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Monsters vs Aliens (2009)

Director: Rob Letterman, Conrad Vernon

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From Time Out Chicago

Wit does not become this DreamWorks-produced 3-D animated feature, which commences with California girl Susan Murphy (Witherspoon) taking a gunk-filled meteorite to the head on her wedding day. Until this point, her problems are pure West Coast—a selfish weatherman boyfriend (Rudd) who prizes career over all and a perpetual yearning to visit Paris. But then the space slime Susan absorbs turns her into a 50-foot-tall superwoman named, wait for it, Ginormica. Now imprisoned at a secret military base, she seems doomed to while away the years in solitary confinement with various other “monsters,” like the half-ape/half-fish Missing Link (Arnett) and the mad scientist insect Dr. Cockroach Ph.D. (Laurie). That is until an off-worlder named Gallaxhar (Wilson) comes to Earth with nefarious plans for domination and a clone army at the ready.

Monsters vs. Aliens reaches the (relative) heights of hilarity only twice. First instance: When the film’s dim-witted POTUS—an amalgam of all the worst aspects of Reagan and Clinton, voiced, natch, by Colbert—communicates with an alien cyborg by tinkling Harold Faltermeyer’s “Axel F” on the synthetic ivories. Second instance: When the Rogen-essayed living globule B.O.B. one-sidedly romances and breaks up with a neon green Jell-O mold. There are also a few lovingly detailed San Francisco landmarks such as the Golden Gate Bridge, which meets a memorably destructive end. But MvA is mostly a brainless parade of half-baked gags, punctuated by the occasional fourth-wall-breaking effect. Only those who desire a paddleball to the kisser or a face full of Mothra snot need apply.

Author: Keith Uhlich

Time Out Chicago Issue 213: March 26–April 1, 2009


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Cast & crew

Director: Rob Letterman, Conrad Vernon

Rated: PG

Duration: 94 mins

US Release: Mar 27 2009




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