RALPH BREAKS THE
INTERNET:
DISNEY REFERENCES GALORE IN SOLID SEQUEL!
By Nico
Beland
Movie
Review: **** out of 4
DISNEY
Wreck-It
Ralph, Yesss, and Vanellope Von Schweetz in Ralph
Breaks the Internet
Everyone’s favorite gorilla-fisted
retro “Bad Guy” is back in Ralph Breaks
the Internet, the anticipated sequel to Disney’s
2012 critical and commercial hit, Wreck-It
Ralph. Big shock, I adored the first movie when it came out and not because
a certain blue hedgehog appears in it…okay, that was part of the reason but
even if you took that aspect out, it was a clever and thoroughly entertaining
nostalgia trip through the world of video games with unforgettable characters.
It was described by many as the video
game equivalent of Who Framed Roger
Rabbit? As it features several cameos consisting of popular characters such
as Zangief from Street Fighter,
Q*bert, Bowser from Super Mario Bros.,
and Sonic the Hedgehog to name a few. But, the film manages to be its own
unique entity without becoming a cheap knockoff of that movie.
Fans of the movie, including myself,
waiting ecstatically for news of a Wreck-It
Ralph follow-up and with games evolving and becoming more advanced with
otherworldly environments and unique characters, the possibilities are endless.
Or, Ralph goes beyond the world of gaming and ventures into the world of the
internet, that’s where Ralph Breaks the
Internet comes in, with John C. Reilly (Talladega
Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Step
Brothers, Guardians of the Galaxy),
Sarah Silverman (The Sarah Silverman
Program, Popstar: Never Stop Never
Stopping, Battle of the Sexes),
Jack McBrayer (30 Rock, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Smurfs: The Lost Village), and Jane
Lynch (A Mighty Wind, Glee, Escape from Planet Earth) reprising their voice roles as Fix-It Felix Jr. bad guy, Wreck-It
Ralph, sweet and sassy glitching racer princess of Sugar Rush, Vanellope Von Schweetz, “Good Guy” repairman with a
magic hammer (Kiss it Thor!), Fix-It Felix Jr., and commander of Hero’s Duty, Sgt. Calhoun, and Rich
Moore (Zootopia) back in the
director’s chair.
So, after all the enthusiasm I gave
the first film, how does the sequel hold up? It's great and I even think the sequel improves upon certain areas of its predecessor. A small gripe I had with the first movie
was that the trailers built up the characters would be traveling to several
games in the arcade when really it was only two, given that their visiting the
online universe now, they crank up the imagination and visual gags for the
online community, it’s like if The Emoji
Movie was done correctly.
Six years after the events of the first movie,
Wreck-It Ralph and Vanellope Von Schweetz are hanging out all the time in the
arcade and just being the best of pals. But when the arcade’s owner, Mr. Litwak
(voiced by Ed O’Neill-Married… with
Children, Wayne’s World 1 and 2, Modern Family) installs a new Wi-Fi
router into the arcade and the Sugar Rush
game’s steering wheel suddenly breaks, Ralph and Vanellope leave the arcade
world and are blasted into the internet to search for a replacement wheel.
Along the way they encounter the
dangerous free-to-play racing game, Slaughter
Race and home of the game’s lead driver, Shank (voiced by Gal Gadot-Fast & Furious 4-6, Triple 9, DC Extended Universe), an algorithm known as Yesss (voiced by
Taraji P. Henson-Hustle & Flow, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Karate Kid (2010)) who determines
video popularity on BuzzTube (This
movie’s version of YouTube) where
Ralph becomes an internet sensation, the frightening realms of the Dark Web,
and Vanellope even wanders into Oh My
Disney where she befriends the Disney
Princesses.
With time running out, Ralph and
Vanellope must race across the web to find a new wheel, before Litwak pulls the
plug on Sugar Rush forever. Oh, and
Fix-It Felix Jr. and Sgt. Calhoun have become parental figures for the other Sugar Rush racers.
The film also features the voices of
Alfred Molina (Raiders of the Lost Ark,
Spider-Man 2, Rango) as Double Dan, Alan Tudyk (Frozen, Trumbo, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story), who had
previously provided the voice of King Candy in Wreck-It Ralph, as KnowsMore,
Flula Borg (Smosh, Pitch Perfect 2, Ferdinand) as Maybe, Hamish Blake (Real Stories, Twentysomething,
Molly) as Pyro, Ali Wong (American Housewife, Inside Amy Schumer, Fresh off
the Boat) as Felony, rapper, GloZell as Little Debbie, Timothy Simons (The Interview, Christine, The Boss) as
Butcher Boy, Roger Craig Smith (Resident
Evil (video game series), Assassin’s
Creed (video game series), Regular
Show) as Sonic the Hedgehog, and Melissa VillaseƱor (Adventure Time, Saturday
Night Live, O.K. K.O.! Let’s Be
Heroes) replacing Mindy Kaling as Taffyta Muttonfudge.
Overall, Ralph Breaks the Internet
is a worthy follow-up and one of the best sequels to a Disney animated film. It doesn’t give the audience a cheap,
carbon-copy version of its predecessor like several of Disney’s sequels in the past, but rather a continuation of the story by
bringing the characters we know and love back and putting them in new
environments and situations.
Much like the worlds of the arcade, the online environments are
absolutely gorgeous and filled with imagination and visual jokes, Twitter birds literally “Tweeting”, pop-up
ads represented by people with advertisement signs, and a virus being like a
creepy snake-like monster (It works in context).
If Wreck-It Ralph was meant to
be the story about Ralph’s search for respect, then Ralph Breaks the Internet is about Vanellope looking for adventure
and variety as she’s become bored with the same-old game and same-old tracks,
in a similar way Incredibles 2 was
more about Elastigirl than its main character. You continue to grow attached to
Ralph and Vanellope as characters and you want to see them succeed in their
quest to find the wheel, but as it progresses they realize that maybe they have
different dreams in the end and might have to go their separate ways (Hard to
imagine since they’re a perfect duo).
This is also proof that it’s possible for a feature-length commercial to
be good, we’ve already had The Lego Movie
set the standard a few years before, but Ralph
Breaks the Internet is literally one big ad for Disney. Besides the Princesses,
references to Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and several other Disney
properties are present and they never, ever feel forced.
Ralph Breaks the Internet is my Go-To family movie for the
Thanksgiving holiday, whether you want to take the kids to something fun or
just looking for an entertaining animated flick, I guarantee you’ll have a “Wreck-tacular” time no matter what your
“game” is.
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