The anime adventure that tells the story of traveling online to search for something missing. It is an exciting story about a missing game online. The hero of the trip is Ralf and his teammate Vanellope von Schweitz, who decide to travel to the World Wide Web to find a replacement for a video game called Vanellope Sugar Rush. Both seem to need helpers for that exciting journey, where friends meet a large group of Internet users who help them discover that part.
Director Rich Moore's return to the gaming world he so brilliantly created in 2012's Wreck it Ralph is a sometimes uneven, but ultimately endearing and satisfying sequel.
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.
An awesome movie for pre-teens that uses hip humor to comment on our world while being unafraid to make us feel real emotions. Add Disney princesses freed from their corsets, and you've got the feel good Disney ethos updated for our electronic age.
While the film doesn't quite reach the bar set by its predecessor, it's propulsive enough to build up enough goodwill long before it reaches its rocky third act.
I am happy to say that the misogynists' worst fears were realized. This is very much a movie whose female characters are equal to their male counterparts...
The 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.
Movies don't get more timely than Ralph Breaks the Internet - an exhilarating yet dismaying sequel to 2012's Wreck It Ralph, for my money easily the smartest and most endearing Disney animated feature of recent years.