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Emoji movie reviews for kids
Emoji movie reviews for kids








emoji movie reviews for kids
  1. #Emoji movie reviews for kids upgrade
  2. #Emoji movie reviews for kids download

The poop handwashing gag went down well with my two germ-ridden ferals. I liked Gene’s parents, Mr and Mrs Meh, trudging through life feeling slightly fed up the whole time (“I’m so nervous I could almost shrug” says Gene’s dad Mel waiting to see if Meh is picked). Most of the humour is groan-worthy though there are a few good jokes.

#Emoji movie reviews for kids download

Download Spotify! And Instagram! And a dance thing I can’t remember the name of because I’m 46 and I only get down to Reach by S Club 7 at weddings! But you know what I mean.Īnd it is a 90 minute marketing exercise. There is the essential rescue of a main character as it turns out there’s no “I” in emoji. But the story does drag even though it’s not a long film.

emoji movie reviews for kids

It’s quite fun for a few minutes – and true to life, what with all that wandering from app to app not getting anything done.

emoji movie reviews for kids

She can take them to The Cloud, where if they can get through the flame-spurting Firewall they can be raptured, sorry I mean reprogrammed.Īs with most films aimed at children, the overriding theme is one of staying true to yourself which is a perfectly acceptable message for anyone as long as you’re not addressing a rightwing mysogynist homophobe. In Piracy – the barman there is a Trojan Horse – they find Jailbreak (Anna Faris), a female hacker. She sends the giant and scary red and black Anti Virus Bots after him, which is what starts his escape through the phone.Īt Hi-5’s suggestion the two of them travel to the Piracy app to find a hacker to help Malfunctioning Meh be reprogrammed as, you know, Proper Meh. Alex starts to think that his phone is malfunctioning – so in Textopolis, Smiler decides that Gene must be deleted to protect the rest. He fancies schoolfriend Addie, and tries to send Gene as an emoji message, but Gene can’t suppress his other emotions in his excitement at being picked for the first time and it all goes horribly wrong. He’s been chucked out of Favourites (sorry I just can’t type Favorites) – replaced by the cooler Fist Bump – and banished to the corner of the screen where Alex can’t even see him.Īlex’s story is very basic. Hi-5 (James Corden) is considered old hat now, next to the newer emojis. Or maybe she’s just a focussed workplace manager aiming for excellence.Ĭube life is ruthless. The cubes are run by Smiler, the original Emoji, whose rictus grin belies a coldly evil heart. His parents finally let him – with some misgivings – start work. The desperation to work in the cubes reminded me of vast call centres when that’s all there is to look forward to for eternity as all the good jobs have disappeared overseas. In Textopolis the aim of every emoji is to start work in the cubes – where they stand, their expression fixed, waiting for Alex to choose them for a text. He lives with his parents, Mary and Mel Meh, in Textopolis, an emoji city in the text app of teenage Alex’s smartphone. Gene (TJ Miller) is a Meh emoji but he is hiding a terrible secret – he can actually perform several emotions, but as he’s still young he can’t always control them when they appear.

#Emoji movie reviews for kids upgrade

The story is simple, the characters recognisable (not to me but then I still haven’t downloaded that upgrade they’ve been reminding me about for a year), it’s mercifully short, and there are a handful of decent jokes in it. Though to be honest I can’t see that demographic liking the film much anyway as it is such a slight tale, and children seem so much more sophisticated these days (I look back with fondness on my own obsession at 10 with my almost-realistically-boobed Cindy dolls).įor young children it’s quite fun. It’s one big advert for apps, and they’re at an age where they are starting to own smartphones and have control of their own purchases. Dissing cheery children’s films can feel a bit like kicking a kitten and we all know how that would go down on social media, even in animated form.īut sadly The Emoji Movie – while not as irredeemably, horribly awful as I was expecting – is still pretty rubbish.Īs a film for preteens? No.










Emoji movie reviews for kids