
Emoji Movie Screenshots
Drei Emojis machen sich auf eine abenteuerliche Reise durch ein Handy. Täglich hoffen sie darauf, von den Menschen für Nachrichten ausgewählt zu werden. Doch ihre Welt ist in Gefahr. Sie wollen sie davor retten, gelöscht zu werden. Emoji – Der Film – Wikipedia. Emoji Movie: Das Buch zum Film | West, Tracey, Thiele, Ulrich | ISBN: | Kostenloser Versand für alle Bücher mit Versand und Verkauf duch. Emoji Movie. Das Buch zum Film eBook: West, Tracey, Thiele, Ulrich: merlotshihtzu.eu: Kindle-Shop. Das Buch erzählt die Geschichte des Kinofilms: In den Messenging-Apps der Smartphones gibt es eine geheime und belebte Stadt Textopolis, in der die Emojis. Emoji Movie. Das Buch zum Film. Gene, ein reichlich schusseliges, aber sehr liebenswertes Emoji lebt in der geheimen Stadt Textopolis. In seiner. Presenting The Emoji Movie Maker official app from Sony Pictures Animations's comedy adventure, The Emoji Movie. Packed with features, this app allows you.

Emoji Movie - Weitere Formate
Save them and automatically sync to the Messages App or Keyboard for seamless use within your favorite apps. MuvaMoji by Amber Rose.
View All Videos View All Photos Movie Info. Hidden inside a smartphone, the bustling city of Textopolis is home to all emojis. Each emoji has only one facial expression, except for Gene, an exuberant emoji with multiple expressions.
Determined to become "normal" like the other emojis, Gene enlists the help of his best friend Hi-5 and a notorious code breaker called Jailbreak. During their travels through the other apps, the three emojis discover a great danger that could threaten their phone's very existence.
Anthony Leondis. Michelle Raimo. Sep 24, Sony Pictures Animation. Miller Gene Voice. James Corden Hi-5 Voice.
Anna Faris Jailbreak Voice. Maya Rudolph Smiler Voice. Steven Wright Mel Meh Voice. Jennifer Coolidge Mary Meh Voice.
Patrick Stewart Poop Voice. Christina Aguilera Akiko Glitter Voice. Rachael Ray Spam Voice. Anthony Leondis Director.
Anthony Leondis Screenwriter. Eric Siegel Screenwriter. Mike White Screenwriter. Michelle Raimo Producer. Ben Waisbren Executive Producer.
William J. Caparella Film Editor. Patrick Doyle Original Music. Carlos Zaragoza Production Design. Ryan Carlson Art Director.
August 4, Full Review…. September 7, Rating:. May 12, Full Review…. October 10, Full Review…. August 2, Full Review…. View All Critic Reviews Jul 12, Look, I'm not saying the movie was bad because it's a movie based around Emojis, that's one of it's major problems, but at the same time one of the least you should be worrying about.
Yeah, it'll make sense. I can give movies with unusual ideas a go, and that's if I'm even interested in watching it.
If they could manage to turn something as plotless as Legos into one of the best animated films of its year, as well as whole, then, hey, why not give it a go with other products that have no real story behind them?
Well, it seems that they attempted that with The Emoji movie and Patrick Stewart-ed all over it. First and foremost is the entire idea of it trying to appear hip, trendy, and every typical crap you'd expect a movie desperate to appeal to smart phone users.
Now we move onto story and plot The story and plot behind this are cringe and painfully unoriginal.
The movie doesn't even try to use its "be who you truly are" narrative and try something more Hell even garbage like Cars managed to try something "fresh" with it's fish out of water and Doc Hollywood rip off storyline and I'm only saying Cars is better than the Emoji movie when compared, because a good movie it's not anyway.
No, you get exactly what you'd expect with a movie using that storyline. The lead character is different, causing it to backfire, they are trying to force him to be like everyone else eg.
That's as easy as I can make it for you, and you can pretty much guess how it goes from there. The different guy meets another person who's also unusually different, they try to fix his problem, and it turns out at the end he really shouldn't have to conform to what society thinks.
Why be the same schtick when you can stand out? There was so much potential for this movie to also explore commentary on social media and the users, but they drop it immediately because the movie would rather focus on product placement than anything else yeah, trust me when I say they literally make a huge emphasis on selling Candy Crush, Facebook, and Youtube Cat videos than selling a good story.
