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Robin Williams in Flubber - Un professore tra le nuvole (1997)

Recensioni degli utenti

Flubber - Un professore tra le nuvole

98 recensioni
6/10

Technically impressive and enjoyable, but somewhat forgettable too

This movie had a lot of potential. While technically impressive and very enjoyable with some genuinely funny moments, for some reason it falls short. Of course there are redeeming qualities, such as the fun music score by Danny Elfman, one of my all time favourite film composers and an amusing turn from Robin Williams. Also the special effects are greatly improved from the effects in the Absent Minded Professor, and Flubber who is so cute steals the show. The performances from Clancy Brown, Ted Levine and Marcia Gay Horden are entertaining, and Jodi Benson (who voiced Ariel in the Little Mermaid)is a delight as the voice of Weebo, whose death is absolutely heart-rending. However the story is very predictable, and offers few surprises, and the physical comedy was better than the patchy script which in places felt uninspired. That saying some of the physical comedy has strong hints of deja vu, and is rather hit and miss. Of course kids will lap it up, but adults probably won't like it as much. The second half of the movie is more meandering in quality compared to the first half, very little of interest happens and some of the situations come across as ridiculous. All in all, somewhat forgettable, but for a kids movie it is pretty entertaining. 6/10 Bethany Cox
  • TheLittleSongbird
  • 30 dic 2009
  • Permalink
4/10

Not Williams' best role

  • Pilsung89
  • 15 feb 2010
  • Permalink
4/10

Quixotic Movie

A very basic and childish movie. It's fast paced, chaotic and nonsensical.. enough to keep the kids interested. As a grown up, it might make your eyes roll a few times.

There's not much to say other than it makes little sense, specially when the invention of a flying car comes AFTER the flying talking and sentient AI robot. Even as a Robin Williams film, this isn't particularly fun or worth a watch. Marcia Gay Harden and Christopher McDonald look too much like brother to make it awkward when they are "romantically involved". And the bad guy and plot are like 20 minutes of the movie. Wil Wheaton is hilariously bad (as he often is).

I'm inclined to seek out and watch the "Absent-Minded Professor" (1961), since this is a remake of that (thing I didn't know until recently).. and looks apt for the time it was made. Which might explain why this 1997 adaptation doesn't work for me at all.
  • daisukereds
  • 17 lug 2021
  • Permalink
4/10

Good possibilities that don't pan out

Phillip Brainard (Robin Williams) is the absent-minded professor. Chester Hoenicker (Raymond J. Barry) threatens to close the college run by his girlfriend president Sara Jean Reynolds (Marcia Gay Harden). He keeps forgetting to go to their wedding and she vows that this is the last attempt. His work with a new compound as an energy source can save their college. He has a mechanical assistant Weebo. His hated old partner Wilson Croft (Christopher McDonald) visits after stealing all of his ideas and now is after Sara. Chester's son Bennett (Wil Wheaton) is failing Brainard's class and he expected his father had already bought the grades. Chester sends his henchmen Smith (Clancy Brown) and Wesson (Ted Levine).

There are a lot of good possibilities that don't pan out. Weebo is not cute and a bit of an annoying jealous brat. There is an uncomfortable man-machine love story. Also he has a flying robot. HE HAS A FLYING ROBOT! That is probably enough to keep the college going. Professor Brainard is not lovable enough. Christopher McDonald is too good at being creepy and I can't buy anybody even liking the guy. MGH is not likable either. There are too many broadly unlikeable characters. The Flubber itself is fun for a little while and Williams has good imaginary chemistry with an imaginary object. It allows him to have some physical humor. Although it gets very repetitive. There is only so much Home Alone slapstick that should be repeated. It's also very stupid that people saw the basketball game without figuring it out. This should be funnier but it's not.
  • SnoopyStyle
  • 30 gen 2015
  • Permalink
7/10

Fun Mainly For The Kids

This was a fun remake of "The Absent-Minded Professor," with special-effects the main show here. We see and hear the following impossible things: inanimate objects become human (with feelings, no less!) and a flying computer called "Weebo." Obviously, this is just a far-off story designs only for laughs (I know one person who actually took some of this stuff seriously.)

Despite a bowling bowl repeatedly hitting someone in the head, it's a fairly harmless movie with no language problems, which is a rarity in a Robin Williams film. Robin is the "absent- minded professor," in this "Dr. Philip Brainiard." You can call him, "Dr. Phil." There are one or two sneaky-vulgar lines but nothing much.

