70 reviews
I was prepared to hate this movie, but I didn't. In fact, I kind of liked it. This variation on the Parent Trap storyline kept me engaged and, dare I say, entertained. I even found myself laughing at some of the cheesy jokes. What has happened to me? I enjoyed an Olsen Twins movie!
- cricketbat
- Dec 30, 2018
- Permalink
I can certainly see why the critics didn't like it, but I think all the reasons they don't like it are the same things that give this movie its charm. I find it too cute not to enjoy.
- alistairmenze
- Feb 25, 2021
- Permalink
I couldn't help but compare to the parent trap (it's the exact same premise, except everyone just decides to call it 'weird' that the two girls are identical). But it really works regardless, it's a cute, fun, mindless movie. Kirstie alley really shines, she's funny and charming and had a great relationship with the kids. A fun movie!
- Calicodreamin
- Dec 9, 2019
- Permalink
I stumbled on this family film while channel surfing the other night. I happened to catch it right from the opening titles. The Olsen girls had me hooked from the first minutes. I couldn't stop watching this movie until the final credits rolled. Having raised two girls I was particularly tuned into the Olsen girls. I was blown away by how cute and funny and bright they were. And I thought the love story though predictable was tastefully handled and fairly intelligent. All in all a most enjoyable experience.
- netsmith2001
- Mar 15, 2004
- Permalink
- lisafordeay
- Sep 27, 2019
- Permalink
Maybe this remake of classic Disney's "The Parents trap" is the best film of these twins, at least it's a good family entertainment. I should say however that it is the last good work of these girls, their latest stuff are really unbearable, like "Getting There", for example.
- peter_garner
- Dec 26, 2003
- Permalink
It is movie for children. It is funny. Romantic. Kristie Alley and Steve Guttenberg are fit to each other. It is a good summer time movie that watch with your child.
- serrakiper
- Jun 7, 2019
- Permalink
- anaconda-40658
- Feb 2, 2016
- Permalink
Very enjoyable film! I watched it back in 1996 and I loved this film. The Olsen twins made great job the same like Kirsty Alley and Guttenberg. After this movie I became a fan of Kirtsy Alley and Olsen twins. One of their best movies. Since then I got it on the tape. I still watch it sometimes and it brings me back to the childhood when I was a kid of 10 years old.
It is a simple film about twins that meet and want to change the worlds. Lots of laugh, funny situations and quotes. A summer vacation begin. Nice shots, very good script. A movie to learn from. This film is very suitable for kids. Good actors, cast, screenplay and action! A movie for whole family!
It is a simple film about twins that meet and want to change the worlds. Lots of laugh, funny situations and quotes. A summer vacation begin. Nice shots, very good script. A movie to learn from. This film is very suitable for kids. Good actors, cast, screenplay and action! A movie for whole family!
The movie is about two little girls who try to get a jerk of a fiancée gone and get Diane (Kristie Alley) and Roger Callaway (Steve Guttenburg) married. Wait, so Amanda wants to get adopted by Diane, so that makes her Alyssa's stepsister. Yup, something we've seen before, and also predictable.
I do not believe that It Takes Two really knows what it wants to be, the story has pacing issues, with the movie most of the time being a light-hearted comedy with some dramatic parts.
The idea is based on THE PARENT TRAP, but except the kids in there are sisters.
The movie is just a bit too saccharine for me, there could've been more tension going on instead of the dishonest kids turning what could've been a thrilling remake into a sappy romance. And also more development on Roger and Diane's relationship.
The movie has some absurd and annoying acting from the Olsen twins, but they seemed to have gave out some great performances for their young ages in their own way. But the best performances go to Kristie Alley, though I think the director could've had been better with her. Now, don't get me wrong, the movie was pretty interesting, I still love the Olsen twins but they could've been in better projects.
I do not believe that It Takes Two really knows what it wants to be, the story has pacing issues, with the movie most of the time being a light-hearted comedy with some dramatic parts.
The idea is based on THE PARENT TRAP, but except the kids in there are sisters.
The movie is just a bit too saccharine for me, there could've been more tension going on instead of the dishonest kids turning what could've been a thrilling remake into a sappy romance. And also more development on Roger and Diane's relationship.
The movie has some absurd and annoying acting from the Olsen twins, but they seemed to have gave out some great performances for their young ages in their own way. But the best performances go to Kristie Alley, though I think the director could've had been better with her. Now, don't get me wrong, the movie was pretty interesting, I still love the Olsen twins but they could've been in better projects.