One conversation is how the phone user has so many friends and why he's so popular, and the High-Five emoji states how they're not real friends, but people who just like him.
We don't get past that, because they'd rather go on to yap about Spotify and other unoriginal crap.
The people behind this couldn't even be bothered to take advantage of the social media apps to explore the kid and give us some more depth into him.
I don't care that the emojis live in a world of their own, that they communicate, etc. To Hell with that. What bothers me is how it doesn't even seem to realize how absurd its setup of the Emoji world is.
Apparently, Textopolis isn't a city that every phone out there is universally connected to. This brings up many questions and concerns.
The Emojis don't want to be deleted because of the mayhem Gene's stupidity has caused on the phone another point I'll bring up momentarily , but yet if thought about logically, what happens when people upgrade to new phones?
People get new phones every year and data is lost, therefore the entire idea of an individual, conscious Textopolis in every phone makes no sense, because the horrifying fact is that those emojis are going to be wiped out once people get a new phones.
The other logical fault to this is how only the "main" human seems to be suffering from phone troubles thanks to Gene. Which actually leads me to the kid's phone glitching.
Why does the phone and the apps start acting up, get played, and activate when the Emojis travel to and mess around in them?
I'm positive the kid's phone I keep calling him kid because I didn't even bother remembering his name, since the humans only exist just to exist should not be the only one glitching, making sounds, playing music randomly, and games opening up because I'm positive every other phone has had Emojis traveling around and using apps.
Finally, why does Textopolis have an entire company dedicated to where Emojis go to get used? This alone makes no sense whatsoever.
Opening up text apps and emoji text boards in your phone happens in mere seconds, and somehow they can predict when people are about to open up their messages and the Emoji characters the most popular ones used literally line up in chambers to be selected.
What happens when none of the emojis people want are in Most Popular? Do they haul ass to find the Dragon Emoji since it's not in the lineup?
Do they teleport the Salsa Dancer or Pregnant woman Emoji when they can somehow predict the users are going to pick those? None of this makes logical sense.
It would make more sense sense if, like a State Farm worker, the emojis just vanish for a second or so all of the emojis; a new one at a time for turns, since evidently Textopolis can't have such a small amount of Emojis with only one of each, and a handful of different skin colors , and then reappear back on spot once it went through.
The characters in the movie are also not original, so I won't even bother. Another fine example of what NOT to do in a movie is making dry, boring jokes.
The movie tries to throw you clever jokes or even forced ones, and none are funny. She was technically my "favorite" character, because I tend to love bright, cheerful, somewhat diabolical, and extra smiley characters, but she still didn't manage to win me over.
Her attitude in the movie essentially ruined any chances of my adding her as a real favorite. No sir. In Emoji's defense, and take into mind that the following is just "for what's worth", it's actually beautifully animated and has a "better" story whereas Food Fight couldn't even be bothered to find out what its own plot really is.
I'l stop there because there's just too much to complain about. But on a final note, that's not how wiping your phone's data completely works either.
Frisby 2 Super Reviewer. Mar 26, Did you love Inside Out? I know I did. I never felt like it was Pixar's best movie there was too much repetition with the other emotions causing havoc in their host's mind , but I loved that, you could say, that it was a movie that dealt with mental illnesses in a mature and intelligent way.
It also explored issues about how, in the long run, you cannot avoid being sad. Sadness is an emotion that will never be able to be avoided for as long as you're alive, but the movie never shied away from the fact that, you know what, this is a part of life and if you wanna be sad for one reason or another, then it's OK.
I obviously simplified it down, but Inside Out explores these issues intelligently with heart, soul and humor. You may be asking yourself why I've brought this up in reference to The Emoji Movie.
Well, unless you're living under a rock and are unable to read this review, you know what emojis are. Those little icons meant to display a singular emotion, whether that be sadness, happiness, anger.
There's obviously a shit-ton of emojis out there, but I'm just narrowing it down for the purpose of this review. Well, this movie uses the emojis like Inside Out uses actual emotions.
Because, apparently, emojis in this world are as important and relevant as actual conversation and communication. Conceptually, the movie is idiotic right from the start.
