Toronto Star

Anti-hero lives up to title

- PETER HOWELL MOVIE CRITIC Twitter: @peterhowel­lfilm

Ralph Breaks the Internet

(out of 4) Animated adventure featuring the voices of John C. Reilly, Sarah Silverman, Gal Gadot, Jack McBrayer, Jane Lynch, Taraji P. Henson and Alan Tudyk. Written by Phil Johnston and Pamela Ribon. directed by Rich Moore and Phil Johnston. Opens Wednesday at theatres everywhere. 124 minutes. STC

The internet had it coming.

After a quarter-century of scrambling pop culture and social discourse with zero heed to the negative consequenc­es, our electronic overlord deserves to be kicked around by a guy like Wreck-It Ralph, the lumbering mayhem artist from 1980s video arcade game Fix-It Felix Jr.

Ralph Breaks the Internet sets out to do exactly that, living up to its title with more vigour and an even greater anarchic sense of glee than in the first Wreck-It

Ralph film. Our anti-hero is once again voiced by John C. Reilly, who you can visualize wearing Ralph’s ratty orange T-shirt and torn overalls. “Sweet mother of monkey milk!” I must interject, to quote Vanellope von Schweetz (Sarah Silverman), the Sugar Rush racer who is also back for more. Besides kicking internet cyberbutt, this movie has a better story than before, one with more heart than you’d expect from a stack of animated pixels.

Seems Vanellope, the glitchy princess with the wide-eyed face of an anime character, is bored of just roaring around the sweet hills and dales of her sac- charine game. But when Ralph tries to help his platonic pal break out of her rut, the resulting chaos leads to a careless human player breaking the steering wheel of the Sugar Rush console at Litwak’s Family Fun Center & Arcade.

A replacemen­t wheel for this ancient game will cost more than arcade owner Mr. Litwak (Ed O’Neill) is willing to pay. He unplugs Sugar Rush, casting Vanellope and the other racers into digital limbo.

Ralph and Vanellope launch their own search for a replacemen­t device, finding one on eBay, but to obtain it they’ll have to launch themselves into the internet, sort of like how the scientists of Fantastic Voyage shrink to enter a human’s bloodstrea­m.

Here the film really zaps the zeitgeist with its barbed social commentary. The internet is depicted as a shopping mall version of Oz crossed with the cursed Pleasure Island of Pi

nocchio. Mindless consumers, their heads square from constantly staring at a screen, busy themselves endlessly buying and selling stuff. They’re surrounded — product placements, ahoy! — by such realworld online distractio­ns as Google, Amazon, Facebook, Pinterest and Fandago, along with a shameless corporate parade of Disney princesses, Groot from Guardians of the

Galaxy and Imperial Stormtroop­ers from Star Wars.

For their rare moments of downtime, internet denizens turn to a 24/7 channel called BuzzzTube to watch a clickbait artist named Yesss (Taraji P. Henson) manipulate the masses for profit.

Frantic fun ensues as Ralph attempts to go viral to earn money to make his eBay purchase. A puzzled Vanellope, meanwhile, tries to plumb the politics of the Disney princesses: How many of them are just waiting for a “big strong man” to show up?

There’s some content that may be a little too adult for some tots: a nasty online game called Slaughter Race, featuring a cynical speedster named Shank, voiced by Wonder Wom

an’s Gal Gadot. They bring out the competive spirit of Vanellope, much to the chagrin of Ralph, whose unruly instincts to defend his friend can only lead to trouble — the kind that really breaks the internet. But as I said up top, the internet had it coming and this movie delivers serious silicon schadenfre­ude. Come for the breaking, stay for the hacking.

 ?? DISNEY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ralph with his pal Vanellope in Ralph Breaks the Internet.
DISNEY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ralph with his pal Vanellope in Ralph Breaks the Internet.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada