"The Professional's" Luc Besson has made a fair share of artfully bad movies. Arthur and the Invisibles -- half-live-action, half-CG kid's adventure -- is (by a hair) more bad-bad, like "The Fifth Element," than good-bad, like "The Big Blue."Read Full Review »
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Washington Post: Desson Thomson
None of the characters are compelling, despite the star-studded vocal cast behind them, including Madonna, Robert De Niro, Snoop Dogg and Jimmy Fallon. Our attitude toward them is casual interest, not anxious concern.Read Full Review »
Watching Arthur and the Invisibles is like sticking your head in a Gallic pinball machine: It's hectic, technically impressive, and your skull starts to pound after a while.Read Full Review »
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The New York Times: Neil Genzlinger
The computer-generated world is visually rich, but short on the droll humor that makes good children's films bearable for adults.Read Full Review »
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LOS ANGELES TIMES: Alex Chun
Director Luc Besson, best known for "La Femme Nikita" and "The Fifth Element," admits he knew nothing about animation before he started this project, and it shows.Read Full Review »