The meh emoji I can't believe I just typed that fails at his one job of being meh. He fails at this by being too many emojis at once, he is called a malfunction and destroys his workplace with his malfunctions.
He teams up with the high-five emoji and Jailbreak the original princess emoji to reprogram the code so he'll be a proper meh emoji and Alex, the kid who owns the phone the emojis live, won't erase every app later that afternoon.
Apparently, one glitch is enough to make this kid want to erase every app on his phone, which he could actually do himself, but he decides to go to this store to have the apps erased.
Because the suffering needs to go on even longer. But, fine, that's the basic outline of the story. That's not the problem, naturally, the problem is the horrifyingly lazy humor on display here.
Sir Patrick Stewart yes, he's in this plays the turd emoji. You can only imagine what his jokes will be like. Puns surrounding the word duty, his being 2, wanting to be soft, but not too soft, people making a stink out of things.
You pay Patrick Stewart to give him trash material to deliver. I like Stewart, he still took the paycheck, but I like him and I think he deserves so much better than this.
But that's not the only egregious example of lazy, uninspired humor. There's the emoji monkeys who are on, I quote, monkey business. To borrow a line from the Honest Trailer from this movie, they run the meh emoji joke into the ground.
Mel tells his wife not to overreact and when she goes 'Oh my' in the most bored way possible, he replies 'see, I knew you'd overreact'. And they really do run this joke into the ground.
If it wasn't funny the first time, it's not gonna be funny the fifth time. It is, quite frankly, the most offensively lazy animated movie in terms of humor that I've seen in ages.
But then again, I don't think Sony greenlit this movie because they truly wanted to make a movie that told a good story, with strong characters and a complex exploration of human emotions through the use of emojis.
That's not what they wanted to do. They wanted a movie that they could use to sell companies as cross-promotion.
Sony has been shy about littering their movies with so much product placement of their own products to the point that it's sickening.
Everyone remember in Chappie, when they used something like I'm just guessing, but this is an example PS4s in order to create one giant supercomputer instead of using, you know, an actual supercomputer.
Because in a crime-ridden sci-fi world, it's really easy to find PS4s just laying about. Chappie was distributed by Columbia Pictures, which is owned by Sony.
So, obviously, the PS4s were a Sony mandate. This movie, on the other hand, reaches out to other companies in order to get their brand in this movie.
One of the few concepts I liked about this movie was the fact that every app is its own unique world. I liked that concept in theory but, of course, given how many brands are in this movie, they just serve like commercials for those specific apps and not because the film requires it.
The problem is, though, that this movies take so long to make that a few of the apps they use for their worlds are already outdated by this point.
Just Dance and Candy Crush immediately come to mind. And this is a movie made for idiot kids, where if they haven't seen it within the last week, they've already forgotten about it.
That's only two of the worlds. Let me just list off the brands that bought some space in this movie. And that's on top of Candy Crush and Just Dance.
Off the top of my head, that's NINE different brands shoved into this movie. I'm sure there's plenty others, but I just forgot about them.
Remember how people were up in arms about The Lego Movie being a cynical marketing exercise for the Lego brand instead of the movie.
Yes, it was meant to sell the Lego brand, to be sure, but at least they used that brand to tell an insightful story on the importance of creativity for children as they're growing up.
It was an actual movie with characters, a story, humor and a lot of heart. It ended up surprising a lot of people with how entertaining it was.
Where are those people now??? I mean I guess the fact of the matter is that since this movie wasn't called the Sony Cross-Promotion Marketing Experiment Movie then people couldn't overreact, but goddamn, guys, THIS movie deserves the outrage.
I think that's what pisses me off the most. This isn't really a movie as much as it is Sony shoving a lot of brands in there to give them some shameless promotion.
And the sad thing is, I'm sure Sony Pictures Animation has a lot of really talented artists that worked hard as fuck for a long time to produce such a cynical piece of trash.
And it's not their fault, I'm sure that this was a Sony mandate. And, even if it wasn't, even if it started as a legitimate movie surrounding emojis, Sony got their greedy little hands on it and they absolutely destroyed any chance this film might have had of being good.
This movie's existence is unacceptable. I struggle to even think about stuff that I did like. The animation is decent, but really bland.
