Film: The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl aka: The Adventuresof Sharkboyand Lavagirl
The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D, also known as Sharkboy and Lavagirl is a 2005 motion picture of action, adventure and fantasy by Robert Rodriguez, the writer, producer and director of Spy Kids. The film uses the same anaglyph 3D technology used in Spy Kids 3D: Game Over. The film stars Cayden Boyd, Taylor Lautner, Taylor Dooley, and George Lopez. Many of the concepts and much of the story were conceived by Rodriguez' kids, and seven-year-old Racer Rodriguez.Dreamer Max, ridiculed by his classmates, conjures up his perfect dreamworld...the Planet Drool. But his dream is more powerful than even he suspects, and his favorite dream super-heroes, Sharkboy and Lavagirl, materialize on Earth. They need help from Max. All is not well in Max's dreamworld. An alien intelligence is interfering and darkness threatens his beloved Planet Drool. Is it true, as Sharkboy and Lavagirl say, that only Max, the powerful dreamer, can stop it? Max takes off on a wild and dangerous journey to the fantastic Planet Drool with Sharkboy and Lavagirl. Can they discover the source of the danger? Will they be able to stop it in time?
Agent Scully: Max's parents don't believe Sharkboy and Lavagirl ate the cookies despite the shark bitemarks and the melted glass.
An Aesop: The movie sets up for a "you need to solve your problems in the real world" aesop (i.e., the protagonist has a problem, goes to a fantasy world, learns how to fix their problem, goes back to the real world and applies their newly learned lessons without the aid of their fantasy friends).
The real aesop is below.
Bad Butt: Minus. On Planet Drool, where dreams become reality, he has a lot of potential for cruelty, but it is deliberately scaled back so the heroes aren't in too much danger since they are always given an opportunity to save themselves.
The Cameo: Rocket, Racer, and Rebel Rodriguez all show up in the movie. Rocket plays one of Linus's friends, and Racer and Rebel play the younger versions of Sharkboy.
Cassandra Truth: Nobody believes Max's dreams exist until they see it for themselves.
Color-Coded for Your Convenience: The glasses for the spaceship: blue for the boys, pink for the girls. Unless you're Max... then you get stuck with a pink pair.
Conspicuous CGI: A hefty majority of the movie has incredibly obvious and often times gaudy CG models and backgrounds.
Cute Bruiser: Lavagirl can lift desks with one hand.
That may be because of the wind from the tornado though, considering the teacher does the same thing later on.
It actually almost appears to be lampshading it, too, if you see said teacher's reaction to it.
Dull Surprise: Jacob Davich as Linus/Minus gives a fairly wooden performance. Though it could be intentional due to how cynical and depressed Linus is.
Does This Remind You of Anything?: Most obviously invoked when the scene during which the Ice Princess hands over her crystal heart is treated like a marriage ceremony. Much more subtly, however, is that Mr. Electricidad treats Max — a fourth-grader — like he's trying to put the moves on his daughter.
Face Heel Turn: Mr. Electric used to supply Planet Drool with power, but he got so fed up with all the happiness that he decided to destroy everything.
Follow the Leader: In-universe example: after Max tells his story about Sharkboy and Lavagirl to the class, the next day they all have their own set of boy-girl superheroes (e.g., Metalboy and Plasticgirl).
Foreshadowing: Mr. Electricidad says they might have to change Linus's name to "Minus," the name that belongs to his Planet Drool alter-ego.
Gosh Dang It to Heck!: Cleverly invoked when they realize Sharkboy's vehicle has no gas. Lavagirl looks at the chocolate coming out of the tailpipe, and says "fudge" with the inflection and facial expression of its R-rated counterpart.
Groin Attack: During the chase scene at the playground, Max slips on a jungle gym and ends up straddling a rope by his groin.
Grumpy Bear: Sharkboy, who is angry about being unable to find his father, the frozen waters, and not being made King of the Ocean.
Guys Smash, Girls Shoot: Sharkboy rips things to shreds with his claws and teeth while Lavagirl shoots flames from her hand.
Informed Ability: It's said that Lavagirl destroys everything she touches, but the only thing she actually destroys in the film is Max's journal. She can even touch ice without it melting.
Mythology Gag: It wouldn't be a Robert Rodriguez movie otherwise. We see Big Kahuna Burger and the logo for Troublemaker Studios.
Painting The Medium: The spaceship scene was blatantly designed for Lavagirl to instruct the audience to put on their 3D glasses from within the movie. A cheap set of glasses were even packaged with the DVD. The scene is, however, somewhat out of place if you don't have any or are watching the movie on television.
Plot Hole: When they get to the Land of Milk and Cookies, Sharkboy says he hates chocolate. So why did he eat the cookies Max's mom made?
Quest for Identity: Throughout the movie, Lavagirl keeps trying to find out who she really is and what her purpose is.
Trickster: The Ice Princess' test for Max (and the fact that she doesn't tell him that only she can use the crystal heart before she gives it to him) reveals her as one.
Unknown Rival: The Ice Princess for Lavagirl. The two girls never even share a scene but Lavagirl hates her because of her theme being ice.