Fly Me to the Moon
2008, G, 89 min. Directed by Ben Stassen. Voices by Trevor Gagnon, Christopher Lloyd, David Gore, Philip Daniel Bolden, Kelly Ripa, Nicollette Sheridan, Tim Curry, Adrienne Barbeau, Ed Begley Jr., Robert Patrick.
REVIEWED By Marc Savlov, Fri., Aug. 15, 2008
If you can buy the fact that Canadian horror auteur David Cronenberg and composer Howard Shore recently unveiled a full-fledged operatic version of their 1986 film, The Fly – in Paris, no less – then chances are you'll be able to figure out this very peculiar, very 3-D, but not very exciting or even all that humorous animated offering from Belgian-born director Stassen. It is, on the face of it, a simple little parable of spirited can-do-ism, in which a trio of young houseflies (voiced by Gagnon, Bolden, and Gore) semiaccidentally tags along with astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin as Apollo 11 slips the reach of gravity (but not, surprisingly, Raid) and shoots moonward. Lurking beneath that main story, though, is a number of subplots only slightly less fancifully trippy, including a pair of bumbling Soviet house-spies sent to Cape Canaveral to sabotage the mission, an elderly fly (Lloyd) and his unrequited love for his long-lost Soviet paramour, and a downright bizarre recurring gag/theme about how bad it is to be overweight. Strange as it is, Fly Me to the Moon boasts superb 3-D effects (debuting feature director Stassen made his name making lots of 3-D nature and entertainment shorts) and gobs of colorful animation, but anyone over the age of 8 is likely to be bored into madness by the lightweight puns that pass for real humor – WALL-E this ain't – and the film's overall "eh" quotient. Adding to the weirdness is a tacked-on, live-action appearance from the real Aldrin, who reassures kids and terrified X-Files fans that there weren't, in fact, any houseflies on board Apollo 11, and therefore any concerns about a giant, gamma-irradiated Jeff Goldblum-type are not to be entertained. Or something to that effect.
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Fly Me to the Moon, Ben Stassen