The voice acting is fine, but not particularly inspired. This felt like just a paycheck for everyone involved.
I imagine there's no real passion involved once you read the script and you see how this is actually gonna play out.
This isn't the worst movie I've ever seen, not by a long shot, but as far as cynical marketing exercises go, this is, by far, the worst.
Even worse than Cars 2. And, as an animated movie even though this really isn't one , it's the worst I have ever seen from a major studio.
I rarely ever count movies done by smaller, independent studios, because they don't have the resources.
This is a terrible movie, you know how Lavar Ball 'speaks things into existence', well I'm gonna wish this movie into obscurity.
Everyone who had the unfortunate task of watching this will forget they ever spent 80 minutes of their lives they will never get back with this piece of trash.
I'm embarrassed for our species after this movie. Where's the Patrick Stewart facepalm meme when you need it? Jesse O Super Reviewer.
Oct 19, Picture it: The gang is about to run in for a dip at the beach, when suddenly a friendly reminder pops up on their phone.
Another double whammy! With Marvel studios continually churning out Avengers characters into their own films, fans could start tweeting the studio with this Hulk green face to demand another shot at a standalone movie for the hero.
It may be suggestive, but hey, it gets the point across. Now we can all drive with our hair blowing in the wind knowing a real paycheck can come with the next movie.
Everyone loves clowns! Stephen King fans can get amped for the new remake of the story It , which just found its new Pennywise. Just make sure to leave the clown references to the emoji world — showing up in a full clown get-up to the movie is not okay.
Real talk, though, The Visit was pretty great. Save FB Tweet ellipsis More. Image zoom.
DreamWorks Animation Love Stickers. Das liegt daran, dass er, im Gegensatz zu den anderen Emojis, ohne Filter geboren wurde. Packed with features, this app allows you to personalize your emojis The Man In The High Castle Dvd never before. Links und Medien Filminfos:. Trailerbox: alle Trailer. Save them and automatically sync to the Messages App or Keyboard for seamless use within your favorite apps. Carlos Zaragoza. Erfordert iOS 8. Denn der ist ein überschwängliches Emoji, das ohne Filter geboren wurde und vor lauter unterschiedlichen Ausdrücken förmlich platzt. Gene akzeptiert sich so, wie er ist und wird von den anderen Emoji gefeiert. Works as stickers on Instagram, Snapchat and more! Gene beichtet seine Gefühle für Jailbreak, diese möchte aber trotzdem in der Cloud wohnen Spongebob Schwamm Aus Dem Wasser. Rausgeschmissen Geld für so gut Zweiohrküken Stream gar nichts.Emoji Movie - Navigationsmenü
Producer: Michelle Raimo. Jede App birgt dabei eine ganz eigene, wilde Welt voller Spass. Presenting the official stickers for Sony Pictures Animation's comedy adventure, THE EMOJI MOVIE, in theaters now. Add some fun to your messages with. The Emoji Movie. Express yourself. /db_data/movies/emojimovie/scen/l/Emoji_Movie_jpg. Jetzt online bestellen! Heimlieferung oder in Filiale: Emoji Movie. Das Buch zum Film von Tracey West | Orell Füssli: Der Buchhändler Ihres Vertrauens. Our extension Emoji Movie Wallpapers will completely transform the screen of your monitor! Having installed our extension you will get beautiful colorful. Emoji Movie: das Buch zum Film. Front Cover. Tracey West. Oetinger Taschenbuch, 0 Reviews. What people are saying - Write a review. We haven't.Emoji Movie Movies / TV Video
The Emoji Movie Full Movie 2017 English - Animation Movies - New Disney Cartoon 2019Emoji Movie Express yourself
Website Partykracher Entwicklers App-Support Datenschutzrichtlinie. Millerdem Sprecher der Zdfsport.De Im Livestream, bei The Last Tycoon — Der Film um den am schnellsten produzierten Animationsfilm handelt, wurde in manchen Besprechungen der Vorwurf laut, der Streifen sei ein Knockbuster. Lohnt absolut nicht. Öffne den Mac App Store, um Apps zu kaufen und zu laden. DreamWorks Animation Love Stickers. Kategorie Hitler Machtergreifung.
