Spy Kids: All the Time in the World

    Spy Kids: All the Time in the World
    2011

    Synopsis

    Eight years after the third film, the OSS has become the world's top spy agency, while the Spy Kids department has since become defunct. A retired spy Marissa is thrown back into the action along with her stepchildren when a maniacal Timekeeper attempts to take over the world. In order to save the world, Rebecca and Cecil must team up with their hated stepmother. Carmen and Juni have since also grown up and will provide gadgets to them.

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    Cast

    • Jessica AlbaMarissa Wilson
    • Joel McHaleWilbur Wilson
    • Rowan BlanchardRebecca Wilson
    • Mason CookCecil Wilson
    • Jeremy PivenDanger D'Amo / Tick Tock / Time Keeper
    • Alexa PenaVegaCarmen Cortez
    • Daryl SabaraJuni Cortez
    • Danny TrejoUncle Machete
    • Belle SolorzanoSpy Baby
    • Genny SolorzanoSpy Baby

    Recommendations

    • 67

      Austin Chronicle

      Far more coherent than its immediate predecessor, Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D benefits greatly from its two likable young leads and some of the series' wittiest, pun-filled writing.
    • 60

      Boxoffice Magazine

      Far more charming, quick-witted and high spirited than anyone could have expected...for a film that didn't screen for press. It's gimmicky up the wazoo (not just 3D, but scratch-and-sniff "Aroma-Scope" cards handed out at screenings) and it's all the better for it.
    • 50

      Movieline

      The film is being released in both 2- and 3-D, and from what I could tell the 3-D version is still almost 50-50. What use is made of the technology is hardly worth the effort, unless you've always wanted to experience a cascade of cheesies in 3-D.
    • 50

      Chicago Reader

      The visual effects are as gleefully shoddy as ever, and the playful ideas sometimes achieve a dreamlike suggestiveness.
    • 38

      Orlando Sentinel

      Nobody has much that's funny to say or cool to do. Even the spy gadgets are lame.
    • 38

      Boston Globe

      Alba, meanwhile, is again ridiculously shoehorned into a comedy gig, although she does have an amusing opening bit spying while nine months pregnant. If only diaper bomb gags weren't the inevitable follow-up.
    • 33

      The A.V. Club

      The Spy Kids series once seemed charmingly homemade. These days, it feels less charmingly homemade than maddeningly amateurish.
    • 30

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Arriving eight years after the lame third installment in Dimension's profitable series, this seems like far too little way too late.

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