'3BlackChicks Review...'
SPY KIDS 3-D: GAME OVER (2003)
Rated PG; running time 85 minutes
Studio: Dimension Films
Genre: Family/Adventure
Seen at: Eastwood Neighborhood Cinema Group (Lansing, Michigan)
Official site: http://www.spykids.com/
IMDB site: http://us.imdb.com/Details?0338459
Written by: Robert Rodriguez
Directed by: Robert Rodriguez
Cast: Daryl Sabara, Ricardo Montalban, Sylvester Stallone,
Courtney Jines, Robert Vito, Ryan Pinkston, Bobby Edner,
Salma Hayek, Mike Judge --
-- with brief cameos by Alexa Vega, Emily Osment, George Clooney,
Antonio Banderas, Carla Gugino, Matthew O'Leary, Alan Cumming,
Steve Buscemi, Bill Paxton, Holland Taylor, Danny Trejo,
Cheech Marin, Tony Shalhoub
Review Copyright Rose Cooper, 2003
Review URL:
http://www.3blackchicks.com/2003reviews/bamsspykids3.html
I suppose there's one good thing about SPY KIDS 3-D: GAME OVER: with
the way the "kids" have grown over the past few years, it's unlikely
that there will be a SPY KIDS 4.
THE STORY (WARNING: **spoilers contained below**)
Juni Cortez (Daryl Sabara) decided he no longer wanted to be a Spy
Kid; he hung up his OCC ID and went into business for himself as a
small-time gumshoe. But just when he thought he was out, they pull
him back in...when OSS Agents Cesca (Salma Hayek) and Donnagon Giggles
(Mike Judge), and President Devlin (George Clooney) tell Juni that OSS
needs him to become an agent again. When Juni resists, they tell him
the one thing that would make him go back: his sister, Agent Carmen
Cortez (Alexa Vega) is in danger.
On assignment to stop the Evil Toymaker (Sylvester Stallone) from
fulfilling his dastardly plan to get children around the world hooked
on his new game, Game Over, so that they would no longer listen to
their parents, Carmen virtually goes into that game, getting stuck on
level four. It's up to Juni to go into the game and save Carmen and
the world, with a little help - and, competition - from Grandfather
Cortez (Ricardo Montalban), and gamesters Rez (Robert Vito), Arnold
(Ryan Pinkston), Francis (Bobby Edner), and Demetra (Courtney Jines).
THE UPSHOT
Two disclaimers before I start: 1) I'm partially blind in one eye;
this impacted greatly on the technical aspect of watching a 3-D movie.
My eyes *hurt*, to the point where I had to take the glasses off
multiple times in the long 85 minutes of this movie. And 2) I am
fully, quite painfully, aware that the SPY KIDS series in general, and
SPY KIDS 3-D: GAME OVER specifically, are "children's movies". As
such, the target audience will likely love it, if only because of the
gee-whiz factor of the 3-D glasses (I'm 40, and I can't remember the
last 3-D movie I've seen; it has to be quite exciting for the kidlets
to have their shot at 3-D in this day and age). But get this: when I
turned around during the many breaks I had to take, I noticed many of
the kids looking around the room, bored; and two of the kids in the
row with me, were snoring.
I was deeply disappointed with SPY KIDS 3-D. I remembered enjoying
SPY KIDS 2, and thought this time around would be no different. Boy,
was I ever wrong. To check myself, I went back and re-read my review
of SPY KIDS 2; it hasn't been that long ago since that movie came out,
so why did the 3-D version turn me off so? And therein lies the
answer: the 3-D dealie really, *really*, pissed me off. And not just
because it really, *really*, hurt my eyes. It irritated my Inner
Child, too.
The beauty of SPY KIDS 2, for me, was in its unassuming wit and charm,
in the way it reflected creator Robert Rodriguez's vision without that
stereotypes, and that it celebrated real, honest-to-goodness family
values [no, not the ones in those empty slogans touted by political
pimps on the Left and the Right. The only way those nitwits would
know Family Values is if it walked up and offered them a bribe]. SPY
KIDS 3-D, on the other hand, seemed less interested in its story and
more interested in the techie stuff. And let me tell ya, it suffered
on both ends.
Disclaimers aside, the 3-D looked *awful* when paired with Rodriguez's
digitized effects. Sure, the first time nuts and bolts looked like
they were flying right in front of your eyes, was cute; but seeing the
characters reach out and juuuuust miss grabbing the objects that they
went on to manipulate, for want of Cool! 3-D! Action!, got real
tiresome, real quick.
But even more than that, the 3-D was an unnecessary distraction, a way
to waste roughly 55 minutes of an 85 minute movie, so that older
viewers wouldn't realize that, hey, there's no real story here! Only,
many of us realized exactly that. Right about the time we realized
that most of the characters that inhabited the words of SPY KIDS 1 and
2, would have what amounted to little more than a cameo in this third
outing. So much for "family values". There were small pockets of
frivolity, sprinkled here and there (a classic bit provided by Ricardo
"Corinthan Leather" Montalban had the adults in the audience
chuckling), pockets which almost overcame the tragedy of casting
Sylvester Stallone to play any role in which he had to utter more than
three words at a time.
I'll put it this way: when I watched a similarly-gimmicky movie called
MEMENTO, I left the theater wondering if the movie would work well the
"right" way. I left SPY KIDS 3-D not caring if I ever saw it again -
with or without 3-D glasses. Though now I wonder if those glasses
will improve on some of the other crappy movies I've had to sit
through lately.
BAMMER'S BOTTOM LINE
"Game over" is right. This flick sucked all the fun right out of the
series.
SPY KIDS 3-D: GAME OVER rating: flashing redlight
Rose "Bams" Cooper
Webchick and Editor,
3BlackChicks Review
Entertainment Reviews With Flava!
Copyright Rose Cooper, 2003
EMAIL: bams@3blackchicks.com
http://www.3blackchicks.com/
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