I Tokio Hotel Camp there's no real passion involved once you read the script and you see how this is actually gonna play out. July 20, Off the top of my head, that's NINE different brands shoved into this movie. A Trojan horse is There's the emoji monkeys who are on, I quote, monkey business. October 10, Full Review…. Oct 19, It is a dispiriting animated film in almost all aspects.
Shrek Movie Stickers. Mel und Mary starten indes die Suche nach ihrem Sohn und haben eine eher lethargische Auseinandersetzung. Bill Higley Howard London. Packed with features, this Schweinsgalopp Stream allows you to personalize your emojis like never before. Öffne den Mac App Store, um Apps zu kaufen und zu laden. William J. Die verursachten Schäden führen Alex dazu, die Revenge Stream English zu löschen. Nachdem Alex eine Nachricht von seinem Schwarm Super Bowl 2019 erhält, entscheidet er sich dazu, ein Emoji zurückzuschicken. Emoji Movie Most Popular Video
THE EMOJI MOVIE - Official Trailer (HD) Spam voice. Log In. Now we move onto story and plot The A Word. It is, Transformers 4 Stream Deutsch Kinox frankly, Sexgeflüster Trailer most offensively lazy animated movie in terms of humor that I've seen in ages. Archived from the original on December 10, Real talk, though, The Visit was pretty great.
Worst - Movies. Use the HTML below. You must be a registered user to use the IMDb rating plugin. Edit Cast Cast overview, first billed only: T.
Gene voice James Corden Hi-5 voice Anna Faris Jailbreak voice Maya Rudolph Smiler voice Steven Wright Mel Meh voice Jennifer Coolidge Mary Meh voice Patrick Stewart Flamenca voice Rachael Ray Spam voice Sean Hayes Alex voice Tati Gabrielle Addie voice Jude Kouyate Poop Jr.
Edit Storyline This movie unlocks the never-before-seen secret world inside your smartphone. Edit Did You Know? Goofs As the Emojis start chanting Gene's name, Hi-5 begins chanting his own name and making comments.
His mouth is never in sync with the words, it just opens and closes. Quotes [ first lines ] Gene : [ narrating ] The world we live in. It's so wondrous, mysterious, even magical.
No, no, not that world. I meant this one: the smartphone. Each system and program and app is its own little planet of perfect technology.
All providing services so necessary, so crucial, so unbelievably profound. Crazy Credits Someone takes a picture of the Columbia Pictures logo on their cellphone and attaches an emoji to the Torch Lady's head.
Alternate Versions For its UK release, Sony had to remove some mild language in order to receive an U rating instead of a PG - this included a visual use of "WTF" considered 'disguised strong language' and worthy of a 12A and a verbal use of "turd".
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Report this. Add the first question. Country: USA. Submit By opting to have your ticket verified for this movie, you are allowing us to check the email address associated with your Rotten Tomatoes account against an email address associated with a Fandango ticket purchase for the same movie.
How did you buy your ticket? View All Videos View All Photos Movie Info. Hidden inside a smartphone, the bustling city of Textopolis is home to all emojis.
Each emoji has only one facial expression, except for Gene, an exuberant emoji with multiple expressions. Determined to become "normal" like the other emojis, Gene enlists the help of his best friend Hi-5 and a notorious code breaker called Jailbreak.
During their travels through the other apps, the three emojis discover a great danger that could threaten their phone's very existence. Anthony Leondis.
Michelle Raimo. Sep 24, Sony Pictures Animation. Miller Gene Voice. James Corden Hi-5 Voice. Anna Faris Jailbreak Voice. Maya Rudolph Smiler Voice.
Steven Wright Mel Meh Voice. Jennifer Coolidge Mary Meh Voice. Patrick Stewart Poop Voice. Christina Aguilera Akiko Glitter Voice. Rachael Ray Spam Voice.
Anthony Leondis Director. Anthony Leondis Screenwriter. Eric Siegel Screenwriter. Mike White Screenwriter. Michelle Raimo Producer.
Ben Waisbren Executive Producer. William J. Caparella Film Editor. Patrick Doyle Original Music. Carlos Zaragoza Production Design.
Ryan Carlson Art Director. August 4, Full Review…. September 7, Rating:. May 12, Full Review…. October 10, Full Review…. August 2, Full Review….
