A one-joke film which somehow manages to hold your attention.
Nigel Bell There's no getting away from the fact that Thunderpants is about the art of letting off wind, of trumping and let's be blunt about it - farting. There's no way of writing a review of Peter Hewitt's film without reference to the F word because that's all this film is about. The Plot Patrick Smash (newcomer Cook) literally rockets into this world and never stops trumping thereafter.  | | It's getting smelly in here. Can I take my helmet off? |
It all becomes too much for his dad who leaves home after nearly being blown up by a bag of his son's collected gas. Matters don't improve at school where Patrick is bullied.
His one friend is brain-box Alan A. Allen (Grint). Alan has no sense of smell which is naturally an advantage. It transpires Patrick's problem is down to the fact he has two stomachs. Alan uses the power of flatulence to propel a flying machine and this brings him to the attention of the US Space Centre.  | | Oh no, Voldemort's transformed Ron Weasley! |
He's whisked abroad leaving Patrick alone until he's asked to go on tour with the second best opera singer in the world, Sir John Osgood (Callow). Patrick's bottom is able to reach notes no one else can and by skulduggery, Osgood achieves his ambition of being the number one opera singer. Things then go wrong, Patrick's accused of murder but escapes death when Alan returns to take him to America to help with a space rescue mission. The Verdict As you'll appreciate from the plot, this is no ordinary Johnny Fart-Pants story. Unlike the character made famous by Viz magazine, our Thunderpants hero goes from happiness to despair in a matter of seconds. As Patrick Smash likes to say "It was the best day of my life - ever", closely followed by "It was the worst day of my life - ever." Yes, the film is crammed with obvious jokes, but those which it is aimed at (10 +) will lap up the jokes.  | | If it's smelly it must be down to Baldrick, surely |
For the adults, there's the bizarre scenario where Patrick helps Simon Callow reach his operatic high notes only to find himself being prosecuted by Stephen Fry. Just how director Peter Hewitt managed to get so many big British names to appear in this "pump fest" is a mystery.
Even Leslie Phillips pops up. Rupert Grint follows up his role as Ron Weasley in "Harry Potter" with a totally different performance as whiz-kidd Alan. He's a bit like Brains from the old children's TV series Double Deckers, only he speaks like Prince Charles. Indeed the whole feel of the film is of a high class Children's Film Foundation movie. As for the Thunderpants of the title, it refers to an invention which stores all Patrick's unwanted emissions until he can safely get rid of them at the end of the day. Pooh. 
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