Do you have a video playback issues? Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.

Watch Arthur and the Invisibles

Oops...

Something went wrong.

Try again later.

  • Get premium account and watch without any limits!

    Close
    • Reset
  •   Report
  •  Trailer
Ten-year-old Arthur must find a way to keep the home of his beloved grandmother from being destroyed by a developer with other plans. Then Arthur goes looking for some much-fabled hidden treasure in the land of the Minimoys, a tiny people living in harmony with nature.
  • Comments
  • Newest
    • Newest
    • Oldest
  • 0 Comments
  • YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
  • ACTORS OF "Arthur and the Invisibles"
  • DIRECTORS OF "Arthur and the Invisibles"
  • CREATORS OF "Arthur and the Invisibles"
  • HEROES OF "Arthur and the Invisibles"
  • CRITICS OF "Arthur and the Invisibles"
Time Out
Luc Besson's half-baked live-action/animated fantasy looks like it was invented on the hoof: it's erratically plotted, poorly animated, overly derivative and too insufferably cute to interest anyone above undemanding toddler age.
January 25, 2007
Time Out
A lazy fairy-tale pastiche reveling in mite-size cherubs, which cribs from gnomic mythology, elvish lore, Harry Potter, Arthurian legend and can't-pay-the-rent melodrama.
February 03, 2007
San Francisco Chronicle
Besson is a pro when it comes to action movies, but this part live, part animation effort is a mess, highlighted by creepy animation, derivative plot points and a child star who speaks way too fast.
January 12, 2007
Film4
In a clear-cut case of arrested development, the film that crowns Luc Besson's career is a magical phantasmagoria for the kids, and a derivative mess for their parents.
June 13, 2007
Entertainment Weekly
Luc Besson has made a fair share of artfully bad movies. Arthur and the Invisibles -- half-live-action, half-CG kid's adventure -- is (by a hair) more bad-bad, like The Fifth Element, than good-bad, like The Big Blue.
January 17, 2007
Toronto Star
While technically polished and adequately executed Arthur, like most of Besson's movies, is a strangely soulless experience.
January 12, 2007
Film Journal International
Things unfold in rote fashion, with nature-based gadgetry no more clever than those of The Flintstones.
March 01, 2007
IGN Movies
Is it time for director Luc Besson to become invisible too?
June 25, 2007
Ebert & Roeper
Strange and kind of meandering.
February 05, 2007
Feedback about this page?

Feedback about this page?