Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
Donate to Christianity Today
login | my account
May 27, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2009
Aliens in the Attic
Mindless but fun fodder exclusively for the videogame-conditioned Generation Z






Aliens in the Attic

Our rating: 2 Stars - Fair Your rating:
Your Comments: see all

MPAA rating: PG
(for action violence, some suggestive humor and language)

Genre: Adventure, Family, Fantasy

Theater release:
July 31, 2009
by Fox Searchlight

Directed by: John Shultz

Runtime: 1 hour 26 minutes

Cast: Kevin Nealon (Stuart Pearson), Ashley Tisdale (Bethany Pearson), Carter Jenkins (Tom Pearson), Doris Roberts (Nana Rose Pearson), Andy Richter (Nathan Pearson), Robert Hoffman (Ricky Dillman)

Related:
Talk About It/Family Corner


Aliens in the Attic is one of those titles that pretty much sums up the entire movie. It's not some sort of pun or metaphor or literary allusion. This is a film about aliens that invade an attic of a house and wage war (in a not-so-scary way) against the family residing below. It's a straightforward film geared toward third-graders, a movie with nothing on its mind but some good old-fashioned "let's shoot paintballs at the bad guys!" kid power.  There's nothing in here for adults to enjoy, but plenty of hijinks and hilarity for anyone born in the 21st century.

The premise of Aliens, directed by John Schultz (Drive Me Crazy), is familiar. An average family takes a vacation at a rental house in Michigan over Independence Day weekend. The Pearson family consists of dad (Kevin Nealon), mom (Gillian Vigman), teenage son Tom (Carter Jenkins), and boy-crazy teenage daughter Bethany (Ashley Tisdale). There are predictable inter-family conflicts. Brother and sister are fighting because brother disapproves of sister's buffoonish college-aged boyfriend (Robert Hoffman). Father and son are at odds because son has been failing classes at school on purpose; he's tired of being picked on for being a brainiac nerd. The strained family dynamic is in need of some sort of galvanizing crisis to bring them back together again—something like an alien attack!

Cousins Jake (Austin Butler) and Tom (Carter Jenkins)
Cousins Jake (Austin Butler) and Tom (Carter Jenkins)

At the rental house, the Pearsons are joined by Uncle Nathan (Andy Richter), his three boys, and Nana (Doris Roberts). Bethany's annoying boyfriend Ricky also shows up and quickly becomes the target of the younger boys' paintball guns. Before long, a team of cartoony-looking CGI alien scouts drops down into the attic and begin planning for an invasion. The younger cousins discover the aliens—a band of four knee-high creatures that look vaguely amphibious/reptilian—and thus begins a raucous fight to keep these aliens from destroying the world. For the next hour, the kids use every weapon at their disposal—including bubbles, tennis rackets, spud guns, skateboards, Mentos/Diet Coke bombs, and years of playing Halo—to fend off the aliens and hopefully keep the adults from ever having a clue that a trans-terrestrial battle was going on upstairs.

Aliens is your typical "kids save the world" action film. Adults are not really necessary in the film, aside from being the foils and/or comic playthings of the kids. Conveniently, the kids are immune to the aliens' secret mind-control/avatar weapon, so they are really the only ones capable of fighting the creatures anyway. The adults—including an unhelpful local policeman (Tim Meadows)—mostly just bumble around wondering why the TV is on the fritz. They're never made privy to the aliens' presence, and thus a private fantasy world is preserved in which the kids are free to have their own gnarly adventure that only they are innocent enough to understand and take seriously.

Ashley Tisdale as Bethany, Robert Hoffman as Ricky
Ashley Tisdale as Bethany, Robert Hoffman as Ricky

Lest we forget that this is a film meant for kids, we are reminded at nearly every turn that being a kid is, like, way cooler than being old. Whether it is a joke about adult diapers or a snarky declaration that dad's suggestion to go fishing is "lame," the film is full of cheapshots at adulthood. One scene in which the kids all pull out their cell phones only to find that they have no reception is particularly funny. They are forced to try to call the police on the landline rotary phone, but you'd think they were monkeys trying to make sense of Ulysses. They're stumped.

Though a film like this feels familiar (it brings to mind 1970s Disney flicks, or Little Monsters with Fred Savage, or about a dozen other movies I haven't seen), it also feels like a product of the 21st century, mainly in the way that it plays like a video game. The plot is pretty much the plot/objective of your average Xbox adventure: Find the bad guys, destroy them, experience crazy stuff like "zero gravity weapons," and then save the world. The kids in this film are conversant in this language already, so they know what to do when extraterrestrial trouble comes knocking. "This isn't Xbox," says one of the kid actors at one point. "It's real. Like Wii!"




Christianity Today


  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!
[Reader Reviews]

Brett

August 16, 2009  6:52am

i thought the movie was funny there were a few stupid parts but it was not what i thought it would be but it is still a childerns movies i liked it.

The allotted time for commenting has ended.

[Browse More Christianity Today]



Quiet

Quiet

Shhh! Introverts working

The Conversation

The Conversation

A tribute to "The Reformed Journal."

more | current issue

Christian Bible Studies

Unbalanced Blessings

Unbalanced Blessings

The balancing act of...

Books & Culture

Quiet

Quiet

Shhh! Introverts working...

Preaching Today

NFL Star Junior Seau Searched for Peace

Small Groups

Prepare with Prayer

Prepare with Prayer

Don't leave out this...

Search
Search




Search
Scripture Search
Go Deeper