Spy Kids (2001)

Rated: ![]()
Starring: Antonio Banderas, Carla Gugino.
Director: Robert Rodriguez
Edition Details:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Color, Closed-captioned
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• Original theactrical edition of film
• Widescreen anamorphic format
Editorial
Reviews
Carmen and Juni Cortez will
soon find out that their favorite bedtime story, "The Spies Who Fell in
Love," is really the story of their parents. So begins this affable
fantasy, a James Bond adventure for wee ones with all the trimmings. When Dad
and Mom (Antonio Banderas and Carla Gugino) mess up their first mission after
coming out of retirement, their kids must come to the rescue, equipped with
some cool gadgets. The Cortez family gets involved in a bizarre plot hatched by
a Pee-wee Herman-type entertainer named Fegan Floop (a wonderfully hammy Alan
Cumming) that's as giddy as it is ridiculous. Needless to say there is plenty
of derring-do concerning long-lost uncles, goofy monsters, double agents, evil
robots, look-alikes, and energized chases. Did we mention the gadgets? Although
Banderas and Gugino make terrific impressions, the movie is carried (as it
should be) by the younger Cortezes, winningly played by Alexa Vega and Daryl
Sabara. Who would have thought an action/horror studio (Dimension) and writer-director
Robert Rodriguez had this pleasing family film up their sleeves? Rodriquez (who
produced with his wife Elizabeth Avellán) seemed to be mired in cheesy horror
films but here breaks out by capitalizing on the talent that gave him instant
status with his debut, El Mariachi (1992). Spy Kids has plenty of
verve but never swerves into potty humor (OK, there is one good potty joke) or
wicked gunplay. All 7-year-olds should have a film as fun as this in their
movie-going lives. --Doug Thomas –