Friday, June 18, 2010

Spy Kids

Spy Kids

In 2001, Spy Kids was a complete and utter surprise to me. Writer-director Robert Rodriguez was known for his action movies and I was befuddled that the maker of Desperado was tackling a kid's movie. But he didn't just tackle it, he knocked it out of the park.

Kids live action films are often terrible. I know I am not the audience for them, but what happened to movies that the whole family could enjoy, including the parents? (Pixar has had the formula down from the very beginning; why weren't other studios taking notes?!?)

Maybe it just takes an outsider, like an action director, to get the job done right. Spy Kids is about two former spies Gregorio and Ingrid Cortez (Antonio Banderas and Carla Gugino) who go off on one more mission and get themselves kidnapped by an evil kid's television show producer and weapons dealer Flooj (Alan Cummings). Now it is up the Cortez' children, Juni and Carmen, to save the day and to do that, they must become Spy Kids! Complete with snazzy gadgets that would make James Bond jealous, they avoid the bad guys and slowly work their way to Flooj's castle. Along the way, we all learn about the importance of family (well, there has to be some sort of moral).

Sound goofy? It sure is, but Spy Kids shows that goofiness does not mean stupid. This is a smart and clever movie, inventive in its jokes and action set pieces. The acting is terrific - especially Alexa Vega and Daryl Sabara as Carmen and Juni. Where the hell did they find these kids?! They not only handle the action and dialogue convincingly, they also have a wicked sense of comic timing I would not have expected from actors that young. And unlike most movies about siblings, these two actually act like they're related - where you can go from arguing to playing to arguing to hitting to playing, all in the span of 30 seconds.

I was worried that the effectiveness of Spy Kids would be diminished by the increasingly over-the-top sequels. But luckily, this movie is just as clever as it was when I first watched it 10 years ago. I don't know what its place in movie history is going to be, but I certainly hope it lifts into the pantheon of children's classics. Its deserves it.

MVP: Clearly it was a casting coup to get Darryl Sabara and Alexa Vega. But I think I am going to have to give it to Alexa Vegas as Carmen, just because I think she had a harder role. Carmen is the annoying older sister, always forced to take care of an annoying brother she doesn't like very much. Her story arc into a family loving spy is terrific, particularly when she gets to share the scenes arguing with her grumpy uncle, Machete (Danny Trejo).

TRIVIA: The evil Thumb-Thumbs are based on drawings Robert Rodriguez did as a little kid.

BEST LINE: Gregorio: "He's emotional...uh, he's Latino."


3 comments:

  1. Still love Juni punching the wall.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That is definitely a highlight!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I vaguely remember this movie. I was also surprised that I liked it.

    ReplyDelete