The kids, with Antie’s help (who is killed by a scorpion), finally reach the house. They climb up the patio, using a Cheerio as a stepping stool. As Wayne operates his portable shrink ray in the yard, the kids—now inside the house—are accidentally caught in the beam’s expansion field and begin growing back to normal size in the kitchen, destroying the table and floor.
The story begins when Wayne finally gets his machine to work, accidentally shrinking Nick, Amy, and the two Russell boys to a quarter of an inch tall. The miniature teens are then swept up in the trash and dumped in the overgrown backyard jungle. The film follows their epic struggle to survive giant insects, deadly lawnmowers, and a perilous journey back to the house, while Wayne, unaware they are alive, mistakenly believes they ran away and throws the shrunken kids away again—this time in a garbage bag. Act 1: The Shrinking Wayne demonstrates his "Electro-Magnetic Reducing Machine" to a skeptical scientific committee, but it fails, destroying his office. Dejected, he returns home. That night, while cleaning his lab, he accidentally activates the machine just as Nick and Ron (who broke in to retrieve a baseball) are in the beam's path. A stray baseball then hits the machine's control panel, causing it to fire a second time, shrinking Amy and Little Russ, who had come looking for the others. The four kids, now 1/4-inch tall, are swept up in dust and thrown into the trash by Diane. Honey I Shrunk the Kids
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids is a 1989 American science-fiction comedy film directed by Joe Johnston (in his directorial debut), produced by Walt Disney Pictures, and starring Rick Moranis, Matt Frewer, Marcia Strassman, and Kristine Sutherland. The film was a massive critical and commercial success, grossing over $222 million on a budget of just $18 million. It is renowned for its groundbreaking visual effects (winning a Saturn Award for Best Special Effects), its inventive blend of domestic comedy and perilous adventure, and for launching a franchise that included a sequel, a TV series, a theme park attraction, and a reboot in development. Core Premise The film centers on the Szalinski family: Wayne Szalinski (Rick Moranis), an eccentric and often-absent-minded inventor; his patient wife Diane (Marcia Strassman); their teenage daughter Amy (Amy O'Neill); and their young son Nick (Robert Oliveri). Wayne is obsessed with creating an electromagnetic shrinking machine, which has failed spectacularly every time. The kids, with Antie’s help (who is killed