The film’s strongest element is Sofia Boutella as Princess Ahmanet. Moving away from the bandage-wrapped tropes of the past, Boutella brings a fluid, athletic, and genuinely eerie presence to the role. Her backstory—a betrayed royal who strikes a pact with the god Set—provides a solid emotional foundation. However, her agency is frequently sidelined to serve the larger plot of turning Nick Morton into a "vessel" for a god, making the titular Mummy feel like a guest star in her own movie. The Dark Universe Dilemma
The 2017 reboot of The Mummy stands as one of modern cinema’s most fascinating case studies in "franchise fever." Intended to be the cornerstone of Universal Pictures’ ambitious —a shared cinematic world of classic monsters—the film instead became a cautionary tale about prioritizing world-building over storytelling . The Tom Cruise Effect The Mummy (2017)
In retrospect, the 2017 reboot is a visually impressive, fast-paced action movie that simply tried to do too much at once. It remains a polished piece of popcorn cinema, but one that is perhaps best remembered as the "what if" that changed how studios approach shared universes. The film’s strongest element is Sofia Boutella as
Critics and audiences were lukewarm, and while the film performed decently internationally, its domestic struggle led Universal to scrap the "Dark Universe" plan. The irony is that the failure of The Mummy (2017) led to a much more successful strategy: the standalone, director-driven approach seen in 2020’s The Invisible Man . However, her agency is frequently sidelined to serve
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