With the flubber-substance making balls bounce forever, into every object, you get a lot of slapstick scenes that are either stupid or laugh-out-loud funny. The story, geared a lot more for kids than adults, has a nice lighthearted feel to it. For adults, one viewing is plenty, but kids will enjoy it multiple times.
  • ccthemovieman-1
  • 11 mar 2007
  • Permalink
5/10

Great talent,dry story.

I admire Robin Williams.His quick,improvisational humor make him the most unique entertainer of our time.However,he does from time to time make bad choices,and Flubber was indeed a bad one,at least scriptwise.This movie's problem is not from bad performances,but from terrible writing,and that often makes the performers look bad.The intentions here are good,but the movie just fell flat in all aspects.If you want to see a movie about flubber,I would highly suggest "The Absent Minded Professor".It's a classic and it's much better.
  • SmileysWorld
  • 9 ott 2001
  • Permalink
6/10

Entertaining and visually impressive, the film nevertheless falls short of the joyous satisfaction found in the original AMP

Philip (Robin Williams) is a chemistry professor at a college with financial woes. On a side note, the school's president, talented Sara Jean (Marcia Gay Harden) is Philip's girlfriend and she is deeply disappointed that he has left her standing at the altar THREE times. Yet, Philip truly loves Sara. His problem is, of course, that once he is into an experiment, he loses touch with everything else in his life. The day Philip misses his third trip up the aisle of love, he discovers something big...that is, flying rubber or flubber. Knowing this could be the invention that turns the college's ledger into the black, he is eager to tell Sara of the news. Unfortunately, she won't talk to him and is receiving the attentions of a rival chemistry prof at a nearby university. It is this rival's intention, along with a host of others connected to the school, to steal the rubbery substance for their own purposes. Will they succeed? This is a mildly entertaining film, mostly due to Williams star power and the spectacular visual effects the movie offers. Flubber, indeed, takes on a green personality not unlike the Pillsbury doughboy and bounces all over the place, causing much fun and havoc. There is also a tiny robot-computer, living with Philip, that is very appealing. Add on the eye-treat of flying cars and basketball superduper jumpshots and you have a technically impressive film. Yet, somewhere along the way, a bit of the original film's soul and joyous freshness is lost. No, its not the fault of the talented Williams, Harden, Christopher McDonald or the other cast members. They are quite fine. There are also some laugh out loud scenes, such as the one where Professor Philip starts giving a lecture, not noticing that he is in a figure drawing class, or the ones where a neighboring boy, quite rightly fears, to his father's consternation, what is outside his window when flubber is out and about. In summary, the film's problem is probably a case of trying too hard in the special effects category and not enough in the remaining aspects of film making. Even so, it is not a stretch to say that most families will like Flubber, as everyone will be amazed by the stunning look of the movie.
  • inkblot11
  • 22 ago 2007
  • Permalink
4/10

John Hughes copies himself once again and crudely staples it to a 36 year old film

Professor Phil Brainard (Robin Williams) is an absent-minded professor of physical chemistry at Medfield College engaged to be married to college president Dr. Sara Jean Reynolds (Marcia Gay Harden), not for the first time, but his third. When Phil becomes wrapped up in one of his experiments when his robot assistant Weebo (Jodi Benson) deletes his wedding from his schedule, Phil discovers he's invented a substance, Flying Rubber or "Flubber", that has the power to build upon whatever energy is applied to it in an exponential manner (in that it bounces higher and higher with each bounce) and even make material fly when applied with Gamma Rays. Now Ned must try to win back Sara's affection from his unscrupulous former partner Wilson Croft (Christopher McDonald), test his newly discovered material, protect Medfield College from closure by a vindictive money hungry Chester Hoenicker (Raymond J. Barry), and sell Flubber for the resources needed to keep Medfield open and keep it out of the hands of Hawk.

Flubber is a 1997 remake of Walt Disney Pictures' 1961 film The Absent Minded Professor. While the original film was only okay and hasn't stood the test of time, it was used as a template for early effects work that would be utilized in other live-action Disney productions such as Mary Poppins and the various high concept comic adventures that would refine and build upon the effects work. Flubber is the second film produced under the short lived John Hughes label for the Disney Company, Great Oaks, which one year prior had seen success with the Glenn Close staring live-action remake of 101 Dalmatians. While John Hughes is credited as a writer on Flubber, Hughes based Flubber so much upon the original script that the original screenwriter Bill Walsh was given screen credit despite having died in 1975. While I wasn't a big fan of 101 Dalmatians, I did at least appreciate that it was trying to do something different regardless of its success. Flubber on the other hand is basically a point by point remake of the original film with only the most superficial of details added or changed and rendered through the lens of John Hughes' "bumbling pratfall" framework that had long been run into the ground after an endless parade of Home Alone rip-offs, many of which written by Hughes himself.

