Here's the thing: Austin Powers was massive in 1999. Everyone quoted it. 'Yeah, baby!' was everywhere. But comedy ages like milk, not wine, and this particular carton has curdled.
The entire movie is built on sexual innuendo—not clever wordplay, just relentless crude jokes about shagging, mojo (sexual prowess), and women as objects. What felt cheeky and subversive 25 years ago now mostly feels dated and uncomfortable. The spy-spoof elements could be fun, but they're buried under layers of juvenile humor that doesn't hold up.
For parents: this isn't appropriate for kids, period. Mid-teens at the absolute earliest, and even then, only if you're prepared to discuss why the portrayal of women is problematic and why comedy standards have evolved. The film has almost zero enriching value—it's not teaching anything, building any skills, or offering insight. It's pure entertainment, and not particularly entertaining entertainment by 2025 standards.
If your teen is curious because of cultural references, maybe watch it together and use it as a teaching moment about how media reflects its time. But honestly? There are better uses of 95 minutes. This one's more interesting as a cultural artifact than as actual entertainment.





