
In Paris, Corinne "Coco" brings her chief Valérie to spend the Christmas Eve with her family. Valérie is depressed since she is newly divorced and Coco decides to tell the story of her sister Isabelle to Valérie to cheer her up. Isabelle is a dentist that has been living with and working in the same office of her boyfriend Pierre for ten years. When they decide to get married, Isabelle and Coco are worried about the family curse that every first marriage ends in divorce. I... (Full plot summary below)
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In Paris, Corinne "Coco" brings her chief Valérie to spend the Christmas Eve with her family. Valérie is depressed since she is newly divorced and Coco decides to tell the story of her sister Isabelle to Valérie to cheer her up. Isabelle is a dentist that has been living with and working in the same office of her boyfriend Pierre for ten years. When they decide to get married, Isabelle and Coco are worried about the family curse that every first marriage ends in divorce. Isabelle and Coco arrange a marriage for Isabelle with a student in Copenhagen so that she can immediately divorce to marry Pierre to live happily ever after. In the flight, Isabelle meets the inconvenient free-spirited tourism columnist Jean-Yves that is traveling to Kenya. When the student does not show up, Isabelle decides to travel to Kenya to marry Jean-Yves. She has the chance when they travel to visit a Masai people when they get married. Isabelle returns to Paris and when she goes to schedule her wedding with Pierre, she discovers that Jean-Yves has registered his Masai wedding certificate in Paris. Now Isabelle travels to Moscow expecting to force Jean-Yves to sign the divorce papers. Will she succeed in her intent?
Leave your thoughts about A Perfect Plan.
| Film4Anton BitelFew would claim there are no flies on this one, but at least the outstanding 3D effects are some compensation for the dumbed-down inanity of everything else. |
| Deseret News (Salt Lake City)Jeff ViceThis 3-D feature boasts anthropomorphic insects as its main characters, and they aren't particularly endearing or funny. |
| One Guy's OpinionFrank SwietekIt makes you want to reach for a can of Raid. |
| San Francisco ChronicleWalter V. AddiegoIt's clear that animators can now achieve levels of visual depth that were previously impossible. |
| Filmcritic.comBill Gibronthis celebration of a giant leap for mankind is really just a small, insignificant step for film fans. |
| Seattle Post-IntelligencerPaula NechakUnfortunately, the flies aren't so compelling. |
| Globe and MailStephen ColeStrictly one-dimensional in terms of characters and storytelling. |
| EricDSnider.comEric D. SniderDull dialogue, a dull story, and dull animation. What's left? |
| Cleveland Plain DealerJulie WashingtonFly Me to the Moon represents a leap forward in 3-D moviemaking. Let's hope the next completely 3-D animated movie picks a more exciting tale to tell. |
| VarietyJohn AndersonIt's a wingless exercise, despite a rather heartening attitude toward space travel that will introduce young auds to the glory that was NASA in the '60s. |