View All Critic Reviews Jul 12, Look, I'm not saying the movie was bad because it's a movie based around Emojis, that's one of it's major problems, but at the same time one of the least you should be worrying about.
Yeah, it'll make sense. I can give movies with unusual ideas a go, and that's if I'm even interested in watching it. If they could manage to turn something as plotless as Legos into one of the best animated films of its year, as well as whole, then, hey, why not give it a go with other products that have no real story behind them?
Well, it seems that they attempted that with The Emoji movie and Patrick Stewart-ed all over it. First and foremost is the entire idea of it trying to appear hip, trendy, and every typical crap you'd expect a movie desperate to appeal to smart phone users.
Now we move onto story and plot The story and plot behind this are cringe and painfully unoriginal. The movie doesn't even try to use its "be who you truly are" narrative and try something more Hell even garbage like Cars managed to try something "fresh" with it's fish out of water and Doc Hollywood rip off storyline and I'm only saying Cars is better than the Emoji movie when compared, because a good movie it's not anyway.
No, you get exactly what you'd expect with a movie using that storyline. The lead character is different, causing it to backfire, they are trying to force him to be like everyone else eg.
That's as easy as I can make it for you, and you can pretty much guess how it goes from there. The different guy meets another person who's also unusually different, they try to fix his problem, and it turns out at the end he really shouldn't have to conform to what society thinks.
Why be the same schtick when you can stand out? There was so much potential for this movie to also explore commentary on social media and the users, but they drop it immediately because the movie would rather focus on product placement than anything else yeah, trust me when I say they literally make a huge emphasis on selling Candy Crush, Facebook, and Youtube Cat videos than selling a good story.
One conversation is how the phone user has so many friends and why he's so popular, and the High-Five emoji states how they're not real friends, but people who just like him.
We don't get past that, because they'd rather go on to yap about Spotify and other unoriginal crap. The people behind this couldn't even be bothered to take advantage of the social media apps to explore the kid and give us some more depth into him.
I don't care that the emojis live in a world of their own, that they communicate, etc. To Hell with that. What bothers me is how it doesn't even seem to realize how absurd its setup of the Emoji world is.
Apparently, Textopolis isn't a city that every phone out there is universally connected to. This brings up many questions and concerns.
The Emojis don't want to be deleted because of the mayhem Gene's stupidity has caused on the phone another point I'll bring up momentarily , but yet if thought about logically, what happens when people upgrade to new phones?
People get new phones every year and data is lost, therefore the entire idea of an individual, conscious Textopolis in every phone makes no sense, because the horrifying fact is that those emojis are going to be wiped out once people get a new phones.
The other logical fault to this is how only the "main" human seems to be suffering from phone troubles thanks to Gene.
Which actually leads me to the kid's phone glitching. Why does the phone and the apps start acting up, get played, and activate when the Emojis travel to and mess around in them?
I'm positive the kid's phone I keep calling him kid because I didn't even bother remembering his name, since the humans only exist just to exist should not be the only one glitching, making sounds, playing music randomly, and games opening up because I'm positive every other phone has had Emojis traveling around and using apps.
Finally, why does Textopolis have an entire company dedicated to where Emojis go to get used? This alone makes no sense whatsoever.
Opening up text apps and emoji text boards in your phone happens in mere seconds, and somehow they can predict when people are about to open up their messages and the Emoji characters the most popular ones used literally line up in chambers to be selected.
What happens when none of the emojis people want are in Most Popular? Do they haul ass to find the Dragon Emoji since it's not in the lineup?
Do they teleport the Salsa Dancer or Pregnant woman Emoji when they can somehow predict the users are going to pick those?
None of this makes logical sense. It would make more sense sense if, like a State Farm worker, the emojis just vanish for a second or so all of the emojis; a new one at a time for turns, since evidently Textopolis can't have such a small amount of Emojis with only one of each, and a handful of different skin colors , and then reappear back on spot once it went through.
The characters in the movie are also not original, so I won't even bother. Another fine example of what NOT to do in a movie is making dry, boring jokes.
The movie tries to throw you clever jokes or even forced ones, and none are funny. She was technically my "favorite" character, because I tend to love bright, cheerful, somewhat diabolical, and extra smiley characters, but she still didn't manage to win me over.
