Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang

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Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang Also available on Blu-Ray KidsClub

The second Nanny McPhee movie (after 2005's Nanny McPhee) starring Emma Thompson as the magical nanny.

She is called upon to help Mrs Green (Maggie Gyllenhaal) run her family farm while her husband is away at war. But she arrives to find the Green children at war themselves with their spoiled city cousins who have moved in and refuse to leave. To make matters worse, the Greens are being forced to vacate their land. Relying on everything from a flying motorcycle, a living statue, a tree-climbing piglet and even a baby elephant, Nanny McPhee uses her magic to teach the kids a lesson and tries to save the farm.

Starring
Ralph Fiennes, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Emma Thompson, Rhys Ifans, Maggie Smith, Daniel Mays, Bill Bailey

Directed by
Susanna White (feature debut)

Written by
Emma Thompson

(G) Family | Adaptation, Comedy, Family, Fantasy | UK, USA, France | Official Website


USER REVIEWS

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Average rating 3 Stars out of a possible 5 Stars


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Good not Great.
3 Stars out of a possible 5 Stars

It was a reasonably good movie, good as a family film. Ending could have been improved.

Reviewed by Lachlan

it is bad

Reviewed by Nic\

PRESS REVIEWS

Average rating 4 Stars out of a possible 5 Stars


tvnz.co.nz (Darren Bevan)

What with How To Train Your Dragon and now Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang, it's clear there's a fight going on for the household cash - if the rain sets in over Easter.

Click to read full review.
ViewAuckland.co.nz (Matt Turner)

Pleasingly old-fashioned fantasy drama with a strong script and terrific performances.

Click to read full review.

Flicks.co.nz "Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang" Movie Review

Flicks.co.nz rating


James Croot, Flicks.co.nz

This sophomore outing for Thompson's titular snaggle-toothed caregiver always had a lot to live up to. The original was one of the brightest, charming and downright fun kids movies of the past decade. And while this is no Babe: Pig in the City, a little of the magic has gone from this wartime-set Blyton-esque ramble.

Maybe it is the lack of romance with Colin Firth instead replaced by blink-and-you'll-miss-them cameos from Ewan McGregor and Ralph Fiennes, or perhaps it just seems a little formulaic the second-time around (the kids once again have to learn key disciplinary and manner-based lessons). Then there are the strange anachronisms that cause you to wonder if this really is set in the 1940s.

But we should celebrate the fact that this cross between Wallace and Gromit, The Railway Children and a British panto is that rare thing - a kids movie for kids. There are plenty of physical hijinks, Heath Robinson-style inventions and even a gaseous bird.

And while Thompson is once again a powerful presence, this is a tale of two Maggies – a wild-haired Gyllenhaal deploys her British accent with aplomb, while Smith is a delight as a dotty shop owner.


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