The Last Mimzy
We live here with a powerful adventure through a dramatic story about dramatic and exciting events with Emma and Noah. The story of Emma and Noah began when they traveled with their mother Joe from Seattle to the family home on Wedby Island for two days while their father David Wilder worked. During that trip, the duo will find a box of toys in the future in the water and bring him home, and this fund may be a reason to develop their skills.
10 December 1957, Chicago, Illinois, USA
May 24, 1997 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13 October 1963, Sapporo, Japan
9 January 1965, Marylebone, London, England, UK
9 February 1963, New York City, New York, USA
24 June 1994, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
20 January 1966, Seattle, Washington, USA
February 06, 2018
The adult cast is an ensemble effort filled with solid performances.
March 15, 2008
Classic kids' fantasy in the spirit of Flight of the Navigator and ET.
March 31, 2007
Occasionally arresting ideas and a non-condescending attitude to its pre-teen protagonists give this more character than many effects-driven family fantasies, even if it's ultimately too wonky in construction to sweep us along convincingly.
February 29, 2008
Considering that parts are frightening, parts are nauseatingly sweet, and it's all confusing, it's not clear which demographic Mimzy is aiming for.
March 26, 2007
The Last Mimzy is that phenomenon as welcome as the first robin of spring, a kids' movie that is more than bearable for adults.
March 31, 2007
It's refreshing to be reminded that an intelligent, exciting family movie isn't always an oxymoron.
March 23, 2007
Wholesome, eager entertainment that doesn't talk down.
March 26, 2007
The special effects are kinda cheesy, and it's a low-rent E.T.
August 27, 2008
Does an excellent job both making science fiction accessible for a younger audience.
January 15, 2008
O'Neil and Wryn convey the occult and the mysterious with greater depth than you'd expect them to possess at their respective ages of 13 and 7.
April 05, 2007
New Line powerbroker/director Robert Shaye has made a children's film for stoners, a trippy, psychedelic fable that belongs in the DVD section of New Age bookstores alongside the strangely similar What The Fuck Do We Know?
March 02, 2008
I like to refer to it as "Donnie Darko" sans the violence if aimed towards kids...

