Films - FLY ME TO THE MOON 3-D


Fly Me to The Moon 3-D Universal

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The year is 1969 and like everyone else in the world, Nat and his pals IQ and Scooter are abuzz over the upcoming launch of the first manned mission to the moon. Inspired by his Grandpa's oft-told tale of hiding aboard Amelia Earhart's plane during her famed solo cross-Atlantic flight, Nat hatches a secret plan for the three young flies to stow away on the Apollo 11 rocket. The hard part is keeping the plan secret from his mom, Mrs. McFly! When a N.A.S.A. Ground Control official catches sight of the three winged stowaways, he instructs the astronauts to store them in a test tube for later study. But after an electrical short causes the ship's engine to malfunction, the three intrepid insects manage to escape from their glass mini-brig just in time to discover the wiring problem and fix it. After a difficult lunar landing, Nat tags along with Neil Armstrong on his legendary moon walk. Although the flies face a few more close calls, the mission appears to be a success. At least until Grandpa's old flame Nadia arrives from Russia to warn him that her government, angry over losing the space race, has dispatched fly-spy Yegor to Cape Canaveral to sabotage the computer flight plans. With the Apollo hurtling toward Earth, it falls to Nat's family to save the mission--and the trio of brave flies--from disaster.

It may not be in the league of Wall E or Kung Fu Panda, but this 3D animated adventure into space is the perfect family entertainment--a clever and funny movie full of wonder and imagination.

Story

Using the 1969 Apollo 11 space mission that landed man on the moon for the first time as its starting point, Fly Me to the Moon seamlessly blends a nice message about achieving your dreams with an amusing story centering on three "fly" guys on a mission to become the first insects on the moon. Young Nat (Trevor Gagnon), inspired by his grandfather's (Christopher Lloyd) tall tales about rescuing Amelia Earhart as she made her historic flight across the Atlantic, decides to recruit two friends--IQ (Philip Daniel Bolden) and Scooter (David Gore)--to secretly board Apollo 11 just before it takes off on its history-making expedition to the moon. When they are discovered on board, they are placed in a test tube for later scientific study. But problems with the ship's engine enable them to escape, and they manage to lend a helping wing that allows the mission to continue. That is until trouble rears its head in the form of grandpa's old love, Nadia (Nicollette Sheridan), who arrives from Russia with news that the Russians plan to sabotage the mission using evil spy fly Yegor (Tim Curry) to stop it in its tracks.

Acting

Gagnon, Bolden and Gore handle their vocal assignments well, making believable flies who want to get to the moon. Basically, they play it like 6 year-olds, and there's nothing wrong with that considering the target audience is just about that age. Lloyd is a delight as the old codger Grandpa fly who has lots of tales to tell and tells them often. Kelly Ripa and Adrienne Barbeau ably play two of the fly moms who become alarmed when they discover their "kids" have just been launched into the stratosphere. There's also good villainous work from Tim Curry as the heavy Yegor, out to destroy the mission, and Ed Begley Jr. as another Russian, Poopchev. Best treat of all is the late inning appearance by Buzz Aldrin, one of the original Apollo 11 astronauts, who turns up to give a pep talk and throw in a disclaimer that flies could never stowaway on any moon mission just in case someone in the audience mistakes this for a NASA documentary.

Direction

As the first animated film ever to be completely shot in the Real D or 3D format, Fly Me To The Moon achieves some first-rate effects using the advancing digital technology so effectively, you just may feel you can reach out and swat one of those flies who come right at you in the film's opening scene. Director Ben Stassen uses his background in large format films and specialised 3D imagery to leap into the full length Real D feature film business with this sweet treat for kids and even the older family members who may have fond memories of the moon shot nearly 40 years ago. Similar in some ways to the recent Space Chimps but more fun to watch, Stassen employs 3D as an integral part of the story rather than just having characters throw stuff at the audience like a lot of these films do. Expect more three-dimensional 'toons if this succeeds and why shouldn't it? Fly Me To The Moon soars, taking the 3D experience to new heights.

Bottom Line

Hollywood.com rated this film 3 stars.

  • Cast:Kelly Ripa, Christopher Lloyd, Nicollette Sheridan, Tim Curry, Ed Begley Jr., Adrienne Barbeau, Robert Patrick, Trevor Gagnon, Philip Daniel Bolden, David Gore
  • Director:Ben Stassen
  • Producer:Caroline Van Iseghem, Gina Gallo, Mimi Maynard, Charlotte Clay Huggins
  • Writer:Domonic Paris
  • Duration:90
  • Official Site:http://www.flymetothemoonthemovie.com/
  • Release:In Cinemas Now
  • Genre:Animation, Family
  • Distributor:Summit Entertainment

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