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Honey, I Blew Up the Kid video

Honey, I Blew Up the Kid (1992) 35mm film trailer, flat open matte, 4K *CROPPED

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Added by Leo
1 week ago on 3 July 2026 19:00

*Note: This is the cropped version as it would have been shown in theaters, to see the uncropped version, click here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIa6DgHyDK8

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This 35mm film trailer has been donated by www.nathanboone.com and transferred to digital using the Gugusse Roller with the Raspberry Pi HQ Camera.

www.imdb.com/title/tt0104437/
www.rottentomatoes.com/m/honey_i_blew_up_the_kid 38% - 24%

The Gugusse Roller is a DIY project. Build your own Gugusse Roller, visit www.deniscarl.com and/or www.facebook.com/Gugusse-Roller-2216783521714775, no registration, no fees, no fuss.

**Synopsis and review by Claude.ai**

**Honey, I Blew Up the Kid** (1992) is a live-action family science fiction comedy from Walt Disney Pictures, directed by Randal Kleiser and produced by Dawn Steel and Edward S. Feldman. A direct sequel to the hugely popular Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989), the film reunites Rick Moranis as the lovably hapless inventor Wayne Szalinski, whose electromagnetic shrinking machine from the first film has now been retooled into an enlarging device โ€” with predictably chaotic results. When Wayne accidentally zaps his toddler son Adam (played by twins Daniel and Joshua Shalikar) with the machine, the boy begins growing exponentially every time he comes into contact with electricity, eventually reaching a towering 112 feet tall and wandering into the neon-lit streets of Las Vegas. Marcia Strassman returns as Wayne's exasperated but devoted wife Diane, while Robert Oliveri reprises his role as teenage son Nick, and a young Amy O'Neill reappears briefly as daughter Amy. Lloyd Bridges joins the cast as the antagonistic head of a government science division determined to contain the situation by any means necessary.

Lighter in tone and more overtly cartoonish than its predecessor, Honey, I Blew Up the Kid leans hard into slapstick spectacle and gigantic practical effects sequences that delighted younger audiences at the time, even as critics found the film formulaic and narratively thin compared to the original. The visual effects team faced the considerable challenge of making a gigantic toddler feel both threatening and adorable, and the Las Vegas backdrop provided a wonderfully absurd playground for the film's oversized mayhem. Composer Bruce Broughton delivered a playful, energetic score befitting the film's broad comedic sensibility. Rick Moranis, at the peak of his family comedy box office appeal following Ghostbusters, Spaceballs, and the original Shrunk the Kids, anchors the film with his trademark nerdy warmth and impeccable comic timing. While it never matched the cultural footprint of its predecessor, the film was a solid commercial performer and remains a nostalgic touchstone for nineties kids who grew up on Disney's golden era of live-action family entertainment.