In this live-action prequel to the 1994 comedy hit, the Flintstones and the Rubbles go on a trip to Rock Vegas, where Wilma is pursued by playboy Chip Rockefeller.
20 June 1944, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
19 February 1958, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
1 August 1957, Glendale, California, USA
26 May 1975, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
6 August 1936, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA
27 January 1965, Aberfeldy, Perthshire, Scotland, UK
28 May 1967, Passaic, New Jersey, USA
30 May 1942, Vallejo, California, USA
20 September 1967, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
11 October 1968, Parsippany, New Jersey, USA
6 November 1975, Oswego, New York, USA
26 October 1978
28 February 1971, Chicago, Illinois, USA
8 November 1940, USA
December 24, 2010
Um, no surprises here. Better than the original.January 01, 2000
Falls from interestingly loopy to tiresome.January 01, 2000
The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas stumbles at its outset by setting up an adult premise inevitably undone by the film's aspirations to family entertainment.January 01, 2000
Livelier, it feels more like a cartoon.January 01, 2000
The prequel is like eating a second helping of underdone bronto burger and being kept awake by the resulting indigestion-induced Dali-esque nightmare.January 01, 2000
It is better than the original.January 01, 2000
Full of leaden one-liners and dull puns.January 01, 2000
Not bad, not bad at all.May 08, 2002
What’s with the film’s odd preoccupation with such adult themes as class, money, and sex?January 01, 2000
This prequel packs a few more laughs than its 1994 big-screen predecessor.January 01, 2000
Kids will love the crowd-pleasing depiction of an entire prehistoric world, complete with an adorable baby Dino -- and loads of great sight gags and puns.January 01, 2000
Look beyond the perfunctory dinosaur flatulence jokes, and Viva Rock Vegas is really quite sweet and clever.