
Young Judy Moody is very excited to have the most thrilling summer of her life with her brother Stink who is a huge believer of Bigfoot. Her goal is to get as much thrill points as possible for every dare she does on her list of summer dares.... (Full plot summary below)
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Young Judy Moody is very excited to have the most thrilling summer of her life with her brother Stink who is a huge believer of Bigfoot. Her goal is to get as much thrill points as possible for every dare she does on her list of summer dares.
Leave your thoughts about Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer.
| Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanThe lesson is that fun can't be planned, but the film is so airless (think iCarly as a videogame) that there isn't a truly playful moment in it. |
| Sacramento News & ReviewJim Lane... hammers away at you for 91 endless minutes. |
| Dallas Morning NewsNancy ChurninFor those sighing about why they don't make more movies like last year's Ramona and Beezus, based on the book series by Beverly Cleary, they just did. |
| Tampa Bay TimesSteve PersallA nice but unnecessary movie for small children who can find the same level of entertainment on kiddie cable networks. |
| Sin MagazineAustin KennedyIt's a fun, imaginative movie that is terrific for young kids. I think it encourages children to celebrate creativity. |
| Reeling ReviewsLaura Clifford...bears a lot in common with last year's "Ramona and Beezus" if those characters had ADD and were a little less goody-two-shoes. Director John Schultz uses a visual style dialed to 11...to make sure kids won't be bored for a second |
| DeadspinWill LeitchAn assault on the senses, a fever nightmare of color explosions and extreme closeups of a child's tonsils while they scream for the ice cream man. |
| E! OnlineMatt StevensSomething got sooo totally lost in the translation from page to screen -- like humor and charm. |
| New York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierA young Aussie actress who seems as all-American as a Magic 8 ball, successfully walks the tightrope from precocious to exuberant, never once falling into obnoxiousness. That could describe this crackerjack of a kids' movie as well. |
| New York TimesAndy WebsterThe whole film is a celebration of messy, colorful, vigorous creativity, echoed in Cynthia Charette's gloriously cluttered hodgepodge production design, with barely a product placement in sight. |