- Aleta_Nook
- Aug 17, 2015
- Permalink
What do you get when you take two parts Prince and the Pauper, one part The Parent Trap and throw in the Olsen Twins? It Takes Two of course!
This story starts with the very different lives of two identical strangers (Mary-Kate & Ashley): Alyssa, who is the lonely daughter of a wealthy widower (Steve Guttenberg), and Amanda, an orphan with a "street" attitude who is looked after by her...social worker? caretaker? Diane (Kirstie Alley). For the summer, Amanda and her friends from the orphanage are sent to a camp for disadvantaged children, which just happens to be across the lake from Alyssa's enormous summer home. By chance, the two girls run into each other (literally) in the woods and discover they look exactly the same. After a few minutes of conversation they decide to switch places because...why not?! Now they both must deal with the other's problems--Alyssa struggling with Amanda's adoption to an awful family, and Amanda doing her best to get rid of the gold-digging b!tch Alyssa's father is engaged to. While the girls deal with that, Diane and Alyssa's dad meet and begin a romance. So, will Amanda be able to stop the wedding? Will Alyssa be able to get out of the awful adoptive parents' home? Will anyone believe they are actually someone else? Will Diane and Alyssa's dad get together?
This movie is quite bad. As a child I loved it, but that's purely because I loved the Olsen twins/Full House. Everything and everyone in this film is an old cliché that was taken from other books and films that did it much better. There is literally nothing new or interesting about the plot line of this film. The acting also leaves something to be desired. Steve Guttenberg, Kirstie Alley, and Philip Bosco as Vicenzo the butler actually did a decent job with what they were handed, but it was still sub-par. More than anything this movie demonstrated something the world seemed to have missed for many years: Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen cannot act for their lives. People forget that they became famous on...not so much acting, but on being cute and essentially being themselves on camera. This is the first role they had where they were not Michelle Tanner or just..."twins" (i.e. themselves)! Neither of them are able to pull off either a high or low class NYC accent and demeanor without sounding like they are pulling it out with a rope. In fact, if I had seen this without knowing who they were, I would think they had never even acted in a school play, nonetheless been "acting" since they were infants. Also, there is something else about this movie that really irritates me. That is, the use of the word "orphan" and Amanda being from an "orphanage". I don't know what films' preoccupation on these anachronistic terms are, but there had not been an orphanage in NYC for over 30 years when this film was made. Not only that, but the term "orphan" has also not been used for a very long time. The fact they are constantly using the word "orphan" in this movie drives me up a wall.
All in all this film is pathetic. It's boring, uninteresting, and has some painful acting on the part of the Olsen twins. Some young children may like it, but you're better off getting The Parent Trap if you must sit through it with them.
This story starts with the very different lives of two identical strangers (Mary-Kate & Ashley): Alyssa, who is the lonely daughter of a wealthy widower (Steve Guttenberg), and Amanda, an orphan with a "street" attitude who is looked after by her...social worker? caretaker? Diane (Kirstie Alley). For the summer, Amanda and her friends from the orphanage are sent to a camp for disadvantaged children, which just happens to be across the lake from Alyssa's enormous summer home. By chance, the two girls run into each other (literally) in the woods and discover they look exactly the same. After a few minutes of conversation they decide to switch places because...why not?! Now they both must deal with the other's problems--Alyssa struggling with Amanda's adoption to an awful family, and Amanda doing her best to get rid of the gold-digging b!tch Alyssa's father is engaged to. While the girls deal with that, Diane and Alyssa's dad meet and begin a romance. So, will Amanda be able to stop the wedding? Will Alyssa be able to get out of the awful adoptive parents' home? Will anyone believe they are actually someone else? Will Diane and Alyssa's dad get together?
