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Marissa Cortez Wilson seems to have it all, a famous spy husband, a new baby and intelligent twin step kidd. But in fact, her toughest challenge is to mother those who don't want her around, Rebecca and Cecil. But when Marissa is called back into action, she uses that chance to bond with her new step-childrenby inviting them along for the adventure to stop the evil Timekeeper from taking over the world.
CRITICS OF "Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D"
Boston Globe
Rodriguez's various family-geared movies - notably the "Spy Kids'' series - have been annoying creative clunkers, the one area where doing things his way has seemed like an iffy way.
An endless series of scatological jokes saps the charm out of nearly every scene, and there's little effort to create an interesting mystery at the movie's center.
Clever and strange, 'Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D' is a psychedelic action movie that will boggle and entertain the minds of adults and kids alike. If you like wordplay, you will like it all the more for the witty dialogue.
Rodriguez's family franchise about underage secret agents limps into its fourth installment with shiny CGI and frequent fart jokes to hold the attention spans of the underage and undemanding.