Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘RALPH BREAKS THE INTERNET’ IS A SAVVY, FRESH ANALYSIS OF LIFE ON THE WEB

- BY KATIE WALSH

“Wreck-It Ralph” felt like a real breath of fresh air in 2012. Using ’80s arcade game characters, co-writer and director Rich Moore explored the nuances of heroism and villainy through the surprising­ly self-aware video game bad guy Wreck-It Ralph (John C. Reilly), exposing the limitation­s of the good/evil binary. It was self-reflective, and not afraid to pillory genre formulas, which Disney has been known to employ a time or two. Moore is back to helm the sequel, “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” along with co-director Phil Johnston, who co-wrote the original film. Once again, the team brings a razor-sharp scalpel to dissect the zeitgeist.

Although Ralph is perfectly happy with his life hanging with his best pal in the arcade, racer Vanellope (Sarah Silverman) is bored, and nothing fixes boredom like a high-speed Wi-Fi connection. After running roughshod over Sugar Rush, Ralph and Vanellope hit the web to snag a new steering wheel for the console from an eBay auction. Along the way, they discover the risks of online shopping, viral fame, pop-up ads, the dark web and a truly addictive adult racing game in the style of “Grand Theft Auto” called “Slaughter Race.” Headed up by the very cool Shank (Gal Gadot), it’s love at first engine rev for Van, and a cause for concern for Ralph, who doesn’t want to lose his best pal.

So while Vanellope follows her heart to the thrills of “Slaughter Race,” Ralph does everything he can to right things in the arcade, which means winning the eBay auction. He becomes a viral video star, doing his best video impression­s — makeup tutorials, hot peppers, screaming goats, you name it. The whole film is quite a savvy analysis of how the web works, and it’s cleverly rendered visually. The characters zip around the internet in little flying cars, make queries at a Search Bar headed up by a stuffy know-it-all KnowsMore (Alan Tudyk), and Ralph vacuums up hearts he turns into cold hard cash.

There’s also a big plug for the Oh My Disney website, but writers Johnston, Moore, Pamela Ribon, Jim Reardon and Josie Trinidad are sharp enough to use this as a means to a very necessary takedown of typical Disney princess lore, with all their strong man saviors, dead moms, kidnapping, singing and magic hair. Vanellope realizes her real dream is to stay in “Slaughter Race,” as it’s what she sings about while staring at “important water,” as the princesses instruct. Ralph, who has become totally co-dependent with Vanellope, panics at the developmen­t.

There’s no real villain in the film — Ralph’s own worst enemy is Ralph himself. His insecurity is cloned by a virus, and his worst, neediest qualities swarm into a giant King Kong monster. Vanellope and Ralph’s most important survival quest is learning to set boundaries and not rely on each other’s validation, and it’s pretty incredible to see how the filmmakers easily and boldly slip concepts right from the therapist’s office into the wild rumpus through the internet.

“Ralph Breaks the Internet” is a fresh, smart, funny and most importantl­y, comprehens­ible analysis of both internet culture and the complexiti­es of interperso­nal relationsh­ips. Once again, the seemingly dopey video game bad guy Ralph manages to be the wokest Disney character we’ve seen in a long time.

 ?? DISNEY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, Ralph, voiced by John C. Reilly; Yess, voiced by Taraji P. Henson; and Vanellope von Schweetz, voiced by Sarah Silverman, in a scene from “Ralph Breaks the Internet.”
DISNEY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, Ralph, voiced by John C. Reilly; Yess, voiced by Taraji P. Henson; and Vanellope von Schweetz, voiced by Sarah Silverman, in a scene from “Ralph Breaks the Internet.”

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