Parents' Guide to

Mummies

By Tara McNamara, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 6+

Logic unravels in animated adventure with Egyptian angle.

Movie PG 2023 88 minutes
Mummies Movie Poster: Animated ancient Egyptian man and woman stand back to back with modern day London behind them

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 5+

Based on 7 parent reviews

age 6+

Everything

The movie was the best movie i have ever watched In my life good job.
age 4+

Great family movie

This movie is good for the whole family. The movie has a good lesson in not giving into your fears and the main character even helps an old mummy cross the street to avoid being ran over by chariots. There is no use of foul language, sexual content or drugs. Mild animated violence and some use of tranquilizers to take the mummies captive. A good movie overall without all the usual things that ruin a kid's movie.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (7 ):
Kids say (1 ):

Bringing ancient Egypt to life will likely appeal to kids, especially when paired with a princess who sings songs that are real scepter-tappers. But it almost feels like something in the English-dubbed version of this animated film (originally produced in Spain) was lost in translation. Parts of the story are flat-out confusing. In the opening scene, champion charioteer Thut crashes and burns in a terrible accident, and the screen goes black. When we next see him, he's wearing bandages and living in Mummy City, talking about his former champion days. Most viewers will assume he died in the big crash, and (spoiler alert) it's not until the end that we learn that wasn't the case. Huh? And when villainous Lord Carnaby (Hugh Bonneville) is introduced, he's wearing what looks like archaeologist gear from the 1920s, while Mummy City exists in an Egyptian era of 3000 years ago. So when Nefer, Thut, and Sekham travel to deal with Carnaby in present-day London, viewers may do a collective head cock -- what year is this? How are all these timelines working together? For that matter, how are the mummies alive? The rule is that when a bright light shines on them, their true nature is revealed, and they appear as skeletons. But Nefer performs under spotlights on several occasions and remains in her human form. Puzzling.

And while the filmmakers clearly made efforts to portray Nefer as a strong, independent, self-sufficient woman, the idea that she doesn't want to rule her people so that she can be a singer is disappointing. Female pharaohs are one of the lasting legacies of ancient Egypt. And Thut feels like a romantic lead from the 1990s -- an athlete with celebrity status who would risk bodily harm rather than marry a princess because he doesn't want to be tied down. The concept of the film is a good one because many kids end up fascinated by ancient Egypt, but dated portrayals like this should stay relics.

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