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    Movie Review

    Dora and the Lost City of Gold plays like Indiana Jones for kids

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 7, 2019 | 2:58 pm
    Dora and the Lost City of Gold plays like Indiana Jones for kids
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    If you find yourself laughing more than you thought you would at Dora and the Lost City of Gold, you can thank the skills of filmmakers like director James Bobin and writer Nicholas Stoller. The two comedy veterans breathe life into a movie, based on the Nickelodeon animated show Dora the Explorer, that might have otherwise been a throwaway, end-of-summer kids movie.

    The gist of the plot is that Dora (Isabela Moner), now a teenager, has been sent to live in Los Angeles by her explorer parents (Eva Longoria and Michael Peña) while they go in search for the titular lost city of gold. She’s not there long, however, before a rival group kidnaps her, her cousin Diego (Jeff Wahlberg), and her friends Sammy (Madeleine Madden) and Randy (Nicholas Coombe) in an attempt to blackmail her parents into giving up information on the city’s location.

    Once in South America, Dora and friends are rescued by Alejandro (Eugenio Derbez), who promises to help lead them back to her parents. With the rival group hot on their heels, Dora uses her many skills to help the group through a variety of obstacles that the jungle has to offer.

    If it had been done the easy, cheap way, the film simply would have recycled the familiar elements from the TV show that would prove entertaining for small kids and excruciating for almost anyone else. Fortunately, Bobin, Stoller, and co-writer Matthew Robinson dispense with the expected jokes early on and, understanding that kids are only half the audience, do a lot to entertain parents, as well.

    They treat Dora and her friends as actual characters instead of caricatures, giving them motivations outside of that which is convenient for the plot. Lots of clever wordplay serves to deliver funny jokes and allows Dora to talk like an actual person. And Benicio Del Toro and Danny Trejo were somehow convinced to give voice to Swiper and Boots, respectively, a funny notion before they even say a word.

    Of course, this is not high art. There are fart jokes and telegraphed twists you can see coming a mile away. But the low-brow stuff is kept to a relative minimum, and the rest of the film, which plays like Indiana Jones ​for kids, is so enjoyable that you won’t notice most of it anyway.

    Moner, who Dallasites might remember as Wendy in the Dallas Theater Center production of Fly in 2013, is near-perfect as Dora. She’s bright, bubbly, and charming, with a face so cherubic that you can’t imagine her ever doing anything wrong. Wahlberg, Madden, and Coombe make for a fun, if not all that memorable, friend group. The adults in the film are almost beside the point, but Longoria and Peña elevate their scenes, unlike Derbez, who is an acquired taste at best.

    It’s always a pleasant surprise when noticeable effort is put into a film that didn’t necessarily need that support. Dora and the Lost City of Gold is a family film that has plenty to offer for anyone in the audience.

    Isabela Moner in Dora and the Lost City of Gold.

    Isabela Moner in Dora and the Lost City of Gold
    Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures
    Isabela Moner in Dora and the Lost City of Gold.
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    Movie Review

    Dallas gets showcased in witchy new movie Forbidden Fruits

    Alex Bentley
    Mar 26, 2026 | 3:24 pm
    Alexandra Shipp, Lili Reinhart, and Victoria Perfetti in Forbidden Fruits
    Photo courtesy of IFC
    Alexandra Shipp, Lili Reinhart, and Victoria Perfetti in Forbidden Fruits.

    There was a time when Dallas was a prime location for movies, whether it was for films set in and around the city, like Tender Mercies, or ones that used it to stand in for other locations, like Robocop. Dallas is getting its first notable shoutout in a long time thanks to the new film, Forbidden Fruits.

    Set mostly in a NorthPark Center-like location called Highland Place Mall, the film centers on a group of young women known as the Fruits. Apple (Lili Reinhart), Cherry (Victoria Perfetti), and Fig (Alexandra Shipp) all work at a clothing store called Free Eden, with the three of them essentially lording over everyone else in the mall. That includes Pumpkin (Lola Tung), who works at the pretzel store Sister Salt’s and who wants to join their group.

    Pumpkin soon discovers that, apart from being an entitled clique, the group also claims to be a coven of witches, with Apple especially using their combined power to get back at anyone who’s wronged them. When Pumpkin starts noticing Cherry and Fig going astray of the group’s code, she uses this knowledge to get in tighter with Apple, although she’s unprepared for how far Apple will go to protect her interests.

    Written and directed by Meredith Alloway (who grew up in Dallas and graduated from both Lake Highlands High School and SMU) and co-written by Lily Houghton, the film seems to have the aim of combining movies like Mean Girls and The Craft. The peer pressure of being part of an exclusive group is evident from the start, as Apple essentially forces the others to live by her code or be ostracized (or worse).

    One of the biggest problems the film runs into, though, is that any conflict comes from within the group itself. With no pressure coming from other friends, family, or co-workers, the group has to create its own drama. The story quickly gets redundant and stagnant, with almost no plot movement until the final act of the film, when it’s almost too late.

    Alloway is clearly aiming for a campy vibe with the film, but the execution leaves something to be desired. The four characters are established in a perfunctory manner, and even as they get fleshed out as the film goes along, there’s nothing to compare them with, so it’s as if they’re just acting off-the-wall in a vacuum.

    Those who know the Dallas area well will enjoy the local references (the women hail from Plano, Irving, Grapevine, and Highland Park), and Alloway makes sure to include the looming threat of a tornado into the plot. But since the film was actually filmed in Toronto, there are no visuals that make it feel like Texas, and so any goodwill she gets from setting the film in the city is muted by that lack.

    While Reinhart (Riverdale) and Shipp (Storm in X-Men movies) have been around longer, both Pedretti (You) and Tung (The Summer I Turned Pretty) have made big impressions on streaming shows in recent years. The foursome play off each other well even when the story is not that compelling.

    If there was a message in Forbidden Fruits that Alloway wanted to get across, she didn’t communicate it clearly enough. Her solid cast can only do so much to sell a story that doesn’t have enough on the bone to be filling. It would have been nice for the movie to be filmed in Dallas, but such is the way of the world in modern Hollywood.

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    Forbidden Fruits opens in theaters on March 27.

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