This movie is quite bad. As a child I loved it, but that's purely because I loved the Olsen twins/Full House. Everything and everyone in this film is an old cliché that was taken from other books and films that did it much better. There is literally nothing new or interesting about the plot line of this film. The acting also leaves something to be desired. Steve Guttenberg, Kirstie Alley, and Philip Bosco as Vicenzo the butler actually did a decent job with what they were handed, but it was still sub-par. More than anything this movie demonstrated something the world seemed to have missed for many years: Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen cannot act for their lives. People forget that they became famous on...not so much acting, but on being cute and essentially being themselves on camera. This is the first role they had where they were not Michelle Tanner or just..."twins" (i.e. themselves)! Neither of them are able to pull off either a high or low class NYC accent and demeanor without sounding like they are pulling it out with a rope. In fact, if I had seen this without knowing who they were, I would think they had never even acted in a school play, nonetheless been "acting" since they were infants. Also, there is something else about this movie that really irritates me. That is, the use of the word "orphan" and Amanda being from an "orphanage". I don't know what films' preoccupation on these anachronistic terms are, but there had not been an orphanage in NYC for over 30 years when this film was made. Not only that, but the term "orphan" has also not been used for a very long time. The fact they are constantly using the word "orphan" in this movie drives me up a wall.
All in all this film is pathetic. It's boring, uninteresting, and has some painful acting on the part of the Olsen twins. Some young children may like it, but you're better off getting The Parent Trap if you must sit through it with them.
- trixie-k-88
- Mar 20, 2014
- Permalink
Such a fun film! I remember watching this film as a kid and I remember how fun and cute it was. I love Mary-Kate and Ashley and there is amazing chemistry between them and all of the adults in the film. This film is such a cute and cheesy film and I consider it a classic.
Seriously.
It reminded me a lot to "the parent trap" from disney AT FIRST.
Because most of the time there were a lot of similarities, but at the end the vibe was totally different.
But I have to say that I really enjoyed and it was my first time watching it after tiktok recommended it to me.. yea, I know, my tiktok is very well trained to recommend me nice movies.
The energy of the characters was really healing for me and the way it made me laugh very much was inmaculate, it must be a fun one to watch with family or friends, I have to say that I absolutely love this kind of movies, they make my day, totally.
It reminded me a lot to "the parent trap" from disney AT FIRST.
Because most of the time there were a lot of similarities, but at the end the vibe was totally different.
But I have to say that I really enjoyed and it was my first time watching it after tiktok recommended it to me.. yea, I know, my tiktok is very well trained to recommend me nice movies.
The energy of the characters was really healing for me and the way it made me laugh very much was inmaculate, it must be a fun one to watch with family or friends, I have to say that I absolutely love this kind of movies, they make my day, totally.
This is as silly as it can get. You have to be in the right mindset for it. I do like silly at times too, but there are things here that just don't work. Now yes the twins here are only 8 years or so ... but there have been way better performances in that age. On the other hand, was a better performance needed for the type of movie this is? Yes their sister is the way better actress as we found out (Elizabeth Olsen, in case you don't know, though right now with Wandavision and all the MCU things going on, I'd be surprised if you never heard of her) ... but that is not the issue at hand here.
So we also get Kirstie Alley and Steve Guttenberg and one actress some people may recognize from Friends. Comically evil they say ... ridiculous is another word you could use. But again, it is a matter of your mindset ... I've never seen someone run down the aisle as fast as we get to see in this movie. Just don't take any moral lessons from this: no food fights (what a waste), no stealing horse and carriages either ... or whatever else is deemed as "funny" but is actually not in the real world ... yes I know this is just a movie. You may find certain things funnier than I did - that's how it works.
So we also get Kirstie Alley and Steve Guttenberg and one actress some people may recognize from Friends. Comically evil they say ... ridiculous is another word you could use. But again, it is a matter of your mindset ... I've never seen someone run down the aisle as fast as we get to see in this movie. Just don't take any moral lessons from this: no food fights (what a waste), no stealing horse and carriages either ... or whatever else is deemed as "funny" but is actually not in the real world ... yes I know this is just a movie. You may find certain things funnier than I did - that's how it works.
This has got to be one of the cutest movies i've seen. I love the way that they have one rich twin and one poor twin. the best part of the movie is when they are running through the woods screaming and the song hippie, hippie shake is playing. This is the best movie out of the olsen twins collection and i would recommend you see it giving it a 10/10.
- lcfamous-1
- Mar 13, 2003
- Permalink
I grew up in the 90s where a lot was happening. One thing that happened were the Olsen Twins. They were the Hannah Montana of the 90s. Their fame really began with the dull show called Full House. (Go check out my review for that show).
Then they were plastered in various movies and all over the place. Only a couple of their movies like It Takes Two are actually tolerable. I was looking through the "More Like This" section and I saw so many movies that they were in that I didn't even hear about before now. So I have to ask why were these 2 so popular and where the heck did they go?