Robin Williams unfortunately isn't all that effective playing a professor and this role that was originally written as fairly simple and reserved for Fred MacMurray just doesn't play to Williams' strengths of madcap manic energy. Most of the time Williams isn't the one giving energy and most of the energy is coming either from the special effects department or stunt coordinators who use a mixture of CGI and wirework to make things bounce around and break things or cause others to do exaggerate pratfalls. Poor Marcia Gay Harden is wasted in a role that wasn't all that well written in 1961, and while they've tried to add some more agency to the character it's still a thin role with nothing all that substantial for Harden to grab onto. I will say that Christopher McDonald is probably my favorite performance in the movie as he effortlessly plays conniving self-serving jerks and his delivery coupled with a complete lack of any subtley does make for some humorous moments (intentional or otherwise) where he's basically saying in play speech "I'm the antagonist". The movie also adds a strange subplot in the form of Phil's robot assistant Weebo voiced by Jodi Benson of The Little Mermaid, and there's a weirder and much more interesting plot going on within the movie where Weebo is in love with Phil and at one point even creates a holographic human projection of herself so she can "kiss" him while he sleeps. It's a very strange thing going on thematically because Phil is her creator so Weebo could be seen as having an Electra complex in addition to being a machine in love with a human and of course being a Disney film this isn't addressed at all and is pushed in the background so we can focus on more of Hughes' regurgitation from Home Alone.

Flubber isn't a good movie, it's not charming, not funny, and not interesting and the only things that do kind of work is McDonald's complete "no care given" performance and the odd nature of the Weebo subplot feeling really out of place and unnerving if you think about it.
  • IonicBreezeMachine
  • 20 ago 2022
  • Permalink
7/10

LOVED this as a child.

I'm giving it a 7 because as a child it was an absolute 10/10 but can appreciate as an adult it wasnt the best probably a 6/10 so decided on 7. I think any child under 10 will be absolutely creased with laughing throughout.
  • TeddySmashings
  • 5 feb 2020
  • Permalink
5/10

When your most interesting character is a computer, you've got problems.

"Flubber" is based upon that old comedy cliché, the absent-minded scientific genius. The central character, Professor Philip Brainard, is a brilliant inventor who has not only invented a robot that will do the housework for him but has also cracked the artificial intelligence problem by producing Weebo, a computer with its own personality that can not only talk to him but also fly. At present he is working on "flubber", a rubbery substance that will allow cars and other objects to fly through the air. For all his intellectual brilliance, however, his private life is so disorganised that he has forgotten to turn up to his own wedding to his attractive sweetheart Sara, not once but three times.

The plot turns upon Brainard's attempts to produce his flubber, which he sees as a solution to the financial problems confronting the college at which he teaches and of which Sara is the principal. (Like another reviewer, I found myself wondering why he didn't just try marketing his domestic robot or his talking computer, inventions which I thought would have had just as much commercial potential). Along the way, he has to fight off Wilson, the handsome but too smooth principal of another college who is his rival for Sara's affections, and a corrupt businessman who wants to use the flubber for his own selfish ends.

The film was clearly designed as a comedy for children, and works quite well as such, aided by a good deal of slapstick humour, mostly involving Robin Williams as Brainard. Unlike some children's films, however, such as the "Harry Potter" series, this one does not have much in it to keep adults entertained. Williams is clearly a talented comedian, but strangely enough, with a few exceptions such as "Mrs Doubtfire", he has been most successful in films with a serious purpose like "Dead Poets Society" or "Good Morning Vietnam", although even in these he often manages to find a use for his comic talents. In many of his comedies his talents just seem wasted. "Club Paradise" is an example, and "Flubber" is another. All the other characters, with one exception, just seem like stock figures with little individuality about them.

The one exception is Weebo the computer. The British computer pioneer Alan Turing devised what has since become known as the "Turing Test" for deciding whether a machine can be said to be intelligent. A human judge engages in a conversation with two other parties, one a human and the other a machine; if the judge cannot tell which is which, the machine is said to pass the test. Unfortunately, if the human involved were one of those in this film, Weebo would fail the test. She (Weebo has a female voice and personality) is smart, funny, sensitive and lovable, much more so than anyone else in the film, so it would be easy to tell them apart. And when your most interesting character is an electronic rather than a flesh-and-blood one, your film has got problems. 5/10
  • JamesHitchcock
  • 13 nov 2005
  • Permalink
10/10

Great kids movie!

