Spy Kids: All the Time in the World (often referred to as Spy Kids 4D, also known as Spy Kids 4: All the Time in the World and Spy Kids 4D: All the Time in the World) is an American 4D family-oriented adventure film directed by Robert Rodriguez and the fourth installment in the Spy Kids series. It was released on August 19, 2011. Filming began on October 27, 2010.[1] It is the first of the series that uses "Aromascope" that allows people to smell odors and aromas from the film via scratch & sniff cards (reminiscent of the infamous 1960s Smell-O-Vision)[5] last used theatrically in the 2003 animated film Rugrats Go Wild.
Plot
Marissa, (Jessica Alba) is trying to fight a villain named Tick-Tock (Jeremy Piven),
when she goes into labor with a baby girl named Maria and manages to
defeat him and send him to jail. She decides to retire so she doesn't
put her stepchildren or her newborn in danger or find out about her
being an agent. The film then revolves around twins named Rebecca and
Cecil Wilson (Rowan Blanchard and Mason Cook)
who always bet and compete against each other. Rebecca has no respect
for her stepmother as she thinks she can't replace her deceased mother,
and their father, spy-hunting reporter Wilbur Wilson (Joel McHale), has little time to spend with them and has to go to work and has not even caught one spy.
When Earth is threatened by an organization led by a hyperion mastermind mysteriously known as "the Timekeeper" (Jeremy Piven),
Marissa is contacted and called back into action by the OSS and has to
take the baby with her, leaving a red-sapphire necklace (the key to the
Timekeeper's plan) with Rebecca. When the Timekeeper's thugs try to
break into their home, Rebecca and Cecil escape and go into the Panic
Room. A video is shown of Marissa, telling the children why the Panic
Room was installed and that she is a spy. They don't believe it until
their dog Argonaut talks, as he is a robot dog, and they escape in
rockets and go to the OSS but then are chased by the Timekeeper's
minions until they avoid them by throwing bags of vomit at them. Carmen
Cortez (Alexa Vega) helps them by letting them have gadgets as souvenirs and wait in a room but they escape and wreak havoc around the OSS.
They later go to a clock shop as they uncover a code to where the
Timekeeper is hiding and become frozen by Tick Tock but Marissa and
Carmen help them by activating their gadgets and they all escape. Wilbur
witnesses the fight and becomes upset, and is fired for destroying the
evidence that Marissa is a spy and he is upset she didn't tell him and
when he thinks he needs to helps them out.
The OSS brings back Juni Cortez (Daryl Sabara)
since he is their best agent ever and they have Rebecca and Cecil stay
back at the OSS so they don't cause trouble. But when the director of
the OSS, Danger D'amo shows up and Rebecca notices his watch like the
Timekeeper and Cecil scrambles the letters of his name saying
Armageddon, they are locked in. They escape by setting Argonaut to
attack mode and smashing the door. The OSS agents are all frozen except
Juni because he doesn't have his badge on because Carmen threw it away.
Juni uses his watch to connect to Rebecca and Cecil to get the necklace
back, and he unfreezes all the agents.
However, with the end of the world pending and the necklace stolen by
the Timekeeper, both Rebecca and Cecil find that they have no choice
but take part in the battle. As they get some gadgets and help Marissa,
Rebecca has to put her anger against Marissa aside to rescue the lives
that are at stake and are able to get through Tick-Tock's minions. They
stop the Timekeeper who reveals he is doing this to see his father back
in time, as while working on something else, Danger got frozen as a boy
and kept going back in time to see him and (after aging as a
side-effect) accept time the way it is. Following that epiphany, he
disables the Armageddon device and leaves the premises an older and
wiser man. Rebecca tells Marissa that she and Cecil are her kids and
"the best spies ever". Wilbur handcuffs Tick-Tock, knocks out his
minions, and Argonaut comes with Maria. When Tick-Tock tries to charge
and escape Maria flips him over her head. And Marissa saying "Baby's
first bad guy".[1]
Carmen and Juni announce that they've decided to be co-leaders of the
"Spy Kids" program. In the end we see Rebecca and Cecil choose new
recruits and both say to the selected recruits "You are activated."
Cast
- Mason Cook as Cecil Wilson
- Rowan Blanchard as Rebecca Wilson
- Jessica Alba as Marissa Wilson[6] (née Cortez), Wilbur's wife, Maria's mom, Rebecca and Cecil's stepmom, Carmen and Juni's paternal aunt and Gregorio and Machete's sister who is also a spy like her brothers.
- Joel McHale as Wilbur Wilson,[7][8] Marissa's husband, Maria, Rebecca and Cecil's dad, Carmen and Juni's uncle and Gregorio and Machete's brother-in-law.
- Alexa Vega as Carmen Cortez
- Daryl Sabara as Juni Cortez
- Belle Solorzano and Genny Solorzano as Maria Wilson/Spy Baby (talking voice by Sarah Stewart)
- Jeremy Piven as Danger D'Amo/Time Keeper, Danger's Father and Tick Tock[1]
- Ricky Gervais as Argonaut (voice)
- Danny Trejo as Isador "Machete" Cortez[1]
- Antonio Banderas as Gregorio Cortez[1](Deleted Scenes)
Production
Robert Rodriguez was prompted by an incident on the set of Machete
to start envisioning a fourth film in the Spy Kids series. Star Jessica
Alba had her then-one year old baby Honor Marie and was dressed to
appear on camera when her baby's diaper "exploded". Watching Alba change
the diaper while trying not to get anything on her clothes prompted
Rodriguez to think "What about a spy mom?"[9][10]
Production on the film was officially announced on September 25, 2009, six years after the release of Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over, by Dimension Films.[11] The script for the film was completed by Robert Rodriguez in December 2009.[12] The title for the film was officially revealed as Spy Kids 4: All the Time in the World on March 24, 2010 as well as an August 2011 release window,[13] which was later updated to an August 19, 2011 release date.[14] Filming for the movie began in October 2010.[1] The teaser was released on May 26, 2011 during Kung Fu Panda 2 and June 3, 2011 during X-Men: First Class.
While Walt Disney Pictures was initially a part of the production,[15]
they cut their own share in it and other recent films with the
Weinsteins to 5% after the latter party lost their bid to reclaim Miramax Films,[16]
though Disney still gets a soundtrack credit for some of the music
featured in the film in the closing credits (namely, a theme from the
first film).[17]
Reception
Critical response
Spy Kids 4 received negative reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes has given the movie a "Rotten" rating of 22% from 55 reviews. CinemaScore polls reported that the average grade moviegoers gave the film was a B plus on an A plus to F scale.[18] It was released on Blu-ray and DVD on November 22, 2011 along with Conan the Barbarian and Super 8.[19]
Box office
The film took in $4 million on its opening day and $11.6 million over the three-day weekend, debuting in third place behind The Help and Rise of the Planet of the Apes. That was on the low end of expectations, but an executive of The Weinstein Company
said, "We're okay with this number. We're going to be in good shape
with this film, and it will play for the rest of the summer".[citation needed]
The following weekend, it dropped 48% to $6 million, and took sixth
place, and on the following weekend, it earned an additional $6.8
million over the four-day Labor Day Weekend. As of November 2011, the
film has earned $38 million in the U.S and $73 million worldwide, making
it a moderate financial success.[4]
Home media
The film was released on DVD, Blu-ray, and on DVD + Blu-ray + Digital Copy combo packs on November 22, 2011.
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