In addition, people use to talk how all cute they were. And if these are actual girls, then they were never all that good-looking.
Anyways...It Takes Two is a family movie about 2 people meeting each other and they have identical children then silly stuff happen then the 2 get married and, they lived happily ever after. Yeah...waste of time.
Nevertheless, during the 90s watching this movie I enjoyed it because I didn't know any better. It's just the nostalgia of the 90s is why this movie get a positive rating, otherwise this movie is a waste of time just like all the other movies they were in that no one cared about.
Then they were plastered in various movies and all over the place. Only a couple of their movies like It Takes Two are actually tolerable. I was looking through the "More Like This" section and I saw so many movies that they were in that I didn't even hear about before now. So I have to ask why were these 2 so popular and where the heck did they go?
In addition, people use to talk how all cute they were. And if these are actual girls, then they were never all that good-looking.
Anyways...It Takes Two is a family movie about 2 people meeting each other and they have identical children then silly stuff happen then the 2 get married and, they lived happily ever after. Yeah...waste of time.
Nevertheless, during the 90s watching this movie I enjoyed it because I didn't know any better. It's just the nostalgia of the 90s is why this movie get a positive rating, otherwise this movie is a waste of time just like all the other movies they were in that no one cared about.
- ThunderKing6
- Sep 13, 2021
- Permalink
- matrix11001
- Jul 16, 2020
- Permalink
I have actually never watched the 1995 family movie "It Takes Two" before. Sure, I am familiar with Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen from the "Full House" series, and do know that they made an abundance of movies as well. But I never got around to watching it. At least not before now in 2024.
Truth be told, I wasn't really harboring much of any grand expectations to the movie, but I still opted to give writer Deborah Dean Davis and director Andy Tennant a fair chance. And it turned out that "It Takes Two" was actually an enjoyable family movie. Sure, it was a pretty straightforward, if not actually generic, switched-roles kind of family comedy, but there was just something entertaining and enjoyable about the storyline. Predictable plot? You betcha. But it still played out nicely.
There were some fun and enjoyable moments in the storyline, and I were genuinely entertained throughout the course of the movie.
The acting in "It Takes Two" was good. Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen do carry the movie quite nicely. And I will say that Kirstie Alley and Steve Guttenberg were nicely cast for the movie, and they spruced up the movie quite a lot. The movie also has Jane Sibbett, Philip Bosco and Lawrence Dane on the cast list.
Don't write off this 1995 movie just because it has twin girls Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in it. It is actually a wholesome and entertaining movie to watch for the entire family. This is actually quite a feel-good kind of movie. And I will say that I had definitely been missing out on something here.
My rating of "It Takes Two" lands on a six out of ten stars.
Truth be told, I wasn't really harboring much of any grand expectations to the movie, but I still opted to give writer Deborah Dean Davis and director Andy Tennant a fair chance. And it turned out that "It Takes Two" was actually an enjoyable family movie. Sure, it was a pretty straightforward, if not actually generic, switched-roles kind of family comedy, but there was just something entertaining and enjoyable about the storyline. Predictable plot? You betcha. But it still played out nicely.
There were some fun and enjoyable moments in the storyline, and I were genuinely entertained throughout the course of the movie.
The acting in "It Takes Two" was good. Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen do carry the movie quite nicely. And I will say that Kirstie Alley and Steve Guttenberg were nicely cast for the movie, and they spruced up the movie quite a lot. The movie also has Jane Sibbett, Philip Bosco and Lawrence Dane on the cast list.
Don't write off this 1995 movie just because it has twin girls Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in it. It is actually a wholesome and entertaining movie to watch for the entire family. This is actually quite a feel-good kind of movie. And I will say that I had definitely been missing out on something here.
My rating of "It Takes Two" lands on a six out of ten stars.
- paul_haakonsen
- Aug 9, 2024
- Permalink
this has to be one of the worst movies i have ever seen, how could you people think that this movie is 5? this is very sad and makes me uneasy about these user ratings. 5?!?!?!?!?! this movie, first of all, had an unrealistic scenario from the beginning. IDENTICAL STRANGERS?!?!?!?!?! how is that possible. the writing is horrendous, and the olsons don't even do anything, they just walk around and see if the two people are going to make out or not. plus, I'm pretty sure they would get their asses sued if they flew a helicopter in and took the girl away from her new LEGALIZED parents, i didn't even watch this movie really, my sister was watching it on TV and i could not believe the little that i saw and i am ashamed that i saw the little i did see
- Homerjay613
- Sep 27, 2004
- Permalink
This is a great movie to watch when you're having a bad day, especially if you watched it as a kid. Along with Passport to Paris, this was one of the Olsen twins' movies that my sisters and I watched the most, over and over and over....so many great quotable one-liners in this (for kids and adults) Plus, Kirstie Alley and Steve Guttenberg are hilarious and very lovable!
