s about the height of it – there are no characterisations worthy of note amongst the humans, and though it is quite nice to see some of Warner’s cartoon characters on a big screen again, any nostalgia that evokes is soon washed away by the sheer naffness of this whole enterprise. Quite whom this is for is anyone’s guess – but it sure wasn’t for me…

    Reply
  2515. Filipe Manuel Neto on

    **An excuse for yet another CGI animated film.**

    I think this movie shouldn’t have been made the way it was made. The secret to the success of the first “Space Jam” was its originality and the way it combined the drawings and a real basketball star in a movie where he could play a little with himself. Here, what we have disappoints anyone and only serves to raise money for the public without delivering a product that truly meets expectations.

    The film’s biggest problem is obviously its script: it all starts when LeBron James, a basketball player, turns down a contract with Warner Bros. The contract was crafted by a computer algorithm that has somehow taken on a life and will of its own, and is determined to make itself noticed, even in the worst ways. By imprisoning the sportsman and his son in a digital universe, things get complicated. James will have to play basketball against the live algorithm, and he will ask the only one who might possibly have a good idea for help: Bugs Bunny. It is, as we can see, a basic script, very poorly written and poorly designed, which is not able to properly sustain the film.

    I don’t want to be mean to LeBron James. He’s not an actor, he’s not expected to do a great job as an actor. I think he did a lot with what he got, which was pretty bad, but I also think he’s not famous enough to support the movie the way Air Jordan did before. Maybe he’s famous in the USA! Outside the US, no one knows who he is. Don Cheadle, thus, ends up being the most prominent actor in the film, even if in a Machiavellian and tiresome character. Cedric Joe does what he can, but his character is terrible, and it was very poorly thought out. Self-centered, selfish, vain and resentful of his father, the kid is nasty almost until the end.

    Technically, the film bets everything on the CGI of great visual effect and fails completely: if there’s one thing that doesn’t work well, it is the stylized and tiresome look of this film. I’ve acquired a special dislike for the computerized versions of Bugs and the rest of Looney Tunes. They are terrible and ugly. There are things that shouldn’t be modernized, so they don’t lose their essence! In addition, the film has tiresome cinematography and is excessively long, with no script or material to fully justify it. I liked, however, the many tributes that are made to the films of the past of the Warner studio: we have everything from “King Kong” to “Casablanca”, with the passage guaranteed by the “Harry Potter” franchise to “Matrix” and “Mad Max”. It was the part of the movie that I found most sympathetic and honorable, but I still don’t recommend this movie.

    Reply

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