
Ralph Breaks the Internet 3D
John C. Reilly returns to voice to the sequel to Disney's 2012 3D animated adventure, along with Sarah Silverman and an all-star voice cast. This time, Ralph ventures into the World Wide Web.
Video game bad guy Ralph and fellow misfit Vanellope (Silverman) travel to the internet in search of a replacement part to save Vanellope's video game, Sugar Rush. In over their heads, Ralph and Vanellope rely on the citizens of the internet - the netizens - to help find their way, including an entrepreneur named Yesss (Taraji P. Henson), who is the head algorithm and the heart and soul of trend-making site BuzzzTube.
- Director:
- Phil Johnston (feature debut)Rich Moore ('Zootopia', 'Wreck-It Ralph', TV's 'The Simpsons')
- Writer:
- Phil JohnstonPamela Ribon
- Cast:
- John C. ReillySarah SilvermanGal GadotTaraji P. HensonJack McBrayerJane LynchEd O'NeillSean GiambroneFlula BorgTimothy SimonsAli WongHamish BlakeGloZell GreenIrene BedardKristen Bell



Reviews & comments

Variety
pressIt's a poignant buddy movie that's sincere in all the right places, but knows better than to take itself too seriously.

Vanity Fair
pressWritten by Johnston and former TV recapper Pamela Ribon, the film has a witty logic that's just bendable enough.

The New York Times
press"Ralph Breaks the Internet" might look like just another adorable, funny animated family film, but it also connects to our current reality in ways that are downright bone-chilling.

The Guardian
pressSomewhere between Ready Player One and The Emoji Movie, summoning up a zero-gravity spectacle of dazzling colours and vertiginous perspectives, a featureless and inert mashup of memes, brands, avatars and jokes.

Stuff
pressBy the end, you'll be hooked and find that, as Vanellope puns, "farting is such sweet sorrow".

Rolling Stone
pressWill he break the Internet or will it break him? It's painfully recognisable, this neediness, as is the rise and fall. Ralph, c'est moi.

New Zealand Herald
pressThe visualisation of the internet is dazzling to look at, but its conception emphasises reference over wit. Luckily the stellar character comedy more than makes up for this, and the film is overall undeniably beautiful to behold.

Newshub
pressWhile I didn't bring any inbuilt love for the character, I certainly left with it and there is one insanely delivered Disney princess sequence which may be one of the funniest things I've seen in years.

Los Angeles Times
pressA witty, fastidiously imagined adventure and a touching, sometimes troubling ode to the power of friendship. But it also demonstrates some of the problems that can befall a movie when its vast ambition and confidence outstrip its finesse.

Hollywood Reporter
pressDeftly defying expectation, the inevitable sequel to 2012's... Wreck-It Ralph, absolutely crushes it.

Variety
pressIt's a poignant buddy movie that's sincere in all the right places, but knows better than to take itself too seriously.

Vanity Fair
pressWritten by Johnston and former TV recapper Pamela Ribon, the film has a witty logic that's just bendable enough.

The New York Times
press"Ralph Breaks the Internet" might look like just another adorable, funny animated family film, but it also connects to our current reality in ways that are downright bone-chilling.

The Guardian
pressSomewhere between Ready Player One and The Emoji Movie, summoning up a zero-gravity spectacle of dazzling colours and vertiginous perspectives, a featureless and inert mashup of memes, brands, avatars and jokes.

Stuff
pressBy the end, you'll be hooked and find that, as Vanellope puns, "farting is such sweet sorrow".

Rolling Stone
pressWill he break the Internet or will it break him? It's painfully recognisable, this neediness, as is the rise and fall. Ralph, c'est moi.

New Zealand Herald
pressThe visualisation of the internet is dazzling to look at, but its conception emphasises reference over wit. Luckily the stellar character comedy more than makes up for this, and the film is overall undeniably beautiful to behold.

Newshub
pressWhile I didn't bring any inbuilt love for the character, I certainly left with it and there is one insanely delivered Disney princess sequence which may be one of the funniest things I've seen in years.

Los Angeles Times
pressA witty, fastidiously imagined adventure and a touching, sometimes troubling ode to the power of friendship. But it also demonstrates some of the problems that can befall a movie when its vast ambition and confidence outstrip its finesse.

Hollywood Reporter
pressDeftly defying expectation, the inevitable sequel to 2012's... Wreck-It Ralph, absolutely crushes it.
There aren't any user reviews for this movie yet.
Share