- novagirl11
- Feb 11, 2019
- Permalink
How I loathe these romantic comedies...
The only one who could have made this movie any worse is Owen Wilson, the king of senseless romantic comedies.
The comedy is not very intelligent. There are loads of falling jokes who are supposed to be funny.
The jokes are bad, and the story shines with its inconsistency.
Be honest people. Do these films ever work? I don't even like the concept. I have yet to see a genuinely intelligent and funny romantic. comedy.
Is it just me or ought America to be ashamed?
The only one who could have made this movie any worse is Owen Wilson, the king of senseless romantic comedies.
The comedy is not very intelligent. There are loads of falling jokes who are supposed to be funny.
The jokes are bad, and the story shines with its inconsistency.
Be honest people. Do these films ever work? I don't even like the concept. I have yet to see a genuinely intelligent and funny romantic. comedy.
Is it just me or ought America to be ashamed?
The Olsen Twins take "The Parent Trap" to a new level as they agree to switch places to see how the other half lives. As the stars, they set the tone for the movie and keep it light-hearted throughout the film, with good and evil on both sides of the tracks waiting for them. Guttenberg and Alley turn in excellent performances, as well.
This movie is better than the original movie with Brian Keith and Maureen O'Hara, in that they get actual twins to play the girls (although the Disney studios did a great job with Hayley Mills in the starring role). The big difference is that the Olsen twins don't play sisters, but are actual strangers who decide to hook the two adult stars up, one the father, who's a company mogul who made it big in the cell phone industry, and the other, a case worker for Social Services in an orphanage that spends a week at a summer camp built by deceased woman who was married to the cell phone mogul. When you throw in a gold-digging débutante about to catch her man, comedy ensues that even the most heavy-hearted adult can't help but enjoy.
It wouldn't be fair to compare this to 1961 without going the other way and comparing it to the film of the same name released three years later than this particular film in 1998. To be honest, I can't see myself comparing it to Lindsay Lohan, because there's a big difference between her and the Olsen Twins in more than just numbers. Well, maybe numbers DO make the difference, because I give this film 8 out of 10, but Lohan only gets 5 out of 10 (and I even like Dennis Quaid, as an actor). And I can't say anything nice about Lohan because I think she's...
Well, my mother always told me, "If you can't say anything nice about someone, keep your trap shut!"
This movie is better than the original movie with Brian Keith and Maureen O'Hara, in that they get actual twins to play the girls (although the Disney studios did a great job with Hayley Mills in the starring role). The big difference is that the Olsen twins don't play sisters, but are actual strangers who decide to hook the two adult stars up, one the father, who's a company mogul who made it big in the cell phone industry, and the other, a case worker for Social Services in an orphanage that spends a week at a summer camp built by deceased woman who was married to the cell phone mogul. When you throw in a gold-digging débutante about to catch her man, comedy ensues that even the most heavy-hearted adult can't help but enjoy.
It wouldn't be fair to compare this to 1961 without going the other way and comparing it to the film of the same name released three years later than this particular film in 1998. To be honest, I can't see myself comparing it to Lindsay Lohan, because there's a big difference between her and the Olsen Twins in more than just numbers. Well, maybe numbers DO make the difference, because I give this film 8 out of 10, but Lohan only gets 5 out of 10 (and I even like Dennis Quaid, as an actor). And I can't say anything nice about Lohan because I think she's...
Well, my mother always told me, "If you can't say anything nice about someone, keep your trap shut!"
- moviedude1
- Nov 15, 2008
- Permalink
Amanda Lemmon (Mary-Kate Olsen) is a tomboy orphan. She loves her case worker Diane Barrows (Kirstie Alley) but Diane is single and unable to adopt her. The orphans go to Camp Callaway which is set up by billionaire Roger Callaway (Steve Guttenberg) on the other side of the lake. By chance, Roger is the single father to Amanda's double Alyssa Callaway (Ashley Olsen). Roger is often absent and he surprises Alyssa by bringing back mean-spirited girlfriend Clarice Kensington (Jane Sibbett). Alyssa is further shocked by news of their impending marriage. When Alyssa and Amanda meet, they decide to switch places. After Clarice leaves on a trip, the girls agree to bring Roger and Diane together.
