Search
The Bob's Burgers Movie
Picture of Derrick Dunn

Derrick Dunn

The Bob’s Burgers Movie is a well done adaptation

Another fan-favorite animated series receives the big-screen treatment in 20th Century Studios, The Bob’s Burgers Movie. Series creators Loren Bouchard and Bernard Derriman co-direct the animated, big-screen, musical comedy-mystery-adventure based on the long-running Emmy-winning series. 

The story begins when a ruptured water main creates an enormous sinkhole right in front of Bob’s Burgers, blocking the entrance indefinitely and ruining the Belchers’ plans for a successful summer. While Bob (H. Jon Benjamin) and Linda (John Roberts) struggle to keep the business afloat, the kids Louise (Kristen Schaal), Tina (Dan Mintz), and Gene (Eugene Mirman) try to solve a mystery that could save their family’s restaurant. As the dangers mount, these underdogs help each other find hope and fight to get back behind the counter, where they belong.

Before I get into my review, I want to tell readers that I haven’t seen a single episode of Bob’s Burgers. So I walked into the film blind. Loren Bouchard and Nora Smith pen the film’s script and provide enough gags for fans and non-fans of the show. Yes, the plot is somewhat simplistic, which is all right as how deep of a story do you need to have when you have a movie about fast food? 

Films buffs may remember 1986’s Hamburger: The Motion Picture, which used the teen sex comedy template to correlate with its story of a fast-food university. Bob’s Burgers is a movie that knows what it is and delivers on that. As a product, the film succeeds. 

There are the fantastic voice performances from the cast and well-known actors Kevin Kline and Zach Galifianakis, the accurate quips with incredible precision, and the gags that fly by at breakneck speed on multiple levels. The ingenuity of the filmmakers plays it with elegance to a never-ending good sense of humor.

While I doubt that I will become a regular viewer of the show, I will say that The Bob’s Burgers Movie is similar to the idea behind fast food. Sometimes we all want convenience, and walking into the theater, I hoped to get some mindless laughter. In that regard, The Bob’s Burgers Movie delivered.

 

Final Grade: B

The Bob’s Burgers Movie is in theater now

Movie Clappers

More to explorer

“Nosferatu ” is elevated horror with bite

Eggers masterfully crafts a narrative that explores the fine line between desire and destruction, drawing viewers into the emotional turmoil of his characters. The cinematography is breathtaking, with shadowy landscapes and hauntingly lit interiors that evoke a sense of dread and anticipation. Every frame of the film feels meticulously composed, a testament to Eggers’ commitment to his craft.

“Dirty Angels” is an uneven action flick

The film opens by introducing us to an American soldier named Jake (Green), who is seconds away from being executed while on her latest top-secret mission. While Jake is rescued, her team ends up losing their lives, adding to Jake’s PTSD. A few years later, during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, a group of schoolgirls was taken hostage in Afghanistan. Jake’s old boss, Travis (Christopher Backus), recruits her to join an all-women commando unit to liberate them.

A pitch perfect Timothée Chalamet elevates cliché filled “A Complete Unknown”

Mangold sets the film in the influential New York music scene of the early 1960s and centers on a 19-year-old musician from Minnesota named Bob Dylan, portrayed by Timothée Chalamet. It follows Dylan’s meteoric rise as a folk singer to concert halls and the top of the charts, as his songs and charisma become a worldwide sensation. The narrative culminates in his groundbreaking electric rock and roll performance at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest