Nim's Island Movie Review
Nim's Island Review
"Nim's Island" Overview

Rating: PG
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark Levin,Jennifer FlackettProducer : Stephen Jones,Paula Mazur
Screenwiter : Mark Levin,Jennifer Flackett,Paula Mazur
Starring : Jodie Foster,Abigail Breslin,Gerard Butler,Alphonso McAuley,Peter Callan
Movies aimed at preteen boys are a dime a dozen, particularly as we approach the
summertime when superhero movies compete with science-fiction sequels and bawdy high
school comedies for available multiplex screens.
Young girls, unfortunately, aren't so lucky. On the rare occasion that Hollywood
does decide to throw teen girls a bone, they're spoon-fed skeletal garbage like the
dreadful Nancy Drew or a doomed vehicle for Hilary Duff. Asking Kirsten Dunst to sharpen
an edge for Mary Jane Watson in the Spider-Man movies doesn't count.
Nim's Island tries to rectify this dire situation, and gets off to a strong start before
abandoning its imaginative premise for madcap antics. Nim (Abigail Breslin) is the
intelligent, inquisitive, and independent daughter of marine biologist Jack Rusoe
(Gerard Butler, versatile in multiple roles). The two live a peaceful existence on an
isolated island in the South Pacific. Jack searches for undiscovered single-cell
organisms while Nim embarks on adventures with her best friends, Silky the sea lion
and Galileo the pelican. Once a week, a supply ship brings food, tools, and the latest
novel from best-selling author Alex Rover (Jodie Foster).
Nim's self-confidence is admirable, and her message deserves to be spread: "With
a little imagination, I can go anywhere," she tells doting dad. When plot contrivances
allow Nim and Alex to communicate via email, Island conveys welcome impressions about
finding courage in life's difficult choices. For Nim, it might mean venturing to
the mouth of a dormant volcano. For Alex, an agoraphobic, it might mean trekking
to the mailbox to pick up today's post (though the fact that an agoraphobic has a detached
mailbox in the first place is kind of silly).
Somewhere along the way, however, co-directors Mark Levin and Jennifer Flackett lose
their own courage and allow Island to devolve into a slapdash version of Home Alone on
holiday. Breslin and her animal mates use farting sea lions and flying lizards to
defend the island from boorish Australian tourists. The delusional Alex braves every
method of transportation to reach Nim's island so she can help, and Jack receives
unlikely assistance to return home from an unsuccessful sea trip. What begins as a
worthy voyage sadly drifts way off course, leaving teenage females stranded once
again.
Oh, it's for you.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





