Mars Attacks! is a very remarkable achievement for yet another reason. This very well might be only film that cost a fortune in order to look cheap! Mars Attacks! movie reviews & Metacritic score: Earth is overrun with mean, green invaders!

The science-fiction comedy Mars Attacks! is a contrived B-movie pastiche with some spicy ingredients alien to other Tim Burton films: attitude, cynicism, misanthropy. The best thing about Mars Attacks! is that you'll come away believing you could have done the movie better. IT'S PROBABLY ON NETFLIX: Ack ack ack!

Mars Attacks!

Read the Empire Movie review of Mars Attacks. This is a Tim Burton film after all, a visual feast, both comedic and cinematic, he, like his. As the attack turns global, the military proves ineffectual, and it takes the efforts of a heroic band of disparate individuals to save mankind as we know it. The screenplay. "Mars Attacks!" inspired by the Topps trading cards, combines disaster epic, science fiction, and war film conventions to tell its comedic story about the people of Earth Mars Attacks! Does tend to try and take it's Spoofy premise a little to seriously, but then lands itself right back in spoof territory. What You Need To Know: MARS ATTACKS is the latest creation of the strange, but brilliant Tim Burton who also brought us the first two BATMAN movies.

Trailer Mars Attacks!

Part Independence Day, part cheesy B-movie, Mars Attacks! slaps its absurd credentials on the table right from the opening sequence. First, a herd of flaming cattle thunder wildly through small-town America, then the scene cuts to a gargantuan fleet of Martian flying saucers hurtling silently towards. Check out the exclusive TVGuide.com movie review and see our movie rating for Mars Attacks!

Out of all the movies I've ever seen, Mars Attacks is one of the most bizarre B-Movies I have ever sat through. The series was called Mars Attacks and the Martians in the movie look exactly like the ones on the cards. (After the shortened intro, we fade to the Nostalgia Critic at his desk). I remember it so you don't have to. Tim Burton has gone from one of the world's most unique directors. (The poster for Big Fish is shown).