Spy Kids 3-D: Game
Over
review by KJ
Doughton, 25 July 2003
Furious Energy
Like a spazzed-out moppet high
on cotton candy, Spy Kids 3D:
Game Over maintains a furious energy level that will delight
youngsters even as it tuckers out their pooped parents. Think
acid-enhanced lazerium shows. Think fuzzy, black light posters of
florescent space ships and mushrooms. Think flamboyant Fourth of
July skies awash in fireworks. Robert Rodriguez’s latest is a
celebration of the senses that dazzles with each consecutive frame,
further enhanced by unprecedented, digital 3-D effects.
Any seven year old who has ever
helmed a Game Boy will fall in love with this latest adventure of
under-age agents Juni (cherubic Daryl Sabara, his freckled face
still free of teenaged acne – for the moment) and Carmen (Alexa
Vega, who also sings the film’s title song) Cortez. After the mind
of the latter is abducted by a sinister villain known as Toymaker (a
refreshingly jovial Sylvester Stallone), Juni ventures, Matrix-style, into the circuit-jammed bowels of a 3-D video game
called "Game Over." To rescue his sister, Juni must tackle each
consecutive level of the program, with grandfather (Ricardo
Montalban), dad (Antonio Banderas), and mom (Carla Gugino) on hand
for backup.
As with its two predecessors, Spy Kids 3D is chock-full of throwaway images and jaw-dropping sets
that reveal Rodriguez’s painstaking attention to detail. In one
scene, a character is observed dipping his index digit into a fish
bowl full of aquatic inhabitants. But these are no Finding
Nemo-style friendly fish. They’re man-eating, miniaturized
sharks that leap at the finger as it’s lifted out. Meanwhile, all
of the neo-Bond sets and gadgets are bathed in rich, Skittles-bright
colors, a visual Prozac that delights the eyes.
However, such minor surprises pale
in comparison to the awesome spectacle of Rodriguez’s surreal "Game
Over" landscapes – a cross between Tim Burton, a high-tech Tron,
and Pee Wee’s Playhouse (in fact, Alan Cummings returns for his
Paul Reubens-esque turn as Floop, a kind of man-child emcee for all
three films). Don your 3-D glasses and thrill to images of
mischievous pogo-toads with neon-pink tongues that lash out like
bullwhips. Marvel to the sight of pre-teen gladiators riding dueling
robots that swing and swivel like the loading device helmed by
Sigourney Weaver in Aliens.
Behold, as your mandible dislocates itself and falls off your face
during a sensational, high-speed race that upstages The
Road Warrior. Coins bounce into your lap. A glowing, blue "life
pack" hovers toward you. A skywalk of dominoes lays itself out
beneath your feet, allowing you to saunter through the clouds. This
is state-of-the-art, dazzling stuff that makes Willie Wonka’s
chocolate factory look like a lame, turd-encrusted Honey Bucket in
comparison.
Unlike the somber pretentiousness
that wears down other films with youth appeal (Phantom
Menace, The Hulk, Matrix Reloaded, X-Men II),
Spy Kids 3D feels like something a kid would make, were he or she equipped
with the budget and technology. It looks, sounds, and breathes like
a grade-school tyke out for a weekend video binge at Game Works.
There are no boring, expository sequences; no depressing, grown-up
politics. Instead, Rodriguez gifts us with a kaleidoscope of energy
and invention.
But there’s more. Amidst the
visual spectacle that brands Spy
Kids 3D is a more profound message. While it’s not hip to
champion family values in this day and age, Rodriguez makes it clear
that the ties binding elders to their offspring have powerful
dramatic pull. As the duo’s wheelchair-bound grandfather,
Montalban is pulled into "Game Over" and suddenly retains his
ability to walk. In fact, he becomes a senior super-hero, who also
shares a bit of history with Toymaker. When was the last time a
grandpa was depicted as the heroic heart of a film? Meanwhile,
there’s a hysterical scene where Banderas, hot in the midst of a
revolutionary scientific experiment, shoves his findings aside
(before they shoot into our seats, 3-D style) to rescue his kids.
Even Nobel-level science comes a distant second to son and daughter.
Is there a downside to Spy
Kids 3D? One could nit-pick about the eyestrain that inevitably
sets from donning the red and blue glasses, or complain that old
franchise favorites from previous films (such as Steve Buschemi as
mad-scientist Romero, and Danny Trejo as inventor Machete) get so
little screen time.
But that’s persnickety whining.
As so many directors abandon a sense of wonder in favor of true-life
horrors and "grown up" realities (Steven Spielberg’s shift from Close
Encounters to Private Ryan
comes to mind), Robert Rodriguez hasn’t lost touch with life’s
playful side. Let’s hope he never does.
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Written and
Directed
by:
Robert Rodriguez
Starring:
Antonio Banderas
Carla Gugino
Alexa Vega
Daryl Sabara
Ricardo Montalban
Holland Taylor
Sylvester Stallone
Mike Judge
Salma Hayek
Matthew O'Leary
Emily Osment
Ryan Pinkston
Robert Vito
Bobby Edner
Courtney Jines
Rated:
PG - Parental
Guidance Suggested.
Some material may
not be appropriate
for children under 13.
FULL CREDITS
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