Rugrats in Paris: The Movie Movie Review
Rugrats in Paris: The Movie Review

"Rugrats in Paris: The Movie" Overview

Rating: G
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Stig Bergqvist,Paul DemeyerProducer : Gabor Csupo,Arlene Klasky
Screenwiter : David N. Weiss,J. David Stem,Jill Gorey,Barbara Herndon,Kate Boutilier
Starring : Joe Alaskey,Christine Cavanaugh,Melanie Chartoff,Cheryl Chase,Elizabeth Daily,John Lithgow,Debbie Reynolds,Jack Riley,Susan Sarandon,Kath Soucie
Well, the Rugrats are back, and, as usual, they’re way too sophisticated for
their audience. The Simpsons of the Nickelodeon Network has meandered its way
back onto the big screen, and this time they are hitting the streets of Paris
with more Freudian slips than a sexually-charged first date.
To start with, Grandpa Lou has gotten remarried (leading into, by the way, an
excellent parody of The Godfather in the first scene) and all Chuckie wants is
a mommy. Meanwhile, Stu Pickles gets a call from Paris demanding that he come
to fix a giant mechanical Reptar (a wonderful running Godzilla/Pokemon spoof
gag from the series) which he designed.
After discovering the mommy button on an airplane (the flight attendant
button), Chuckie decides that Paris is the perfect place to find a new mommy.
The group proceeds to EuroReptarLand, where we discover that one Coco LaBouche
(Susan Sarandon) needs to become a mother so she can move ahead in the Japanese
conglomerate for which she works (oh, all the feminist implications one can see
in this). Manipulative as Coco is, she decides to romance Chuckie’s dad via
her secretary Kira's knowledge of childrearing.
From here on in the plot flows predictably, and the movie inserts its share of
both lowbrow puns and intelligent humor throughout the entire film, making for
a satisfactory viewing experience... a kid’s movie the rest of us can stand (or
even enjoy).
Of course Rugrats in Paris: The Movie is hardly exemplary. It lacks the witty
parodies of the first Rugrats film, and goes for too many fart-and-diaper jokes
that are strictly kids-only. The show would better serve itself to go
completely the route of The Simpsons and dropping all pretense of being kiddie
fare, instead using its writers’ satiric wit for all it’s worth. But, as the
Rugrats franchise will be raking in quite a few pretty pennies, don’t expect
anything like that to happen anytime soon. Instead, expect that these movies
will gradually get less and less intelligent, until one day Rugrats is nothing
more than just another one of those dumb kid’s movies you can’t stand.
This way to fun!
Reviewer: James Brundage



