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Home > Movie Reviews > Movie Review: Alex Rider: Operation Stormbre...

Movie Review: Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker

Oct 13, 2006 - Claudia Puig

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For fans of Spy Kids who have grown up a bit, there's Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker, a tale of a dashing British teenage spy.

Based on the popular series of novels by Anthony Horowitz, who also wrote the screenplay, Stormbreaker is an entertaining, if predictable, romp with a handsome junior James Bond in training (Alex Pettyfer).

Pettyfer plays a 14-year-schoolboy also named Alex who is recruited to become a spy after his uncle (Ewan McGregor), whom he believed to be a bank manager, goes missing.

Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker
Credit: The Weinstein Company

Alex learns his uncle was actually a British special agent who had been training his nephew for a career as a spy by honing Alex's skills in mountaineering, martial arts and scuba diving. Alex attends an accelerated boot camp for spies, a tedious segment when contrasted with some fairly exciting chase sequences and a panoply of gadgetry.

Fortunately, this is no Agent Cody Banks across the pond. Though Alex engages in some youthful pranks (this movie is targeted to tweens and young teens, after all), he also matches wits and moves with adult spies. He is assigned to infiltrate a company run by an eccentric tycoon (Mickey Rourke with a George Hamilton tan and blue eye shadow). Once Alex is undercover, the millionaire's creepy assistant (Missi Pyle) keeps a menacing eye on him.

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Content Provider: USA TODAY Copyright: © Copyright 2006 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.