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Spy Kids (2001) - movie notes

Spy Kids (2001)

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74%
(89 votes)
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Trivia (2)
Plot Description
Soundtrack
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Directed by
Robert Rodriguez

Written by
Robert Rodriguez

Cast
Antonio Banderas, Carla Gugino, Alexa Vega, Daryl Sabara, Alan Cumming [more]


Release Date
• USA: Aug 8, 2001
• UK: 13 Apr 2001
DVD Release Date
• R1: Sep 18, 2001
• R2: 22 Oct 2001

Budget $35,000,000
BoxOffice: $99.9M

Official Website:
Spy Kids Website

MPAA Rating
PG

Running Time
1 hour, 28 minutes

Country USA

Studio Dimension Films

More info on IMDb.com



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 Behind the Scenes

     Introduction
     The Cortez Family
     About The Enemy File
     OSS Intelligence Report
     Special Effects
     Locations

Special Effects

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Nothing gets a spy, or a kid, as excited as a wildly inventive new gadget — and SPY KIDS is full of amazing gizmos and inventions that will tickled adult funny bones and light up children's imaginations. Most importantly, SPY KIDS gadgets use playfulness, skill, curiosity and strategy to outsmart villains, rather than violence.

Most of the SPY KIDS gadgets came right out of the fertile imagination of Robert Rodriguez, who became a sort of no-holds-barred "Q" for kids, coming up with modes of transportation and means of surveillance that would make anyone's eye pop. Some of Rodriguez's most exotic gadgets include:

· A computer-programmed Super Guppy submarine pod that can transform into a boat

· A shiny silver Spy Car with video screens that can turn amphibious at a moment's notice

· A GPS locator that can tell you where on earth anybody you're looking for is

· A speedy, kid-size spy plane with video-game controls that can circle the globe in minutes

· Buddy Pack jetpacks that slip on like backpacks but take off like rockets

· Tool belts filled with surprises

But throughout the film, there are also myriad smaller but equally fascinating inventions that turn ordinary "kid" items — such as bubblegum and crayolas — into powerful forces for good. There's even a silly-string-like Instant Cement that gets the kids out of a jam.

Most of the gadgets seen in SPY KIDS began as drawings in Robert Rodriguez's notebooks. As Elizabeth Avellan notes: "He'd been working on the shape of the submarine pod for years, refining it over and over until it was just right."

With his sketches finalized, Rodriguez then handed his fledgling designs over to an accomplished team of makeup, special effects, modeling and computer artists to bring his ideas to life — by any means necessary. Much of the real work of making kids fly in jet packs, and cars turn into submarines, was done inside computers. But working models were also created, including a life-size Spy Plane.

The logistics behind some of the creations stretched even the filmmakers' imaginations, requiring forays into physics and trigonometry. For example, when the Spy Pod carrying Carmen and Juni turns for awhile into a speed-boat-like contraption, riding across the surface of the water and producing a unique wake, the filmmakers were stumped as to how to shoot the scene properly. The kids needed to be mounted high up on the boat, but this would put them in danger of capsizing due to the high center of gravity. What Rodriguez decided he really needed was a square boat. Crazy as that sounded, days later while flying on a plane to Los Angeles, Rodriguez saw a picture of exactly that: a square boat used in rescue missions. The production bought one — and not only did it keep the kids safe, it created exactly the right kind of wake for the pod shape!"

Some gadgets were simpler than others, of course. To create the highly top secret "Third Brain" that gets the Cortez family in so much trouble, Rodriguez held a "Brain Painting Party" one day on the set, with prizes for the best rendition.

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