Dir: Rich
Moore
2012
****
I
grew up with 8 bit and then 35 bit games and Pixar/the Wreck-it Ralph team
explore that nostalgia brilliantly. I loved the story and the characters, I
thought the three different worlds and the very clever Game Central Station
were brilliantly imagined too. It is a shame that more real games weren’t
featured – and also surprising given all of the famous toys that missed out on
the Toy Story films – but there were enough there to keep it relevant and
familiar. However, the story is about far more than just old games. It
all begins at Litwak's Family Fun Center & Arcade. When it closes
at night, the various video game characters leave their normal
in-game roles and socialize in a power strip. Wreck-It
Ralph, the antagonist of the game Fix-It Felix Jr., is ostracized
by its other characters for being the game's villain, while the titular hero
Felix is praised and awarded medals. After being excluded from the game's
thirtieth anniversary party thrown by the inhabitants, Ralph announces that he
is tired of being mistreated and will earn his neighbors' respect by winning a
medal. However, by doing this, he is risking going "Turbo" - a term
coined when notorious auto-racer Turbo attempted to take
over RoadBlasters, a more popular racing game, which resulted in
both of their games being unplugged. Ralph learns he can obtain a medal from
the first-person shooter, Hero's Duty. After disrupting a game
session, Ralph scales the game's central beacon and obtains a medal, only to
hatch a Cy-Bug, a dangerous monster from the game. Ralph and the Cy-Bug stumble
into an escape pod, which is launched out of the game, and crash land in Sugar
Rush, a candy-themed kart racing game. With Ralph missing, his game is
labelled as malfunctioning and faces being unplugged. Felix, upon learning
from Q*bert that Ralph has left his game, ventures to Hero's Duty and
allies with the game's heroine, Sergeant Calhoun, to retrieve Ralph and the
Cy-Bug. A little girl, Vanellope von Schweetz, steals Ralph's medal to buy her
way into the nightly race that determines which characters are playable the
next day, but King Candy, the ruler of Sugar Rush, forbids her from
racing because she has glitches that cause her to teleport erratically.
Ralph and Vanellope agree to work together to retrieve his medal and help her
win a race. They build a kart and hide out at Diet Cola Mountain, an unfinished
race track, where Ralph teaches her to drive. King Candy hacks the
game's code to obtain Ralph's medal, and offers it to Ralph in exchange for
preventing Vanellope from racing. He claims that if Vanellope wins and becomes
playable, her glitches will lead to Sugar Rush being
unplugged; unable to leave the game because of her glitch, Vanellope will be
left to die while King Candy and his subjects become homeless in the arcade.
Ralph reluctantly agrees and destroys Vanellope's kart. Heartbroken, she
declares he "really is a bad guy" and runs off distraught. Upon
returning to his game, which has been evacuated in anticipation of it being
unplugged the next morning, Ralph notices Vanellope's image on the side of
the Sugar Rush cabinet and realizes she was meant to be a
playable character. Meanwhile, Felix and Calhoun search Sugar Rush for
Ralph. Felix falls in love with Calhoun, but she abandons him when he
inadvertently reminds her of her late fiancé who was murdered by a Cy-Bug on
their wedding day. Felix is later imprisoned in King Candy's castle, but Ralph
frees him and Vanellope, and Felix fixes the kart. Calhoun discovers a swarm of
Cy-Bug eggs underground, which hatch and start devouring the game. Vanellope
participates in the race, but is attacked by King Candy. Vanellope's glitch
reveals he is actually Turbo, who took over Sugar Rush and
displaced Vanellope as the main character. Vanellope glitches to escape Turbo, who
is then eaten by a Cy-Bug. Ralph, Felix, and Calhoun evacuate the game, but
Vanellope is trapped due to her glitches. When Calhoun points out that the
Cy-Bugs can be attracted and destroyed by a beacon of light as in Hero's
Duty, Ralph decides to make Diet Cola Mountain erupt, replicating
the beacon. Ralph is confronted by Turbo, now fused with the Cy-Bug that
devoured him. Ralph makes the mountain erupt and falls into its depths to
sacrifice himself, but Vanellope saves him using her glitching ability. The
volcanic beacon lures and permanently destroys the Cy-Bugs and Turbo. Vanellope
crosses the finish line, rebooting Sugar Rush and restoring
her status and memory as Princess Vanellope, the main character of the game,
but keeps her glitching ability. Ralph and Felix return home and their game is
spared. Felix and Calhoun marry, Vanellope gains popularity as a playable
character, and a content Ralph gains respect from his fellow characters. The
story gets a little over the top towards the ending but the part about Ralph
trying to fit in is wonderful. There is nostalgia for people of my generation
and there is a nice little message for the youngsters:
reject stereotype. That is a very non-Disney thing to do and is why I love
Ralph a little more than most Disney/Pixar characters. There is far too much
product placement in the film, so much so that you’d be forgiven for thinking
it was a film about confectionery rather than
old arcade games. John C. Reilly and Sarah Silverman
are perfect in their leading voice roles and the game looks just like it should
for a film that tributes the games of that era. It
is blatantly supposed to be Donkey Kong but I’m glad they didn’t make
it Donkey Kong the movie. It’s a wonderfully whimsical idea that somehow
becomes soothing greater, like a Seinfeld sketch becoming poetry or something.
The details are great also, even when certain things were changed from real
games, you knew exactly what was being referenced. Something for old and new
fans combined.
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