Fly Me to the Moon (3-D) Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

48 =
Based upon 10 Critic Reviews
See all Fly Me to the Moon (3-D) reviews at
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Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

Fly Me to the Moon is a crummy movie for kids, yet it still holds out the prospect of past wonders and future marvels. It's one small step for a housefly, one giant leap for 3-D.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

Brisk and sweet, even if the script veers toward fussy and lame.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Michael OrdonaAdd Critic to Favorites

This oddly paced kids' entertainment displays flashes of intelligence -- then misspells terms on NASA control panels.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Walter AddiegoAdd Critic to Favorites

Will probably pass muster with very young viewers, but their parents may grit their teeth at its saccharine quality.Read the full review

The Hollywood Reporter | Michael RechtshaffenAdd Critic to Favorites

An awkward mix of proficient 3-D animation, detailed technical recreation and strained storytelling that stalls on takeoff.Read the full review

The New York Times | Nathan LeeAdd Critic to Favorites

One of the most undermotivated plots in many a moon, the zero-wit, zero-gravity misadventures of Nat, I.Q. and Scooter are embarked on merely because they're bored on their garbage dump.Read the full review

The Onion (A.V. Club) | Tasha RobinsonAdd Critic to Favorites

The film still suffers from cheap plasticky design, a klutzy overall look, dim preschooler humor, and a nearly impact-free story that thinks it's clever when it steals cues from 2001.Read the full review

USA Today | Claudia PuigAdd Critic to Favorites

A tribute to a giant leap for mankind feels like a clumsy shuffle backward for animation.Read the full review

Variety | John AndersonAdd Critic to Favorites

It’s a wingless exercise, despite a rather heartening attitude toward space travel that will introduce young auds to the glory that was NASA in the '60s.Read the full review

Washington Post | Michael O'SullivanAdd Critic to Favorites

Despite some Cold War humor, the formulaic film is aimed squarely at the youngest of young children.Read the full review

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