"Lava Girl" aims to please, but the sterile atmosphere of the film is uninteresting, exacerbating the already thin plot way beyond its limits.Īs it was in the third "Spy Kids" feature, the gimmick here in "Lava Girl" is 3-D. With "Lava Girl" Rodriguez pursues an obnoxious tone that is aggravated by some rather lousy performances (Davis and Arquette simply look perplexed the entire time, and I'm not convinced it's acting), and the stillborn design of CG creatures. Because the film is aimed so specifically at tickling children, Rodriguez has lost what made "Spy Kids" magical. This is a brave undertaking, but for anyone over 9 years of age, it's also a complete chore to sit through. "Lava Girl" indulges all those wild imaginative whims of youth unlike most productions, and for that inspiration alone I give Rodriguez credit. The picture has characters traveling to the land of milk and cookies, features some furious roller coaster action, a bizarre musical number, and spotlights a group of talking sharks. Removing anything that would appeal to adults, the film is a strictly "kidz only" affair, much like the last "Spy Kids" chapter.īased on the "dreams" of Rodriguez's 7 year-old son, Racer (along with ripping off "The Neverending Story"), "Lava Girl" doesn't hide its juvenile plotting in the least. "Lava Girl" is the next step down for Rodriguez. Over the course of two sequels, the fun factor dropped considerably, with the filmmaker resorting to gimmicks and CG noise for the final installment, "Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over." Rodriguez succumbed to the lure of easy digital landscapes and ADD storytelling, removing the last drop of ingenuity that I thought would never leave the franchise. In a lethal family film landscape, Rodriguez's creation was a satisfying, inventive marvel, striking a balancr between CG and practical effects, and providing equal enjoyment for children and adults. When the first " Spy Kids" movie debuted in 2001, it was like a breath of fresh air. But what happens when the ease of CG becomes too much? When the ability to create anything out of thin air starts to atrophy the power of fantasy? With "The Adventures of Shark Boy & Lava Girl in 3-D" ( IMDb listing), Rodriguez finally finds the limits of his digital imagination. An influential proponent of digital cinema, Rodriguez barely has to leave his garage studio to capture the vast dreamlike landscapes he desires, or in the case of his spring hit " Sin City," instant dirty alleyways and crime-ridden streets. In Austin, Texas, filmmaker Robert Rodriguez has built himself a studio that can fulfill all of his cinematic needs. When the dynamic duo come calling for Max to help save their home, Planet Drool, from being overcome by darkness, the boy is whisked away for an adventure that will take his imagination to the limit. Tormented by bullies, his stuffy teacher (George Lopez), and disapproving parents (David Arquette and Kristin Davis), Max (Cayden Boyd, " Dodgeball") retreats to his fantasy world where he interacts with the half-boy, half-shark Shark Boy (Taylor Lautner), and the fiery Lava Girl (Taylor Dooley). The Adventures of Shark Boy & Lava Girl in 3-D
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