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Fun Size
Eager to get separated from her dysfunctional family Wren prepares to leave for college but what happens when her brother gets missing in her care.
2 May 1986, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
17 December 1953, Los Angeles, California, USA
4 May 1967, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
March 31, 1987 in United States
25 February 1975, Livingston, New Jersey, USA
September 08, 2013
A modern day revamp (of sorts) of the 1980s teen classic Adventures in Babysitting meets The Hangover for tweens, the feature debut of television writer/producer Josh Schwartz is a mess of a movie.June 30, 2013
An offensive and obnoxious comedy that never feels secure in its own identity.October 26, 2012
Screenwriter Max Werner and director Josh Schwartz clearly have several well-worn copies of Adventures in Babysitting between them, but they keep the gags coming at a brisk pace.March 07, 2013
Justice has a real charm and appeal on-screen, looking good in just about anything she wears in the film...October 26, 2012
There's little fun to be had in this foolish Halloween comedy that generates many more eye rolls than laughs.October 29, 2012
This is utterly disposable stuff, but it does have its moments.October 26, 2012
It feels like a project that was pitched for the CW but watered down for Nickelodeon audiences. In the end, everyone loses.October 26, 2012
Though it doesn't always hit the hilarity target, this tween-targeted romp strikes a sweet-but-not-sappy balance.July 23, 2013
A gaudy, simple-minded fiasco that's too dumb for adults and too suggestive for kids.January 03, 2013
Nickelodeon goes outside their comfort zone with Fun Size, but the film is very hit or miss, with an inconsistent tone.October 30, 2012
This is a dog's breakfast of a film, lurching from simpering teen-romcom sentiment to off-colour paedophile gags to sub-'Juno' hipster cultural references to a lecture on the woes of single motherhood without breaking stride.March 19, 2013
Justice makes a likeable lead but director Josh Schwartz's comic touch is distinctly leaden and a high proportion of the would-be funny scenes - some of them involving an uncredited Johnny Knoxville - fall flat.