  • knightviper56
  • 4 ago 2009
  • Permalink
6/10

It's a Live-Action Cartoon

  • PyroSikTh
  • 7 mag 2020
  • Permalink
4/10

Bearable only for kids

A few good jokes, tolerable special effects, that's all. This film doesn't try to be a great piece of art, it wants nothing else than to entertain people, mainly children. And for children and also other people who don't think about it any longer, it's fun and therefore able to bring the producers a lot of money. For people like me, it rather hurts. A machine falling in love with a professor? Is that cute? A man who misses his wedding three times? Not really. Luckily, we're told in no uncertain terms that John Hughes is responsible for this: the "Home Alone`-head-bangings come up again and again. And everybody's laughing...?
  • Mort-31
  • 2 feb 2001
  • Permalink

Mildly amusing kids film

An absent minded professor discovers a new type of rubber that can be harnessed as an energy source. However his discovery causes him to miss his wedding and lose his girlfriend. While trying to demonstrate his discovery to Sara Jean to win her back, he gets the attention of mobster Hoenicker who wants the discovery for himself.

The story here is unimportant - it's all a bit daft and if you look too closely at it, it all falls apart. For example - the professor has created a flying robot that has full intelligence and character but yet he hasn't made any money for himself or his college!, is the flubber alive or not? etc. But really it's all about the set pieces and the jokes. As such it falls down a little - it's good for kids but there's nothing in the crude slapstick for adults. Jokes include the usual "people getting hit in the head" style humour.

Williams character is not funny at all - a bit of a weakness in a comedy lead. In fact his forgetfulness is just stupid at times and doesn't have any charm to cover it. The funniest bits actually revolve around McDonald's Wilson - he doesn't get good lines but he has lots of incidental laughs. Ted Levine and Clancy Brown have both done better than this and are limited to comedy thugs - although both were probably glad to be in a big movie. Other well known faces include Raymond J. Barry and Wil Wheaton, although these are also underused. It's not really a movie about performances but I think it's still important.

The best characters are Weebo and the flubber. Weebo is quite funny and actually has a deep character - she's the secretary in love with her boss type - she also creates a strangely moving scene. The flubber is good - best in one big musical number halfway through and I wonder if they could have had more imaginative scenes with it as a character rather than just a bouncy ball.

Overall it's a kids film - don't expect anything more than that.
  • bob the moo
  • 22 gen 2002
  • Permalink
5/10

Still somewhat enjoyable as a kids movie but it had more potential really.

This movie really feels like a wasted opportunity. With so many talent involved, how could this movie turn out to be so disappointing? It probably is due to the messy script that uses too many plot lines that never get fully developed or that work out completely the way as they were suppose to. You can say that the movie feels incomplete. I don't know, were they in a hurry or something to complete this movie? I have a feeling that a month or two more work on the movie- and perhaps its script, would had made this movie a better one.

It's still somewhat decent entertainment for the kids. The characters should be enjoyable for them and some of the comical situations are good enough to make them laugh.

Robin Williams is always fun to watch in a comedy but however in this case it feels like he's holding back to not completely play a nutty professor. It's perhaps a bit of a disappointing to most. When you know Robin Williams plays the lead role in a comedy you would expect some more fireworks and hilarious situations from him. His talent is wasted, a real missed opportunity for the movie to become a great one. Christopher McDonald plays a typical 'villainoush' Christopher McDonald role and he does it once more really great. Other well known actors in the movie are Marcia Gay Harden, Raymond J. Barry (boy, he's beginning to look really old now), Ted Levine and Clancy Brown. But none of the characters feel really developed well enough in the movie, with the exception of the robotic character Weebo. Of course it's not a very good sign when the best developed- and featured character of the movie is not even an human...

Also the use of 'Flubber' is highly below par. From a movie named "Flubber" I expected something more from the green slimy stuff. It however doesn't play a that significant role in the movie and the things that are done with the Flubber are far from original or interesting. The Flubber itself however looks fantastic through some early computer effects. Remember that this movie was released in 1997 when the special effects were of course not as advanced as present day is the case. The effects from this movie look great and really fully convincing. Too bad that it isn't featured very well in the movie.

