Skip over navigation

Nim's Island

Another above average children's film from Walden Media, the company behind the Narnia films, The Water Horse and Bridge to Terabithia (not to mention The Seeker).

Based on a novel by Australian author Wendy Owen, this is a Robinson Crusoe/Swiss Family Robinson story, crossed with a bit of Romancing The Stone, and a subplot about a mariner struggling to survive after his yacht is capsized by a tropical storm.

That leaves his ten-year-old daughter Nim Rusoe (Abigail Breslin) on her own, marooned on the tiny Pacific island that has been their home for as long as she remembers.

Luckily she's a remarkably resilient, self-possessed child. She has her friends (a sea lion, a pelican, and a bearded dragon). More importantly, she has a solar powered iMac, and the email address of her favourite author-adventurer, Alex Rover. It's the most natural thing in the world to expect him to come to her rescue.

What Nim doesn't understand is that Alex ' an Indiana Jones type hero who always emerges unscathed from the most perilous predicaments ' is just a fictional figment of agoraphobic author Alexandra Rover (Jodie Foster).

The writer and the child share an image of Alex as a rugged, rough hewn charmer who looks a lot like Nim's shipwrecked dad (both men are played by Gerard Butler), but while this fantasy figure pops up on the sidelines occasionally to urge his creator to face her fears, he's not much in the way of practical help.

Co-directors Mark Levin and Jennifer Flackett ' and DP Stuart Dryburgh ' weave between fantasy and reality with some elegance (there's a lovely scene when Nim becomes so engrossed in one of Alex's escapades it seems to be playing out in her bedroom). There are also a handful of beautiful animated sequences, the fairytale version of the death of Nim's mom, as told by her father.

If anything, it's over-loaded with incident, though I have to admit, I can't recall the last time I heard my kids complain about a movie having too much going on. The island itself looks beautiful, and comes complete with a very natty bamboo hut, a volcano, and zip lines through the trees.

No wonder that when a cruise ship lands a bunch of Aussie tourists on the immaculate white sandy beach, Nim does her utmost to repel these dastardly 'pirates'.

Presumably Jodie Foster signed on in support of the script's plucky young heroine (children's movies still seem unduly weighted in favour of the boys). Nim is the kind of gal she used to play in her child star days. It also gives her a chance to do comedy after a series of heavy dramatic roles (The Brave One, Flightplan, Panic Room).

Like everything else, she plays it to the hilt, pratfalling like a trouper. The technique is impressive, but for my money comedy works better with a lighter, less self-conscious approach.

Another actor who has been known to overdo it, Butler is actually quite agreeable in his complimentary roles here, not exactly guying Harrison Ford's Indy, but certainly winking in that direction.

The movie loses some of its charm on the last leg of the journey, but it's certainly recommended for that adventuresome 6-12 age group.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

View Details

More information about Nim's Island »

Critics' Reviews

Rating of 3 
	  stars out of 5 Tom Huddleston, Time Out

Nim (Abigail Breslin) is an 11-year-old girl living with her scientist father (Gerard Butler) on a remote island in the... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

* * * This review contains spoilers * * *

Rated - 4 starsGreat watch-together family treat.

PaulaWestwood from Ashton-Under-Lyne [Highly rated reviewer] , 06/05/2008

Nims father is a research scientist who gets into a scrape leaving Nim stranded on the remote island they live on. Worried Nims contact with the outside world involves reading adventure books and using the internet. She decides in her predicament to enlist the help of what she presumes is a real adventurer fresh from the pages of her favourite book, only to find the hero, Alex, is in fact a character written by a clastrauphobic authoress (Jodie Foster), who has to battle her own fears of the great outdoors to help Nim. A remote island, an oceanographer father, a fictitious adventurer and a clasutrophobic writer, there are quite a few points of interest to this one. A great film to sit down and watch as a family, it will keep both your and your little ones interest, and is definately worth a watch.

  18 out of 18 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 2 starswot,s all the fuss about

A customer from leeds , 03/09/2008

sorry did,nt like this very much.............

  11 out of 12 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 5 starsNims Island Is The Best!

filmsaremypassion from Bexhill [Highly rated reviewer] , 23/06/2008

I saw this twice on my local cinamia and I totally loved it. Everything about Nims Island is amazing, the island is beautiful and the animals are cute especially Freddie the lizard. The pefomances are just right, Abigail Breslin is just perfect as Nim with her baby-face features and her good sense of humour. Jodie Foster is back after doing so many serious roles lately, she's just so funny as Alexandra Rover. But the one person that ruled this film was Gerard Butler with two roles as Jack and Alex Rover, he steams hot and I can see a lot going for him in the future. One of the best children films around, without doubt.

  9 out of 9 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 1 starWasted talent

A customer from Surrey , 20/09/2008

What a waste of the considerable talents of Abigail Breslin and Jodie Foster. To bring together one of the greatest acting talents of the last few decades with one of the most promising acting talents of tomorrow should be a privilege for any film maker - and yet to give them this shallow vehicle ... why? Abigail Breslin's agents really let her down on this one, and Jodie Foster really should know better.

  4 out of 5 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsNim's Island

A customer from Blandford Forum , 28/01/2009

Thoroughly enjoyable, but impropable excapism, just what you need at this time of the year. Would thoroughly recommend.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews

Rated - 5 starsNims Island Is The Best!

filmsaremypassion from Bexhill [Highly rated reviewer] , 23/06/2008

I saw this twice on my local cinamia and I totally loved it. Everything about Nims Island is amazing, the island is beautiful and the animals are cute especially Freddie the lizard. The pefomances are just right, Abigail Breslin is just perfect as Nim with her baby-face features and her good sense of humour. Jodie Foster is back after doing so many serious roles lately, she's just so funny as Alexandra Rover. But the one person that ruled this film was Gerard Butler with two roles as Jack and Alex Rover, he steams hot and I can see a lot going for him in the future. One of the best children films around, without doubt.

  9 out of 9 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews