| The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron - Attack of the Twonkies | 
| Actor: Adventures Of Jimmy Neutron Studio: Nickelodeon Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy New: $6.69 You Save: $8.29 (55%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $3.36
Avg. Customer Rating:   (7 reviews) Sales Rank: 29507
Format: Animated, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD Running Time: 104 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: PARD879774D ISBN: 0792198808 UPC: 097368797741 EAN: 9780792198802 ASIN: B0002WZTKW
Release Date: November 16, 2004 Theatrical Release Date: September 6, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Description After a horrific encounter with an abominable, six foot space beast, Jimmy returns from an excavation on the Twonkus-3 comet with a small furry creature burrowed in his soil samples. The Twonky is an immediate hit, especially after it coughs up a dozen more identical colorful creatures just like it. In the presence of music, these dream pets morph into violent and wild monsters and proceed to tear the town apart. Now it?s up to Jimmy to gather up the Twonkies before the Twonkus-3 comet leaves earth?s orbit and Retroville is stuck with the menacing varmints.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
  Average Jimmy Neutron Fare June 29, 2007 Basically this episode is based on the film 'Critters'. Cute furry aliens become mean nasty aliens, Jimmy & pals battle them, yadda yadda yadda. Derivative though not too bad - an average adventure for Jimmy & pals.
  Don't leave the wrapper on the Twonkie when microwaving! February 17, 2007 2 out of 6 found this review helpful
You know, there is such a thing as too much of a good thing. Before you say, "nay, Andy, this is just something our mothers would say to stop us from eating too many cookies", I would ask you to listen. Recently I had the opportunity to enjoy the animated film Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and was pleasantly surprised. In fact, the crisp animation with zany characters kept my attention for the short hour and a half that it played. It was the perfect film to accompany a lazy afternoon. Like a salesman, it hooked me to watching more of what this brainiac had to offer. I wanted to go to further distant lands, I wanted to allow my imagination to rocket into space, and I wanted to be a kid again and save the galaxy from anything that poised a threat. I thought, ahem, that Jimmy Neutron would be that dark horse (you know, the series that you never want to mention to your friends) that gave me that giddy pleasure. Before you read further, I would like to redirect you back to my original thought, "Is there too much of a good thing?" I would like to answer that in this review for Jimmy Neutron: The Attack of the Twonkies. Upon watching about 104 more minutes of my little genius, I found the answer to be a very big "yes". Obviously, the film had more of a budget than the smaller television episodes, which ultimately hurt my perception of a once excited concept. The point: Jimmy Neutron does not translate well to the small screen, unless you like cheap animation, annoying characters, and pitiful plots.
Upon staying with the theme of "too much of a good thing", we are bombarded with forced previews on this DVD before any and all viewings of the series. Once we finally sleep our way through those, we are silently handed the feature episode, "Attack of the Twonkies". In this episode, Neutron and friends battle plagiarism as we witness a retelling of Gremlins for children (substitute water/food for music). Nothing surprising, alas, nothing smart, and disappointingly, nothing funny. Originality seemed to be forgotten, as our heroes from the film step through the same patterns they did for us before. The jokes were stale and old, while Jimmy seemed more needy than friendly. The only aspect of this episode worth viewing is, my personal favorite creation, Jimmy's dad and ventriloquist dreams. One can only laugh when he demonstrates how to have the dummy speak while he drinks a glass of water. Ug, within twenty minutes the episode had gone too far and for too long.
Hoping for better (though the headlining episode left me with no element of desire), I watched the remaining three episodes with still the feeling of "too much of a good thing" deep within my gut. Always needing to go back into space, Jimmy clones himself for chores in the second episode entitled, "Send in the Clones", but alas, Jimmy doesn't do a successful follow-through and the clones wreak havoc all through Retroville. Decently dark ending, but getting to the final moments seemed like the show should have been called "Jimmy Neutron: Filler until the Finale". I didn't find myself laughing once, as the jokes were blow even the standards of "Twonkies". Then, we are escorted rapidly into "A Beautiful Mine". Title indicates perhaps a segway into a spin-off of the film title, but alas, it was not. Thus understanding that Jimmy constantly "needs" things, he and cronies, travel to an asteroid to become millionaires. Perhaps this could have been saved if the animation didn't make me feel like I was playing a new release on my Turbo Graphics 16. Then, as if the plagiarism from the first feature wasn't enough, we get a boring retelling of "Boy Who Cried Wolf" in the episode, "Junkman Cometh". It isn't set up well for first time watchers of the series as we are introduced to a faux-Neutron brother that somehow made it to space. He cries wolf, they run, the jokes on nobody, then it all goes downhill from there - I think we know how this one turns out. Arg, this will be over soon.
