Aliens in the Attic Movie Review
Aliens in the Attic Review
"Aliens in the Attic" Overview

Rating: PG
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : John SchultzProducer : Barry Josephson
Screenwiter : Mark Burton, Adam F Goldberg
Starring : Carter Jenkins,Austin Butler,Ashley Tisdale,Ashley Boettcher,Robert Hoffman,Henri Young,Regan Young,Doris Roberts,Kevin Nealon,Andy Richter,Gillian Vigman,Tim Meadows
High energy levels and some genuinely hilarious set pieces make this kids'
alien-invasion romp a lot more fun than expected. It's not, erm, rocket
science, but it's a thoroughly entertaining ride from start to finish.
Tom (Jenkins) is a surly teen who's a lot smarter than his grades indicate. But
his parents (Nealon and Vigman) plan to whip him into shape with a family
fishing holiday with sisters Bethany and Hannah (Tisdale and Boettcher) plus
cousins (Butler, Young and Young), a goofy uncle (Richter), sassy Nana
(Roberts) and Bethany's smarmy too-old boyfriend (Hoffman). At the isolated
lake house, the kids discover that they're under siege from pint-sized aliens.
And without letting the grown-ups know, they set out to foil the invasion.
The film is pure pre-teen fantasy, as the children save the day through sheer
ingenuity and a lot of whizzy gadgets they grab from the invaders. The
grown-ups never have a clue what's going on, and this is only partly due to the
drone darts shot into some of them (they won't work on children). This allows
the kids to actually make the grown-ups do things that are even more ridiculous
than they usually do, the high point being a remote-controlled super-fighting
ninja Nana.
Yes, it's thoroughly silly, but the script never tries to be anything else.
There's a certain deranged internal logic at work, so the film hangs together
unusually well for a Hollywood action caper. Even though some characters get
lost now and then, they eventually return in scenes that let every cast member
do something truly cool. Tisdale and Hoffman vanish for large chunks of time,
but really throw themselves into the comical mayhem, as do all of the actors.
It helps that the characters are genuinely likeable--even the hilariously ugly
little aliens, who bicker and do stupid things just like the adults. It's far
too cute and crazed for late-teens to give it the time of day, but younger
children will love this, right up to the sweet E.T.-light finale, complete with
the requisite message about having the courage to be yourself. And adults will
be surprised that they like it too, although most would never admit it.
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Review by Rich Cline
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