After moving his family back to his hometown to be with his friends and their kids, Lenny (Adam Sandler), finds out that between old bullies, new bullies, schizo bus drivers, drunk cops on skis, and 400 costumed party crashers sometimes crazy follows you. From: IMDb.com
After moving his family back to his hometown to be with his friends and their kids, Lenny (Adam Sandler), finds out that between old bullies, new bullies, schizo bus drivers, drunk cops on skis, and 400 costumed party crashers sometimes crazy follows you. From: IMDb.com
Directed by: Dennis Dugan
Starring: Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock and others
The all-star comedy cast from Grown Ups returns (with some exciting new additions) for more summertime laughs. Lenny (Adam Sandler) has relocated his family back to the small town where he and his friends grew up. This time around, the grown ups are the ones learning lessons from their kids on a day notoriously full of surprises: the last day of school. From: IMDb.com
Directed by: Dennis Dugan
Starring: Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock and others
This movie is providing some harmless and fun enough entertainment but
other than that, it's not being a great or original genre movie in any
way or form.
Good thing about the movie is that it never bored or annoyed me with
any of its jokes or characters but the bad news is that nothing about
it ever stood out. The jokes don't exactly fall flat but they don't
impress very much either. The movie will probably still put a smile on
your face but it won't ever truly make you burst into laughing. As a
movie it's being perfectly harmless and fun all but it's really missing
2 or 3 truly funny, impressive or memorable moments, that most other
animated movies often have in it.
The story was also definitely lacking some more substance. It all was
being some pretty simple and straightforward stuff, which is the
foremost reason why this movie doesn't ever feels like the most
original or impressive one. It has an entertaining- and potentially
good and interesting main concept but you'll feel that the movie does
far too little with all of it.
The many divers characters still help to keep the movie going and keep
things fun and occasionally also fresh. The monster characters and the
interaction they have with each other is where most of the movie its
comedy comes from and this all works out perfectly fine.
It's also definitely true that its visuals help to make this a
perfectly fun and watchable enough little movie. Genndy Tartakovsky's
style is noticeable and the animation is perfectly smooth looking. Just
compare this movie to a, lets say, computer animated movie from 5 years
ago and you'll notice an huge difference. Every time you believe that
animated movies just can't get any better or more smooth looking there
comes out another movies that surprises you, in a positive way.
And please don't let its themes or concept scare you off, if you want
to take you children to see this. It's really being a kids movie and
there is nothing horror-like about this movie at all. Even while the
monster of course look like monster, they are cuddly looking at the
same time and only do a bunch of harmless and innocent stuff throughout
the entire movie.
Not a movie that ever truly impresses but it's watchable enough
entertainment, for a lazy afternoon.
Dracula, who operates a high-end resort away from the human world, goes into overprotective mode when a boy discovers the resort and falls for the count's teen-aged daughter. From: IMDb.com
Directed by: Genndy Tartakovsky
Starring: Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Andy Samberg and others
While still in his teens, Donny (Adam Sandler) fathered a son, Todd (Andy Samberg), and raised him as a single parent up until Todd's 18th birthday. Now, after not seeing each other for years, Todd's world comes crashing down. From: IMDb.com
Directed by: Sean Anders
Starring: Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg, Leighton Meester and others