Fly Me to the Moon (2008)
Director: Ben Stassen
Synopsis
The first ever animated movie created exclusively to be shown in 3D cinemas, ‘Fly Me to the Moon’ follows the adventures of three cheeky young houseflies who stow away on the Apollo 11 moon rocket. With the voices of Tim Curry (Rocky Horror Picture Show), Christopher Lloyd (Back to the Future) and even astronaut Buzz Aldrin as himself, this is a riotous family comedy with the added attraction of those eye-popping computer generated 3D visuals.
Movie review
From Time Out Chicago
People who make kids’ movies bank on the fact that children are easy critics and that these newbie filmgoers will gleefully sit through anything with bright colors and a fart joke or three. It’d be nice to imagine, however, that after enduring this attempt at selling fourth-rate 3-D animation as entertainment, ripped-off toddlers would react properly and take to the streets en masse. After grabbing their fake torches and plastic pitchforks (courtesy of the Fisher-Price My First Angry Mob™ set), the rioting tykes would storm the studio and demand their money back, with some juice boxes thrown in to compensate for emotional distress.
You’d think that this tale of three houseflies who stow away on the first Apollo 11 flight was made with contempt for its audience, as if mechanically stiff animation and clichéd moralizing (“If it ain’t an adventure, it ain’t worth doin’ ”) would be given a pass just because a rocket appears to be coming right at you. But the only things that Stassen’s toon proves is that mediocrity is no different in three dimensions than it is in two and that the use of the “Blue Danube” waltz in zero gravity has officially been stripped of its grace.
Author: David Fear
Time Out Chicago Issue 181: August 14–20, 2008
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