I would like to restate that there is such a thing as "too much of one singular thing" and that just happens to be Jimmy Neutron. While I did find myself enjoying the feature film, these small snippets of episodes just didn't make the cut. They smeared a good thing all over the wall and never looked back. The episodes were nothing more than recycled bits of better shows (or stories or films), and there was no real climax or dilemma. Jimmy, as I noticed in these episodes, is a poor role model. He was great in the film, but in the television series he seemed pushy, rude, and very needy. Sure, he is smart, but in these four episodes, he felt snobbish instead of humble. The only element I loved was his father, whose bumbling behavior gave me a welcomed rest to my furrowed brow. I cannot suggest this series, and in fact, I will not be watching any smaller screen versions of Jimmy Neutron unless forced by violence. I don't recommend this to children or adults, as it would put them to sleep instead of filling them with laughter. There were no lessons to be learned that couldn't be found in other programs. I am disappointed with this outing and expected better with Oedekerk behind the wheel. The tantalizing visuals from the film didn't make it to the small screen and we, the audience, pay for it. Maybe if Jimmy went elsewhere than "outer space" than my perception would change - but alas, I don't see that happening in the future.
Jimmy can be a smart boy, if he applies himself. Obviously, his brain has had too much "of a good thing".
Grade: ** out of *****
  go jimmy neutron! August 10, 2005 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
You tell me (I'm getting these episode descriptions right from the back cover!):
THE ADVENTURES OF JIMMY NEUTRON: ATTACK OF THE TWONKIES A DOUBLE-LENGTH FEATURE Plus 3 Bonus Episodes!
ATTACK OF THE TWONKIES Jimmy returns from the Twonkus-3 comet with one of its native creatures in tow. Carl adopts the "Twonky" and brings it to class where, in front of everyone's eyes, it starts coughing up identical little creatures. But these sweet little creatures start mutating into wild monsters. Now Jimmy's got to get them back to the comet before they destroy Retroville!
SEND IN THE CLONES Jimmy wants to go to space, but his mother has chores in mind for him. What's a boy to do? Clone himself, of course! But now one of his clones is wreaking havoc on Retroville!
A BEAUTIFUL MINE A meteor encrusted with "asterubies" lands in Cindy's backyard. When Jimmy sees the sparklers, he convinces Sheen, Carl, Cindy and Libby to head into space with him to mine the priceless gems.
THE JUNKMAN COMETH Jimmy's robotic brother, Brobot, asks for Jimmy's help to rescue his parents when the evil "Junkman" abducts them.
SPECIAL FEATURES: -Full Screen Format -Dolby Digital 1. English Stereo
2004/COLOR/104 MIN./US NOT RATED/CAN G/FULL SCREEN
I'm gonna collect ALL of the Jimmy Neutron DVD's that come out! I already bought and reveiwed all of the Fairly OddParents DVD's!
  Great creatures, fun animated flick March 6, 2005 3 out of 8 found this review helpful
Jimmy Neutron is one of the more boring NickToons but this double length feature is a gem! The Twonkies are adorable and likeable characters with cute faces, the episode has a good storyline and most of the themes that are repeated are done in good reason (They lead up to the big ending scene). This is the only Jimmy Neutron feature that I have become attatched to so far, and it even rivals the Jimmy Neutron movie at some points. It also comes with 3 bonus episodes: A beautiful mine, send in the clones, and the Junkman cometh. It gets four stars and not five because the plot is sometimes thin, most of the big surprises are hinted to so much that by the time they are revealed, you already know what will happen, and it has an unsatisfying beginning (you have to wait 20 + minutes before the Twonkies ever show up). Yet another review by Emily the 11 yr old Genius!
  Forced Previews are bad, bad, bad January 29, 2005 11 out of 15 found this review helpful
Please take note: this DVD has forced previews, i.e. every time you put this DVD in the player you are forced to watch advertising which you cannot skip. Be aware of this before buying this DVD.
|
|
|