Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Belcher family treats viewers to hilarious, heartfelt outing

- By Katie Walsh

The long-running, award-winning Fox animated series “Bob’s Burgers,” created by Loren Bouchard, is an unassuming Hollywood success story. Built in the same mold as the “The Simpsons” and “King of the Hill,” it’s no surprise that this irreverent, whipsmart and family-oriented animated comedy is such a success, both commercial­ly and creatively. The arrival of a movie version, “The Bob’s Burgers Movie,” seems like just the icing on the cake, but the film is also a refreshing contrast to the kind of big screen spectacle that usually crowds theaters in the summer.

The comedy of “Bob’s Burgers” is manifold, and like a burger, it works because of the combinatio­n of elements melding together to create something singular. There’s the writing, dense with jokes, puns and the cognitive dissonance of little kids making references wiser than their years. There’s the voice acting, which makes the writing and characters even funnier. And then there’s the sort of aggressive­ly 2D animation style, which, blown up on the big screen, becomes a positively radical aesthetic. Plus, there are elaborate musical numbers.

It’s this combo that makes “The Bob’s Burgers Movie” not only work, but also sing, as one of the funniest, smartest and most unique summer movies of the year. “Bob’s Burgers” is on its own wavelength and it’s simply a treat to take that wave for a ride.

“Bob’s Burgers” follows the Belcher family, the proprietor­s of a local burger joint in a seaside hamlet. Dad Bob (H. Jon Benjamin) flips the burgers, wife Linda (John Roberts) keeps the family together, and their three kids Tina (Dan Mintz), Gene (Eugene Mirman) and Louise (Kristen Schaal) are going through their own challenges and growing pains, whether it’s a long-standing crush (Tina), a frustrated desire to be a musician (Gene) or a desire to prove one’s own bravery to the other kids at school (Louise).

In “The Bob’s Burgers Movie,” the family faces a business-crippling setback when a sinkhole opens up in front of their restaurant. It’s enough to send Bob into an anxiety spiral after their loan extension has been denied, threatenin­g to put Bob’s Burgers out of business entirely. Struggling with insecurity at school, Louise enters the sinkhole in a misguided attempt at bravado, and finds the skeletal remains of a local carnival worker, which sets off a police investigat­ion. While the kids head off on a wildgoose chase to discover the identity of the murderer, thinking it might help save their family, the parents try to save the business with their own scheme, selling burgers out of a cobbled-together grill cart on the boardwalk. During this adventure, the Belcher kids become caught up in the carny underworld of their community.

The antics are wacky, the jokes are dense, and “The Bob’s Burgers Movie” is both nail-bitingly tense and genuinely moving.

It’s a story that demonstrat­es how family unity is a powerful force, and that small businesses are tantamount to preserving the fabric of a community. But most importantl­y, it’s hilarious, and it’s likely to make you crave a burger too.

MPAA rating: PG-13 (for rude/suggestive material and language)

Running time: 1:42

How to watch: In theaters

 ?? 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS ?? Gene Belcher (voiced by Eugene Mirman), from left, Louise Belcher (Kristen Schaal) and Tina Belcher (Dan Mintz) in “The Bob’s Burgers Movie.”
20TH CENTURY STUDIOS Gene Belcher (voiced by Eugene Mirman), from left, Louise Belcher (Kristen Schaal) and Tina Belcher (Dan Mintz) in “The Bob’s Burgers Movie.”

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