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The website's critics consensus reads: "The Princess Switch offers a healthy dose of charming, light-hearted, twin-swap fun and is delightful viewing for any hopeless romantic." [5] Linda Holmes of NPR praised the movie's acting and called it "pleasingly frothy and ridiculous", while criticizing unrealistic aspects of the plot. [6]
But the same could be said for many a beloved romance film or holiday movie". [7] Alex Abad-Santos of Vox was called it "a perfectly harmless way to burn 90 minutes, during which you won't worry about the awful things happening in real life. It's inoffensively fine — the conflict is never too high-stakes, and the happy ending is happy enough."
The following is a list of the characters in the Ice Age films, mentioned by a name either presented in the films or in any other official material. Each character includes a summary when possible, the voice actor or actors associated with the character, and a description of the character along with any aliases, spouses and the character's species.
The Princess Switch film series consists of American Christmas romantic-comedies, [1] [2] [3] including three feature films. Starring Vanessa Hudgens in multiple roles, alongside Sam Palladio and Nick Sagar, the plot is based loosely on the 1881 novel The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain .
The Parent Trap is a 1961 American romantic comedy film written and directed by David Swift. [1] [2] It stars Hayley Mills (in a dual role) as a pair of teenage twins plotting to reunite their divorced parents by switching places with each other.
Ice Age 3: Boulder Drop was an online game released in 2009. Ice Age 3: Dino Dinner was an online game released in 2009. Ice Age 3: Slippery Slope was an online game released in 2009. Ice Age Village was a mobile video game released by Gameloft on April 5, 2012, for iOS and Android devices, [58] and on April 24, 2013, for Windows Phone. [59]
Nearly 12 years later in 1998, the twins are coincidentally sent to the same all-girls summer camp in Maine, Camp Walden, where they form an intense rivalry. After Hallie and her friends perform a dangerous prank on Annie's cabin, the twins are sent to the isolation cabin, where they begin to bond over their similarities.
The site's consensus reads "Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock told us that It Takes Two to make a thing go right, but this unpleasant Olsen twins comedy proves that the opposite can also be true". [4] At Metacritic , which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 with reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 45 based on ...