Zoolander 2

The best gag in the original Zoolander may well have revolved around a gaggle of male models being immolated in a “freak gasoline fight accident,” so it’s probably not surprising that the funniest moment of Zoolander 2 involves a likewise unexpected and incredibly violent automobile wreck. A spectacular bit of comic violence, it stands as an unfortunate outlier in an otherwise tired sequel. Almost every comic garnish in Zoolander 2 feels plucked from the clearance rack or rejected from a more relevant film.
It’s difficult to tell who, if anyone, among the cast was really pushing for this Zoolander sequel to get made 15 years later. As the title character, Ben Stiller is the most obvious answer, but of the principals he seems the least interested in the film’s outcome. Zoolander’s one-note characterization is meant to be expanded here by the addition of his lost son, Derek Jr. (Cyrus Arnold), but their interactions fail to tell us a single thing beyond “Derek is not smart,” something we’re made quite aware of far before Derek Jr. even comes into the picture. It takes a literal knife in the face for Stiller to really come alive, and you wonder if he’s talking about himself and not Derek when he claims he’s “lost the fire in his face.”
Was it Owen Wilson pressing to get this thing made, hunting for a payoff more substantial than the checks one can garner appearing in cameo roles in Wes Anderson movies he didn’t help write? That could be—it would certainly explain why his character, Hansel, has so much more screen-time in this film, as well as two entirely separate subplots to follow. Theoretically they also could have been simply trying to pad out the film, in which case said subplots are a remarkable success.
It certainly wasn’t Will Ferrell pushing to get the film made. I feel confident of that. His presence as the villain Mugatu was heavily used to sell the sequel—one might argue that he was made out to be the main attraction—but fans of Ferrell will no doubt be disappointed to find out that he doesn’t even enter the film until after the one-hour mark. I ask you: What’s the point of revealing a “secret” villain when everyone in the theater already knows it’s a beloved character? Why not just get into it earlier in the script and give the audience what it so obviously wants?