
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
The most astonishing, innovative, backyard adventure of all time!
The scientist father of a teenage girl and boy accidentally shrinks his and two other neighborhood teens to the size of insects. Now the teens must fight diminutive dangers as the father searches for them.
- 6.3
- 1989
- Released
- 1h 33m

Rick Moranis
Wayne Szalinski
Matt Frewer
Big Russ Thompson
Marcia Strassman
Diane Szalinski
Kristine Sutherland
Mae Thompson
Thomas Wilson Brown
Little Russ Thompson
Jared Rushton
Ronald Thompson
Amy O'Neill
Amy Szalinski
Robert Oliveri
Nick Szalinski
Carl Steven
Tommy Pervis
Mark L. Taylor
Don Forrester
Kimmy Robertson
Gloria Forrester
Lou Cutell
Dr. Brainard
Craig Richard Nelson
Professor Frederickson
Laura Waterbury
Female Cop
Trevor Galtress
Male Cop
Martin Aylett
Harold Boorstein
Janet Sunderland
Lauren Boorstein
Frank Welker
Special Vocal Effects (Voice)
Patrick Brown
Employee (uncredited)
Isabel del Puerto
Women (uncredited)
Sammy
Quark the Dog (uncredited)

Released
en
$18,000,000.00
$222,724,172.00
- #inventor
- #parent child relationship
- #ant
- #shrinking
- #giant insect
- #neighbor
- #next door neighbor
- #odd neighbor
Reviews
"Honey, I Shrunk the Kids" employs a large quota of traditional values which many people still unashamedly cherish and use as the corner stone in the foundation of their lives: Children, family, and friends. Of course, the children must always be the most important people in your life and they make everything worthwhile even though they often misbehave and are unappreciative and downright ungratef

Rick Moranis is the geeky scientist working on a means by which he can shrink matter. Using a complex series of gadgets and a laser - he is confident the his Eureka moment is close when... a baseball shatters a window, activates his equipment and suddenly his children and those of the family next door have essentially disappeared! Where can they have gone? Well we all know that they are now playin

Well, it didn't age well. At least not the special effects. But, they were more practical than digital and that makes a difference. You get the feeling that the people are actually there when the effects are practical and not digital, and you don't have that sensation that you are watching other people play a video game like you do with a lot of the digital effects heavy movies these days. It's











