After making a string of popular, but violent films
writer/director Robert Rodriguez decided he wanted to make a movie that his
children would be able to watch. The
result was the intelligent, entertaining family film Spy Kids. And I’m using the term ”family” in the best
sense, not just as “only for kids”.
Adults, especially ones with kids of their own, can certainly identify
with the parent characters in the movie.
The film is intelligent, too. It
doesn’t talk down to the adults or the kids; there’s no scatological humor to
be found. The result was that
Rodriguez’s fans just killed this
film on IMDB. “Where’s the blood and
guts? Where’s the naked chicks? Where’s the guns? How dare my favorite director make a, a, a family film?!!!” (The last sentence should be read in the high
pitched tones of a child not getting their own way.) Luckily there’s a far larger audience out
there than just fans of Robert Rodriguez.
The movie was both a winner with critics (93% Fresh at Rotten Tomatoes)
and with the general public, who made it a box office hit.
Spy Kids had me right from the beginning where the mother,
Ingrid Cortez (Carla Gugino), tells her daughter Carmen (Alexa Vega) and son
Juni (Daryl Sabara) a bedtime story.
It’s about two superspies, a man (Antonio Banderas) and a woman (Gugino
again) who were sent by their countries to “take out” each other. Instead, they fall in love. There are a couple of scenes where they have
to very discreetly romance each other, from sitting on opposite sides of a
restaurant, to him proposing on top of the Eiffel Tower by flicking a box
containing an engagement ring along a railing to her. When the two are married they are attacked by
forces that want both dead. The story
ends with a scene right out of James Bond where the two attach parachutes over
their wedding clothes and jump off the seaside cliff location. We see the parachutes open and they are
heart-shaped. They glide to a waiting
powerboat and sail off into the sunset and into “the biggest adventure of their
lives” – settling down and becoming parents.
When she finishes the story, Ingrid comes out into the livingroom and
who is sitting there but her husband Gregorio (Banderas again). She just told her kids the story of how their
parents met, but the kids don’t know it yet.
They only see their parents as any other boring mom and dad.
Things change, though, when spies start disappearing. Gregorio and Ingrid are only consultants now,
but after 10 years or so of being parents they are a little too anxious to respond. I don’t have kids of my own, but I’ve worked
with a lot of folks who have and at a certain point they all seem to hit the
same “I used to be cool, dammit” phase where they try to recapture, however
briefly, the feeling that they’ve “still got it”, whatever that “it” is. Gregorio and Ingrid jump back into the field
all too easily and end up disappearing like the other spies.
A family friend, Uncle Felix (Cheech Marin), is taking care
of Carmen and Juni. He explains to them the
truth about their parents. The two kids
resolve to try to find them. As we have
seen, Gregorio and Ingrid have been captured by Fegan Floop (Alan Cumming), a children’s
TV show host. The cartoonish characters
he has on the show are actually the missing spies that have been transformed,
mad scientist style, into these creatures.
His right hand man Alexander Minion (Tony Shalhoub) is also assisting
him in creating an army of robot duplicates of the children of world
leaders. This is at the behest of Mr.
Lisp (Robert Patrick).
Meanwhile, Carmen and Juni meet superspy Ms. Gradenko (Teri
Hatcher) and then they seek out their real uncle, Gregorio’s older brother
Machete (Danny Trejo). He and Gregorio
are estranged, though. All siblings
fight; Carmen and Juni have been picking on each other for much of the movie up
to this point. Well, Machete and
Gregorio did the same thing, except they never got over it. Machete got tired of always having to look
out after his younger brother – a frustration Carmen has been sharing – and he
and Gregorio went their separate ways.
He doesn’t want to help the kids now because of it. Carmen and Juni do manage to make their way
to Floop’s castle and find out what’s going on, and it’s not exactly what you
may think.
If this plot sounds familiar it’s because three years later the
2004 Pixar film The Incredibles did almost the exact same story, except with
superheroes instead of superspies. And
then in 2007 Mr. and Mrs. Smith used the plot again, minus the kids, of two superspies
who marry, become boring, but then are supposed to kill each other. Each of those films was also very popular at
the box office and with critics.
One thing that really makes Spy Kids a good film for the
whole family is that the kids get to live out the fantasy of going on an
adventure, being independent, and saving their parents, while the parents get
to live out the fantasy of remembering how they were before they settled down
and became parents in the first place.
And what could be cooler than being gorgeous (we’re talking Carla Gugino
and Antonio Banderas) international spies?
Another great thing about this movie is that it teaches the
importance of family, without being preachy about it. Carmen and Juni fight with each other, but
they see what can happen when their Uncle Machete takes it too far. They learn that their parents are real
people, and that they are not just some embarrassing “mom” and “dad”. The parents learn that maybe their kids are
more capable than they give them credit for and they can be proud of them.
This film was followed by three sequels. I saw the second one and it was a step down
from this one. It had some good scenes,
but it didn’t have the intangibles of the first one. The third and fourth ones received bad reviews
and I’ve never gotten around to seeing them.
It’s possible that the two Machete films are also spinoffs. I have not seen them, but Rodriguez has the
same actor playing a character of the same name as he did in this film.
Watch for cameos by George Clooney, director Richard
Linklater, and personality Dick Clark. Watch
also for another scene after the credits.
And for any adults who have seen a lot of movies Spy Kids is just a
treasure trove of references, from The Wizard of Oz, to Willy Wonka and the
Chocolate Factory, to The Matrix, to The Spy Who Loved Me, to many more.
And here’s a piece of trivia for you: this is the last movie
Robert Rodriguez shot on film. When he
was doing the post-production for it at Skywalker Ranch George Lucas took the
opportunity to show Rodriguez what could be done with digital cameras. Rodriguez has never looked back.
Spy Kids is an entertaining family film. Yes, it was certainly a departure for
Rodriguez, but don’t let that dissuade you from seeing it. As I said he actually made a film that can
delight both kids and their parents at the same time, and that’s an all too
rare accomplishment nowadays. Unless you
have to have blood and guts I highly recommend this film.
Chip’s Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
I liked the first one as I thought it was a well-made family film while its 2nd and third one were OK but the fourth wasn't any good as was the following family films that Rodriguez has made as I think he's in a creative slump right now.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the info on the third and fourth ones. I don't think I'll be running out to see them.
DeleteI think Rodriguez is in a creative slump overall, not just with his family films. How many years now have they been talking about the next Sin City movie? And the first one was the last film of his that I saw and was impressed by.