The plot is simplistic switcharoo and conveniently silly. In most of these movie, the twin roles are played by one actress. There is no denying that the Olsen twins are very charismatic. This is generally harmless and predictable. It's great for the little ones. It's way too predictable for older kids.
The plot is simplistic switcharoo and conveniently silly. In most of these movie, the twin roles are played by one actress. There is no denying that the Olsen twins are very charismatic. This is generally harmless and predictable. It's great for the little ones. It's way too predictable for older kids.
- SnoopyStyle
- May 12, 2016
- Permalink
I saw this movie back when I was 12; I liked it then, and still wouldn't mind seeing it again. Like all kids' movies, this movie has just a few corny kid moments that older viewers, especially teenagers, wouldn't prefer. But, unlike countless other movies, "The Parent Trap" included, this movie doesn't let all those annoying little things, like "I love you, honey! I love you with all my heart!..." get too far and make the viewer want to put a grim on his face and turn off the TV. They do it by using great acting skills by countless ingenious actors and actresses, and by not having a moment of nothing, but smiles, hugs, and extra-corny laughter get too long.
Also, another advantage this movie has over "The Parents Trap", is that even 'though the main characters are both young girls, and one is an orphan in a group home, they are never portrayed as completely helpless, and in need of adult supervision; throughout the whole movie, all the adventures and gigs the girls think-up and go through they do with the help of no one, but themselves, and constantly help each other when either would get in a tough spot. The reason this is such a big advantage for this film is that in most real life, and most movies we see, all the main action is done and held by adults, and kids are treated as little and somewhat spoiled helpless creatures, who can't take care of themselves. This fact, often unconsciously, bores and sickens the audience, sometimes even bringing feelings of disgust towards kids. But in this movie, this problem is dealt with masterfully. Not only do kids here do things all on their own, but many times the adults, when in the same situation, look up to to them for help and advice. I thought this movie was made with a beautiful plot, truly great acting, very nice camera work, and, very importantly, very good character development: enough time is taken to introduce every important character's life before getting anywhere near the main idea of the movie. I would, personally, give this movie a 10/10, hands down.
Also, another advantage this movie has over "The Parents Trap", is that even 'though the main characters are both young girls, and one is an orphan in a group home, they are never portrayed as completely helpless, and in need of adult supervision; throughout the whole movie, all the adventures and gigs the girls think-up and go through they do with the help of no one, but themselves, and constantly help each other when either would get in a tough spot. The reason this is such a big advantage for this film is that in most real life, and most movies we see, all the main action is done and held by adults, and kids are treated as little and somewhat spoiled helpless creatures, who can't take care of themselves. This fact, often unconsciously, bores and sickens the audience, sometimes even bringing feelings of disgust towards kids. But in this movie, this problem is dealt with masterfully. Not only do kids here do things all on their own, but many times the adults, when in the same situation, look up to to them for help and advice. I thought this movie was made with a beautiful plot, truly great acting, very nice camera work, and, very importantly, very good character development: enough time is taken to introduce every important character's life before getting anywhere near the main idea of the movie. I would, personally, give this movie a 10/10, hands down.
Thea acting was probably 3.6 for Mary kate and ashley's performances, not the best out of this movie, but cute. and the movie was a naughty child thing but the movie was OK so it's because the acting was not terrible and not the best movie and acting of all, but it was good. So this movie is not bad connected to not horrible and not great but still I'll give it a 6.5 for some funny scenes and the acting scenes were pretty good so I'll be nice to the movie since it's old but I think a maybe 5 or 6 year old will like this movie and even some of the campers. This is a total rip copy off of the Parent traps movies and so I liked the Parent trap and this movie is still quite remarkable for 1995 but not the best year to release movies out,I thought the 2001 and the 2002's movies were quite remarkable and unforgettable like I am Sam or any other movie released out then in the 1990s but I guess 8 miles was a good movie too but beware that movie is rated R but for opinion I'll give this movie "A great of a comedy film" I say.
- kill-the-boxtrolls
- Apr 20, 2009
- Permalink