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  • ...Isn't about or for anyone past puberty.
  • It's actually kind of disgusting and gross, and I'm sure that's the point, but I don't see the entertainment value in watching a kid eat one worm after another, after another, after another.
  • This is a story that could have gone way too far in the direction of the touching tale illustrating how kids overcome their fear of being ridiculed -- but instead maintains a buoyant irreverence.
  • Worms has its share of kid-friendly gross-outs but is actually a sweet-natured look at standing up to bullies.
  • Take the kids to see How to Eat Fried Worms, but hold off on forking over the usual princely sum at the concession stand.
  • San Francisco Chronicle

    8/25/2006 by Peter Hartlaub

    It's a pleasant and well-intentioned end of summer diversion that doesn't possess the imagination-stoking qualities of a premier children's movie.
  • Fried Worms is a Hoot with more laughs, funny enough, so long as you don't consider the worm's point of view.
  • Unhealthy eating is paired with a wholesome message, as the story encourages youngsters to be themselves, keep their word and accept kids who are different.
  • A blandly inoffensive 'After School Special'-type comedy based on a perennially popular children's book.
  • New York Magazine/Vulture

    8/25/2006 by David Edelstein

    I hope life doesn't imitate art in the other fun movie opening this week, an adaptation of Thomas Rockwell's gross-out 1972 kids' classic How to Eat Fried Worms.
  • New York Daily News

    8/25/2006 by Elizabeth Weitzman

    Here's hoping its old-fashioned sensibility appeals to contemporary kids, because we could certainly use more movies as smart and sweet as this one.
  • When it comes time for the movie to impart its lessons, it does so in such a way that kids won't feel like they're being forced to eat their broccoli -- or live worms -- for that matter.
  • What we have here is a 90-minute worm-eating contest, a spectacle that could be of interest only to robins, small-mouth bass and eight-to-11-year-old boys. Girls, don't bother. Parents and guardians, if you have to go, plan to take a nap.
  • Somewhere in How to Eat Fried Worms is a message about keeping your word and the pitfalls of peer pressure.
  • Issues like family harmony, justice, righting wrongs and telling the truth never go out of fashion and that comes across strong and clear in this less-than-perfect, but still solid, feel-good film.
  • An appealing juvenile cast distinguishes this otherwise uneven live-action adaptation of Thomas Rockwell's 1973 young adult book.
  • If it grows more genial as it pokes along, it still feels like a lesser Nickelodeon special, with adults who are shrill cartoons and kids who are one-note character tics.
  • Fort Worth Star-Telegram/DFW.com

    8/25/2006 by Scott Von Doviak

    By now we're all sick of snakes on a plane, so how about some worms on a plate?
  • Anarchic but charmingly authentic.
  • It's nice to spend time in a mostly sunny world where everyone ends up happy. Except, that is, for the worms.