Spy Kids 4: All the Time in the World Movie Reviews
3.0
Nikhat Kazmi | Times of India
Fun all the way, Spy Kids 4 not only successfully carries the franchise forward, but makes for pleasant family viewing with its fine blend of sci-fi, gizmo and gadgetry and vignettes on family values too. Of course, there are lots of things to recommend....Like, Jessica Alba who must be the most glamorous spy on board in her tights with a baby tied on to her. Or else, the talking dog-robot who spices up the proceedings with his sundry modesRead full review2.5
Rounak Guharoy | Mumbai Mirror
Spy Kids IV decided to pull a fast one on the audience with the 4D gimmick. Or 'Aromascope', to be politically correct. As you enter the theatre, you're given a scratch card with numbers on it. When the numbers appear on screen, scratch and voila, you can be a part of 'special moments' in the film. Unfortunately, all the special moments take on the smell of strawberry bubblegum. Baby pooping. Smells like bubblegum. Baby farting. Also smells like bubblegumRead full review2.0
Mohua Das | The Telegraph
It’s not just about the goggles this time but a post card with a menu of eight aromas that they hand you as you step into the dark theatre for some smell-the-action fun in Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D. This edition of the Spy Kids is about the new generation of under-age spies Rebecca and Cecil who spring into action after learning that their boring stepmom (Jessica Alba) is a retired spy. As time keeps running out on most of the planetRead full review2.0
Daniel Pinto | DNA India
Spy Kids deals with time travel. To enjoy the film, retrogression, not revisiting your inner child would be a necessity. Perhaps I’m being too harsh. The film after all, was made with children in mind. And Robert Rodriguez does love to push the envelope with filmmaking. But providing cards that dispense fragrances is where you should draw the line. On with the story then. Cecil (Mason Cook), a hearing-impaired anagrams whiz and his prank-loving sister RebeccaRead full review1.0
Shaikh Ayaz | rediff.com
"I am beginning to think women make the best spies (or agents)", says a distraught Audrey Hepburn enmeshed in a complex vortex of big cash, vicious double-crossers and Hitchcockian intrigue, in Charade, 1963. Spy Kids: All the Time in the World's stepmom Marissa is nowhere close to the reluctant spy that mademoiselle Lampert is but she is a spy alright, in director Robert Rodriguez's fourth instalment of Spy Kids after a gap of eight yearsRead full review1.0
Suprateek Chatterjee | Mid-Day
Here's a fun drinking game to play when Spy Kids: All The Time in The World comes out on DVD - take a sip each time a character in the film makes a cringe worthy time-related pun (sample: "He's really starting toRead full reviewtick me off now." Get it?). Be sure, however, to only take sips and not large gulps or else you might just find yourself in the hospital undergoing treatment for alcohol poisoning. It's been a decade since the original NR
Mrigank Dhaniwala | Koimoi
Spy Kids: All The Time In The World review Biz rating: 1/5 star. What’s Good: The performances of the kids; the ...Read full review