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Spy Kids 4: All The Time In The World
The action packed franchise is back…with the next generation of Spy Little ones! Marissa Cortez Wilson (Jessica Alba) has it all: married to a well-known spy-hunting television reporter (Joel McHale), with a new child and intelligent twin step youngsters, Rebecca (Rowan Blanchard) and Cecil (Mason Cook). When maniacal Timekeeper (Jeremy Piven) disrupts her domestic bliss–threatening to take over the planet–Marissa comes out of retirement as a best secret agent. With Armageddon swiftly approaching, Rebecca and
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Smell You Later: Slapstick Silliness And Obvious Humor Introduce A New Generation Of Spy Kids,
Director Robert Rodriguez seems determined to keep the “Spy Kids” franchise alive at all costs. “Spy Kids: All The Time In The World” is essentially a reboot as opposed to a true sequel as it launches viewers upon the adventures of a new central family. Yes, original kids Alexa Vega and Daryl Sabara are on hand as grown counterparts of themselves, but it feels as if they are passing the torch to the younger generation. While this, the fourth in the series, has much of the visual inventiveness you’ve come to appreciate from Rodriguez, it does lack some of the easy charm of the first couple of pictures. Trading cleverness for obvious humor, though, has its drawbacks. Thankfully, on DVD, we are spared the theater’s Aroma-Scope scratch cards that surely promised a plethora of unpleasant smells. (For the record, I liked it when John Waters did it, but that was a different story entirely). The movie plays to a certain demographic–if you think passing gas, vomit, and other bodily emissions are hysterical, this might be just up your alley. I always hear the argument “but the movie is for kids” when people are defending entertainment of this type, but the point seems rather irrelevant when you think of all the good kids’ movies with genuine smarts.
Jessica Alba plays Vega and Sabara’s aunt. She, too, is a spy. Upon giving birth to her daughter, she decides to quit this dangerous occupation to focus on her new baby, husband (Joel McHale), and step kids (Rowan Blanchard and Mason Cook). However, when a nefarious mastermind starts moving time forward at an alarming rate–the fate of the very world is in jeopardy. She has had prior dealings with another criminal who holds the key to this mystery, so she is drafted back into service. This being “Spy Kids,” though, Blanchard and Cook are soon up to their little necks in danger as well. Will these darn kids be able to save humankind? I won’t ruin the surprise. Jeremy Piven is cast as Alba’s superior at the agency, and Ricky Gervais provides unusual support. Everyone is game and, as I said, certain visuals are fun to watch. But that being the case, I found most of the actual humor forced and flat. There are only so many times passing gas can effectively be used as a punchline!
The movie, despite its slapstick silliness, wants to have its share of warm moments as well with the family drawing closer. I never really responded to Blanchard, though, who needed more discipline than understanding. I love Jeremy Piven, who despite having a large role, is never given any real comedy. And Gervais, to my mind, is a comic genius but his running monologue is uninspired and obvious. All the elements were here to make a good picture, I even liked the plot well enough–the screenplay just needed that extra push to make it more fun and funnier. Mostly for the kids, I can’t really make this much of a recommendation. It’s easy enough to watch (since I didn’t have to smell it), I just wanted to laugh along.
3-D: For those with 3-D technology, the film comes across well in that regard. The fanciful scenes have a real depth with the extra dimension, but there aren’t really out-of-screen shots to take it to the next level. Neither the best or worst the technology has to offer, this doesn’t elevate the movie to a different level of quality. Overall, about 2 1/2 stars but I’ll round up for the kiddies. KGHarris, 11/11.
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Fun Family Movie,
This was an enjoyable movie for the whole family. I recommend the entire series (which i purchased) on amazon. My 5 year old son and his friends have watched this movie at least 10 times in the last three weeks. Even adults find themselves sitting down and enjoying it.
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For Adults Not as Entertaining as Prior Ones, But My Kids Enjoyed,
My kids ages 5 and 7 really liked this film, so I decided to rate it 4 stars, although on my own I would have given it 3 (I am not the target demographic after all.) I think Antonio Banderas and Alexa Vega lifted these films a bit in the past, and without them, it is feeling tired. In this one, a new generation of parents and kids are introduced, and they do OK, but lack the charisma of the original. The tone of the movie is different too – much more focus on humor, and a fair amount of slapstick. The highlight for me was Ricky Gervais voicing a robotic dog – he gets some of the best lines of the film, although my kids didn’t quite get him. Jeremy Piven has some good moments as a two-faced agent/villain, but he also overplays it at times. Jessica Alba and Danny Trejo are fine, but don’t compare to Banderas and Vega.
The plot is so-so, although I did appreciate the stepmother/blended family theme, as I do think that is relevant to many modern families. I also appreciated that even though this is an action movie, it is more focused on humor than violence. And as I said, my kids really loved it, they were riveted throughout, so for a family film, that gets it to 4 stars in my book.
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