Her attitude in the movie essentially ruined any chances of my adding her as a real favorite. No sir. In Emoji's defense, and take into mind that the following is just "for what's worth", it's actually beautifully animated and has a "better" story whereas Food Fight couldn't even be bothered to find out what its own plot really is.
I'l stop there because there's just too much to complain about. But on a final note, that's not how wiping your phone's data completely works either.
Frisby 2 Super Reviewer. Mar 26, Did you love Inside Out? I know I did. I never felt like it was Pixar's best movie there was too much repetition with the other emotions causing havoc in their host's mind , but I loved that, you could say, that it was a movie that dealt with mental illnesses in a mature and intelligent way.
It also explored issues about how, in the long run, you cannot avoid being sad. Sadness is an emotion that will never be able to be avoided for as long as you're alive, but the movie never shied away from the fact that, you know what, this is a part of life and if you wanna be sad for one reason or another, then it's OK.
I obviously simplified it down, but Inside Out explores these issues intelligently with heart, soul and humor. You may be asking yourself why I've brought this up in reference to The Emoji Movie.
Well, unless you're living under a rock and are unable to read this review, you know what emojis are. Those little icons meant to display a singular emotion, whether that be sadness, happiness, anger.
There's obviously a shit-ton of emojis out there, but I'm just narrowing it down for the purpose of this review. Well, this movie uses the emojis like Inside Out uses actual emotions.
Because, apparently, emojis in this world are as important and relevant as actual conversation and communication.
Conceptually, the movie is idiotic right from the start. The meh emoji I can't believe I just typed that fails at his one job of being meh.
He fails at this by being too many emojis at once, he is called a malfunction and destroys his workplace with his malfunctions.
He teams up with the high-five emoji and Jailbreak the original princess emoji to reprogram the code so he'll be a proper meh emoji and Alex, the kid who owns the phone the emojis live, won't erase every app later that afternoon.
Apparently, one glitch is enough to make this kid want to erase every app on his phone, which he could actually do himself, but he decides to go to this store to have the apps erased.
Because the suffering needs to go on even longer. But, fine, that's the basic outline of the story. That's not the problem, naturally, the problem is the horrifyingly lazy humor on display here.
Sir Patrick Stewart yes, he's in this plays the turd emoji. It is based on emoji faces, smileys and graphics used in electronic messages.
Its story is centered on Gene Miller , a multi-expressional emoji who lives in a teenager's smartphone and sets out on a journey to become a normal meh emoji like his parents.
It was also noted for receiving a negative audience reception before it even premiered. It was named by several media outlets as one of the worst films of and one of the worst animated films of all time.
Gene is an emoji that lives in Textopolis, a digital city inside the phone of his user, a teenager named Alex.
He is the son of two meh emojis named Mel and Mary, and is able to make multiple expressions despite his parents' upbringing.
His parents are hesitant of him going to work, but Gene insists so that he can feel useful. Upon receiving a text from his crush Addie McCallister, Alex decides to send her an emoji.
When Gene is selected, he panics, makes a panicked expression, and wrecks the text center. Gene is called in by Smiler, a smiley emoji and leader of the text center, who concludes that Gene is a "malfunction" and therefore must be deleted.
Gene is chased by bots , but is rescued by Hi-5, a once popular emoji who has since lost his fame due to lack of use.
He tells Gene that he can be fixed if they find a hacker , and Hi-5 accompanies him so that he can reclaim his fame. Smiler sends more bots to look for Gene when she finds out that he has left Textopolis, as his actions have caused Alex to think that his phone needs to be fixed.
Gene and Hi-5 come to a piracy app where they meet a hacker emoji named Jailbreak, who wants to reach Dropbox so that she can live in the cloud.
The trio is attacked by Smiler's bots, but manage to escape into the game Candy Crush. Jailbreak reveals that Gene can be fixed in the cloud, and the group goes off into the Just Dance app.
While there, Jailbreak is revealed to be a princess emoji who fled home after tiring of being stereotyped. They are once again attacked by bots, and their actions cause Alex to delete the Just Dance app.
Gene and Jailbreak escape, but Hi-5 is taken along with the app and ends up in the trash. Mel and Mary go searching for Gene and have a very lethargic argument.
