Parents' Guide to

Night at the Museum

Movie PG 2006 100 minutes
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Common Sense Media Review

By Cynthia Fuchs , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 7+

Cute adventure; OK for tweens, but a little scary for kids.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 7+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 7+

Based on 39 parent reviews

age 7+

Based on 80 kid reviews

What's the Story?

In NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM, divorced father Larry (Ben Stiller) needs to get a job in an effort to maintain contact with and provide some level of stability for his 10-year-old son, Nicky (Jake Cherry). To that end, Larry applies to be a night guard at New York's Museum of Natural History, a job he believes will be "ordinary." So he doesn't really listen when retiring security guards Cecil (Dick Van Dyke), Reginald (Bill Cobbs), and Gus (Mickey Rooney) advise him to read their handwritten instruction manual and follow the steps exactly and in order. When Larry falls asleep on his first night, he wakes to find that an amazing change has occurred: The exhibits have come to life! The next few nights offer more of the same and a deepening relationship between Larry and the historical figure to whom he feels a particular affinity, Teddy Roosevelt (Robin Williams). Not only must Larry find a way to bring the nightly chaos under control, he must also stop thieves from stealing treasure from the museum.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (39 ):
Kids say (80 ):

Mostly cute and often frantic, this movie runs out of story early. Although the individual creatures can be entertaining, the film is repetitive and too invested in its silly explanation of how the coming-to-life phenomenon came about (something about an Egyptian pharaoh's tablet). The movie makes a cursory case for the significance of the "first working mother," Lewis and Clark guide Sacajawea (Mizuo Peck), even though -- stuck behind a soundproof glass exhibit -- she's unable to speak or hear the action for much of the film. And it even promotes reading, as Larry researches all his new charges in a bookstore (apparently in one day). Entertaining as it is, though, Night at the Museum falls short of "greatness" ... not that kids will care.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the message behind all of the fancy effects in Night at the Museum. Why is it the important to pursue your dreams -- and to learn, read books, and discuss ideas as you do so?

  • How is Larry inspired by his new friends to go after his dreams?

  • Does Larry's relationship with his son seem realistic to you? Who seems more grown-up of the two? Does that change over the course of the movie?

Movie Details

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