Clockstoppers Review
by Susan Granger (ssg722 AT aol DOT com)April 1st, 2002
Susan Granger's review of "CLOCKSTOPPERS" (Paramount Pictures)
This trippy time-travel saga is specifically targeted at a preteen audience who will probably like it far better than their parents. The plot revolves around the sci-fi idea of hypertime, a concept that catapults a person so fast that time seems to freeze, allowing him to go, undetected, anywhere. The hypertime device is hidden in a digital wristwatch that's accidentally discovered by Zak Gibbs (Jesse Bradford) who desperately wants a vintage Mustang and forages through the house for junk to sell on eBay. Checking to see if the strange-looking watch - which was sent by a former student (French Stewart) to Zak's physics-professor father (Robin Thomas) - works, Zak presses one of its buttons and is catapulted into an accelerated version of reality. Which is way cool! It even impresses Francesca (Paula Garces), a beautiful Venezuelan exchange student who is 'way out of his league. Meanwhile, there's a sinister conspiracy as subversive bad guys in dark suits, led by mysterious Mr. Gates (Michael Biehn), covet the hypertime technology as a military weapon. It's too bad the three writers - Rob Hedden, J. David Stem & David N. Weiss - didn't give director Jonathan Frakes (#1 on "Star Trek: Next Generation") more inventive hypertime adventures to work with instead of silly practical jokes played on a meter-maid, bullies and a competitive DJ during a rave before the banal "Spy Kids"-inspired sub-plot keys in. Perhaps to compensate for the pseudo-scientific molecular alteration mumbo-jumbo, there's an inspirational lesson as the absent-minded, workaholic father comes to appreciate his clever, if contentious son. But the CGI time-travel effects and bike-riding stunts are awesome. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "Clockstoppers" is a family-friendly 5, giving new meaning to "killing time."
Originally posted in the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup. Copyright belongs to original author unless otherwise stated. We take no responsibilities nor do we endorse the contents of this review.