The story is of course predictable from A to Z and the movie has absolutely no surprises in it. It makes "Flubber" a very easily forgettable movie that is far from great. The movie had far more potential really. If only that had made some better choices with its story and perhaps picked a different director...

The movie is good and professional looking, so from a technical point of view the movie does really not disappoint. Also the fun musical score by Danny Elfman makes the movie a watchable one

The kids will probably still enjoy it but still the movie feels like a big waste of some far more and greater potential, which the movie really had.

5/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
  • Boba_Fett1138
  • 28 apr 2006
  • Permalink
7/10

Flubber review

I watched this movie when I was a kid. It was good from what I remember. But it wasn't a story a watched super much as a children. I loved that this movie was about a scientist. That was cool. I think everyone should watch this at least one in their life.
  • maddiebuggie
  • 26 apr 2020
  • Permalink
4/10

Flying Rubber

Disney got Robin William's who became popular in the 1990s with family entertainment films to remake the The Absent Minded Professor. Popular with kids at the time mainly because it was co- written by John Hughes who put some of his Home alone slapstick formula with two comedy henchman played by Ted Levine and Clancy Brown.

William's discovers discovers some kind of flying rubber which may save his college which is in a financial crisis. So excited he is with his invention that he forgets his wedding day for the third time. Why his bride to be could not make sure that in case he forgets, he is accompanied by two people to drag him to the church on time is anyone's guess.

His girlfriend who also happens to be the College Dean gets the attention of a love rival and a mobster wants the formula for flubber and sends his henchman to retrieve it.

Williams is assisted by an Artificial Intelligent flying robot called Weebo which strangely is not marketed by Williams to save the college.

The film is knockabout slapstick squarely aimed at kids and they will appreciate it the most. Adults will find the film too silly, flawed and simplistic.
  • Prismark10
  • 24 gen 2015
  • Permalink
6/10

A Part Of My Childhood

I remember enjoying this film as a kid and was my second Robin Williams film I ever saw after Hook. I recently got the chance to revisit this film and although it didn't live up to my memory of it, Flubber was still a decent family film. It suffers from of the classic film tropes especially one that I hate where people are just ignorant to what is going on around them. A fun Williams film you can watch with your kids.
  • MichaelMRamey
  • 8 giu 2018
  • Permalink
1/10

Fred MacMurray, where are you??

Words escape me. My jaw is on the floor. How can this be?

You want to see how NOT to make a kid's comedy? Watch "Flubber" then count with me the ways:

1) Williams isn't funny (his hair seems to put in more acting time than he does).

2) It's written by John Hughes (and it isn't even good on a slapstick level! Sheesh!!).

3) Marcia Gay Harden is completely, totally, hopelessly wasted (did I say "totally"? Good!).

4) There aren't HALF as many funny situations in this one as there was in the original.

5) The bad guys act as if they're in a serious movie (though since there wasn't any laughs in this one, I can see where they would get confused for content).

6) There are more FX than anything else (when a movie forsakes its story in favor of an FX loop, it's not a good sign).

There are more, but we're only allowed 1,000 words for reviews here.

One star. For the FX. They're good.
  • Mister-6
  • 8 nov 1999
  • Permalink
6/10

Flubber is for the kids.

This is the remake of 1961's Absent-Minded Professor, where Robin Williams plays Professor Phillip Brainard. He works with his assistant Weebo, a talking miniature flying robot, and created a rubber-like substance called Flubber, which can make objects fly through air. His scientific research has caused him to miss his wedding to fiancée Dr. Sara Jean Reynolds (Marcia Gay Harden), who ends up going out with Professor Wilson Croft (Christopher McDonald). Therefore, Brainard works to get Reynolds back, and deal with a couple of criminals who want their hands on Brainard's scientific work.

I haven't seen The Absent-Minded Professor, so I couldn't compare the two films. But, to evaluate this movie alone, I'd say it is just an average movie with some whimsical fun and silly slapstick comedy, and a plot that really goes all over the place. Williams looks pretty odd in the movie, Harden did an OK job in her role, and McDonald was just plain annoying in his performance. I enjoyed the Weebo character, voiced by The Little Mermaid voice actress Jodi Benson. The little flying robot reminded me of the little aliens in the sci-fi flick *batteries not included, and her little TV screen that shows various Disney cartoon scenes whenever she makes emotions is a clever touch.

Overall, I didn't think it was a really exciting movie, but for its whimsical, slapstick and childish elements, this movie is best left for younger children to enjoy.

