Honey I Blew Up The Kid May 2026
Wayne’s wife, Diane (Marcia Strassman), is now a real estate agent, exhausted from managing two growing boys. Their eldest, Nick (Robert Oliveri), is a sullen teenager who resents being known as "the kid who got shrunk." Their youngest, Adam, is a curious, mischievous two-year-old with a penchant for putting things in his mouth.
As the National Guard prepares to fire on Adam (now 112 feet tall, straddling the Las Vegas Strip), Wayne commandeers the casino’s massive outdoor speaker system. Diane climbs a construction crane to get eye-to-eye with her giant son. Together, they sing the same lullaby Wayne used to sing to Nick when he had nightmares. The sound echoes across the neon desert. honey i blew up the kid
A frantic chase ensues. Adam, now the size of a garage, sees a neon sign for a circus outside Vegas. He thinks it's a giant toy. He waddles toward the Strip, leaving a trail of crushed cars and snapped power lines. Wayne’s wife, Diane (Marcia Strassman), is now a
A casino janitor sweeps up near a puddle. In the puddle’s reflection, a tiny, shrunken showgirl from the first movie’s cameo waves a miniature foam finger. Tone: A perfect blend of slapstick visual comedy (a toddler using the Stratosphere Tower as a sippy cup) and genuine family heart. It’s Godzilla meets Mr. Mom , with the core message that children don’t need to be big to make a huge impact on your life. Diane climbs a construction crane to get eye-to-eye
Over the next 12 hours, strange things happen. Adam breaks his high chair. Then he cracks the tiled floor. By dawn, he has outgrown his crib. By noon, he punches a hole through the living room ceiling. Wayne realizes with horror: the ray has a delayed, exponential effect. Every time Adam experiences a strong emotion—hunger, excitement, fear—he grows.
Honey, I Blew Up the Kid: A Suburban Tragedy in Three Acts