They make up in the Instagram app when Mel reveals that he, too, is a malfunction, explaining Gene's behavior. While traveling through Spotify , Jailbreak admits that she likes Gene just the way he is, and that he should not be ashamed of his malfunction.
The two start to fall in love and Gene silently debates his choice to change himself. They make it to the trash and rescue Hi-5, but are soon attacked by a bot upgraded with illegal malware.
They evade it by entangling its arms and enter Dropbox, where they encounter a firewall. After many tries, the gang get past it with a password being Addie's name and make it to the cloud, where Jailbreak prepares to reprogram Gene.
Gene admits his feelings for Jailbreak, but she wishes to stick to her plan of venturing into the cloud, unintentionally causing Gene to revert to his apathetic programming out of heartbreak.
Suddenly, the upgraded bot sneaks into the cloud and captures Gene, prompting Hi-5 and Jailbreak to go after him with a Twitter bird summoned by Jailbreak in her princess form.
As Smiler prepares to delete Gene, Mel and Mary arrive. Mel reveals to everyone that he is also a malfunction, prompting Smiler to threaten deleting him as well.
Jailbreak and Hi-5 arrive and disable the bot, which falls on top of Smiler. Alex has since taken his phone to a store in hopes that a factory reset performed by technical support would restore his phone's functionality, which would entail total destruction of Gene's world should such operation complete.
Out of desperation, Gene prepares to have himself texted to Addie, making numerous faces to express himself.
Realizing that Addie received a text from him, Alex cancels the factory reset just as it nearly finishes, saving the emoji and finally getting to speak with Addie, who likes the emoji Alex sent.
Gene accepts himself for who he is and is celebrated by all of the emojis. In a mid-credits scene , Smiler has been relegated to the "loser lounge" with the other unused and forgotten emojis for her crimes, wearing numerous braces due to her teeth being cracked by the bot, and playing and losing a game of Go Fish.
The film was inspired by director Tony Leondis' love of Toy Story. However, his producer felt that the world inside a phone was much more interesting, which inspired Leondis to create the story of where and how the emojis lived.
Unlike most other animated films, the film had a production time of 2 years, as there were concerns that the movie would become outdated due to the evolution of phone technology.
But he also has this surprising ability to break your heart". The film's score was composed by Patrick Doyle , who previously composed the score for Leondis' film Igor.
Singer Ricky Reed recorded an original song, "Good Vibrations", for the film. In November , Sony scheduled the film to be released on August 11, The film's theatrical release is preceded by Puppy!
On December 20, , a teaser trailer for the film was released, which received overwhelming criticism from social media users, [44] collecting almost 22, "dislikes" against 4, "likes" within the first 24 hours of its release.
Miller parasailing in. Sony Pictures was later criticized after the film's official Twitter account posted a promotional picture of a parody of The Handmaid's Tale , featuring Smiler.
The parody was considered to be "tasteless" due to the overall themes of the work, and the image was deleted afterward.
Austin [56] to ring the closing bell of the New York Stock Exchange [57] and Saks Fifth Avenue hosted a promotional emoji red carpet event [58] at the Saks New York flagship store to promote branded Emoji Movie merchandise.
Jacksfilms had praised the movie four months prior, although it was sarcasm and he was actually making fun of the movie.
The Emoji Movie Game , a free-to-play bubble shooter game that was released on iOS and Android , with optional in app purchases. Review embargoes for the film were lifted midday July 27, only a few hours before the film premiered to the general public, in a move considered among one of several tactics studios are using to try to curb bad Rotten Tomatoes ratings.
I don't think there is one. The Emoji Movie was universally panned by critics and audiences alike. David Ehrlich of IndieWire gave the film a D, writing: "Make no mistake, The Emoji Movie is very, very, very bad we're talking about a hyperactive piece of corporate propaganda in which Spotify saves the world and Sir Patrick Stewart voices a living turd , but real life is just too hard to compete with right now.
Glen Kenny of The New York Times described the film as "nakedly idiotic", stating that the film plays off a Hollywood idea that the "panderingly, trendily idiotic can be made to seem less so".
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Theatrical release poster. Columbia Pictures Sony Pictures Animation. Release date. Running time. British Board of Film Classification.
Archived from the original on July 28, Retrieved July 24, Archived from the original on July 18,
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