Invisible
Dad
.

Welcome to Education by Design's Online store. We have brought to you a selection of products like DVD : Invisible Dad along with it's reviews, pictures and related products. All sales from these pages goes towards the creation and maintenance of our educational online activities, articles and resources. We have over 40,000 online stories submitted by kids around the world.

DVD: Invisible Dad

Invisible Dad

Normal Price:$7.98
Our Price:$7.98
Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours

... For more information or Buy from Amazon.com ...


Manufacturer: Allumination
Binding: DVD
Publisher: Allumination
Label: Allumination

NEW!!
Enjoy drawing this product with our drawing board.
Drawing Activity for this product
Features for Invisible Dad:

Small Picture
Medium Picture

Editorial Review
Doug Baily's dad is weird, but a strange machine in the garage now makes him invisible too! As he vanishes into thin air Mr. Baily's discovers that his secret powers can help him defeat a co-worker with evil plans. But invisibility has its drawbacks when he reappears at very strange moments. Its a roller coaster ride of fun and high jinks before Doug turns his father back to normal and saves the day.
Cached date: AWS Called=true
Similar Products
Customer Reviews

Wonderful Movie!!! 2007-06-03
This movie is hilarious and fun to watch. The story starts as the boy is cleaning the garage when the dad is not home. The two had just moved because the dad had got fired from his job and had to get to a new one. Meanwhile, in the garage the boy finds a strange machine, which the boy thinks is nothing until his father comes home and screams at him for not cleaning the garage. Later on, the boy finds out that the machine is some sort of wishing machine and that's where everything starts.
This movie, in my opinion was well-written and is a movie that is enjoyable for all ages.


Invisible Dad 2001-06-06
This movie was so incredibly bad that it was funny! Save yourself and your family from this lemon. It was poorly written, acted, edited, you name it. It has no redeeming value whatsoever. Sorry folks, but giving it one star was not a real accurate statement, more like -5! Our ten year old couldn't even bare to watch it, it was so lame!


Visible Dud! 2000-12-18
This movie is bad, bad, BAD. My kids loved it.

Features: A plot that wobbles between ludicrous and nonexistent. Actors who learned their craft during an elementary-school production of "Mister Molar Meets the Tooth Decay Bandits." Props purchased from Goodwill on half-price Saturday. And a budget apparently smaller than Ben Affleck's dental-floss bill. It all adds up to a movie whose quality has reached rock bottom and started to dig. If there's a child in your household between five and eight years old, however... hey, it's a lot more entertaining than watching Thomas the Tank Engine for the 10,800th time!

As noted, describing the plot is superfluous, but for the sake of completeness: Dad Andrew (Daran Norris) and 12-year-old son Doug (William Meyers III) move into house formerly occupied by crazy inventor, who's left behind a gadget. Doug, playing with gadget, accidentally turns dad (surprise!) invisible, after a few preceding misadventures, including summoning a "Baywatch" bimbo (Shayna Ryan) to his bedroom (not as naughty as it sounds; she thinks Doug and his friend are aliens.) Naturally, Doug breaks the machine right after Dad's mishap. Meanwhile, Dad's in the middle of a big architectural contract and a budding romance with Doug's teacher (Mary Elizabeth McGlinn), set up by Doug), so the invisibility thing is a tad inconvenient. The plot features a number of physical-comedy moments, none convincing in the least, but all hugely appreciated by our 7-y.o. critic. Doug's desperate to get his dad back in the pink, but all his efforts (including an utterly unbelievable shoplifting/jailbreak sequence) flop - until crazy inventor's long-lost twin brother happens to fly in from South Africa to save the day. There are a couple of side-plots involving bad guys stealing Dad's architectural plans and a wacko neighbor (Charles Dierkop) who thinks space aliens are taking over. (He may have a point -- the actors are pretty Stepford-ish.) Of course everything turns out okay in the end. Even the neighbor gets his just desserts at the hands of his long-suffering wife (Vicki Skinner), who has probably the funniest lines in the movie.

Kids will enjoy the plot's premise (what 12-y.o. boy has NOT daydreamed about turning Dad invisible, at least when it's time to take out the trash?) Adults can laugh themselves silly at the many unintentional howlers, such as the invisibility gadget (a vegetable steamer on an old record-player turntable - I am not making this up), or the low-budget location sets, which consist of two, count 'em, two building exteriors (I'm still wondering how both Dad's architectural office and the library can continue to be in the building that gets blown up halfway through.)

All in all, it's as bad as they come, and that's okay. Incidentally, we watched "Independence Day" the same evening as "Invisible Dad", and I'm hard-pressed to say which is more ridiculous. At least "Invisible Dad" doesn't pretend to be serious cinema.

... For more information from Amazon.com about Invisible Dad...
null
In association with Amazon.com. Please support our site by doing your online shopping here.
Search