Grade C
  • OllieSuave-007
  • 4 mag 2014
  • Permalink
1/10

Painful and Droll

On a flight home from Japan the in-flight movies were Flubber, Home Alone 3, and For Richer or Poorer (starring Tim Allen and Kristie Allie). These are by far three of the worst films I have ever been subjected to. How I managed to see them all in one shot, I will never know. Luck I guess.
  • d5witkow_99
  • 13 gen 2001
  • Permalink
8/10

Not As Good as "The Absent Minded Professor" But Pretty Funny

  • zardoz-13
  • 5 ago 2009
  • Permalink
7/10

Good

Flubber - Uma Invenção Desmiolada is brilliant and relaxed from the 1961 remake of The Fantastic Superman! Phillip Brainard (Robin Williams) is a badly awkward inventor and tries everything to reconcile with his fiancee and save the city college, even though it's a movie it's not a big deal anymore it's good ... I don't understand Rotten Tomatoes put 15% approval of the film is good and I recommend watching it with your family will bring nostalgia and laughter.
  • mfellipecampos
  • 15 feb 2020
  • Permalink
1/10

Liked it when I was a kid. Not so much now.

As a boy, I was always impressed and amused by the movies that I saw. Some of them bring back memories of me watching whatever kids movie that made me excited. But as time goes on, those memories are still embedded in my memory bank. And sometimes, an fellow movie-goer can sometimes get teary-eyed by going down memory lane. Some of those movies do hold up well. Some of them, well.... get lost in my mind.

Take Flubber, for example. Flubber is the kind of movie that I enjoyed as a young boy. But, I've grown up over the years and to tell you the truth, it doesn't hold up for me.

The story was originally from the 1961 comedy film, "The Absent-Minded Professor". In that film, Fred MacMurray played the lead character. MacMurray's character was a complete nut case who invents a new and improved substance that can bounces off the floor due the amount of energy stored inside. The substance was named Flubber, due to the fact that it is flying rubber. The absent-minded professor tried to convince his colleagues that flubber can saved their university from going into shambles.

Here, Robin Williams plays the absent-minded professor. Professor Phillip Brainard, (who could be a distant relative or son of the original Absent-Minded Professor), is in the process of creating a new substance that can raise money to save the college from closure. Brainard's colleague is a flying robot called Weebo. Brainard soon discovers flubber and from the start of it, Flubber doesn't want to settle down.

The story deepens as Brainard tries to convince the college president and his fiancée, (Marcia Gay Harden), but it doesn't turn out the way he wants it to go. He even expands the idea of flubber by converting the substance into a liquid and then into a white cream. In one particular scene in the movie, Brainard tries out the flubber by spraying it onto a basketball that can bounces as twice as much as a regular basketball. The idea even becomes more popular when it spreads onto a basketball team. Their sneakers are also sprayed with flubber, making them bounce more higher and faster than ever.

There are, however, bad guys in Flubber, and their job in the movie is to try to steal the substance from Brainard. But, to tell you the truth, you seen these bad guys before in a movie. And it's no surprise that these characters are ripped right out of Home Alone. It's ironic because the script for the movie was written by John Hughes.

I don't know what happened to John Hughes back then. He started off his career with good movies like Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club and Planes, Trains and Automobiles. But, after the big success of Home Alone, I believe Hughes dropped his pen and started depending on recycled material from his other movies to substitute in his scripts. Recycled material soon resulted in forgettable movies like Dutch, Career Opportunities and Curly Sue. Bad career move. And I supposed Flubber can be included in this specific category of forgettable John Hughes' movies.

Robin Williams looks as if he was practically on speed throughout the entire movie. At certain times throughout this movie, I thought he overacted as being the main character of the story. The slapstick did not work this time around since it didn't make me laugh the first time I saw it as a young boy. The flubber wasn't even worth my time since there wasn't anything special about the green goo. In fact, when Flubber soon shows up, the movie goes downhill from there with the green gelatin bouncing around the movie, breaking windows and panes of glass. I realize that after the movie was over, I forgot how many times Flubber went through a window or a pane of glass. It was very tiresome and boring the second time around.

Is there anything else I forgot? I don't think so. Except to say that I won't be looking forward to seeing this movie since this is one of those kids' movies that I like to forget. But, don't worry. There's plenty of other good or great kids' movies that I saw in my childhood. Flubber wasn't one of them. ★ 1/2 1 1/2 star.
  • blazesnakes9
  • 28 lug 2014
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