Archive

Bolt 3D

Bolt 3D 2009

This is the super-duper 3D version of Bolt (the one you should be seeing, in our opinion).

For super-dog Bolt (voiced by John Travolta), every day is filled with adventure, danger and intrigue – at least until the cameras stop rolling. When the canine star of a hit TV show is accidentally shipped from his Hollywood soundstage to New York City, he begins his biggest adventure yet – a cross-country journey through the real world. Armed only with the delusions that all his amazing feats and powers are real, and with the help of two unlikely traveling companions – a jaded, abandoned housecat named Mittens (voiced by Susie Essman), and TV-obsessed hamster in a plastic ball named Rhino – Bolt discovers he doesn't need superpowers to be a hero. Miley Cyrus (Hannah Montana) brings her vocal talents to the role of Penny, Bolt's human co-star on the television series.

Starring  John Travolta, Miley Cyrus, Chloe Moretz, Susie Essman

Directed by Byron Howard (feature debuts), Chris Williams

Written by Byron Howard, Chris Williams

Studio Walt Disney Animation Studios

1hr 36mins | Rated (G) | Origin: USA

Flicks review

  • This is a solo Disney project, without the involvement of Pixar (the genius company responsible for Ratatouille and WALL-E). Be at ease, however, for the Mouse House has done a top job and, whilst not reaching the giddy heights of the films just mentioned, their Bolt is funny, enjoyable, and terrifically entertaining.

    It’s a modern spin on The Incredible Journey (in which three animals trek across America), combining mash-up elements of the superhero and espionage genres that served Pixar's The Incredibles so well. Bolt (voiced by John Travolta), is the canine star of a hit TV show, filmed in Hollywood, but things go awry when he accidentally gets himself shipped across the country to New York City. To complicate matters, he thinks his TV-show powers are real, a la Buzz Lightyear in Toy Story.

    There’s a great sense of Americana, of a nostalgic, romantic view of the United States that hasn’t been seen on screen for a while. This comes across strongest in a sweet little road trip montage, set to a country song by Rilo Kiley’s Jenny Lewis. And throughout the film, the animation style puts the CG characters against a hand-painted backdrop, further adding to the traditional appeal.

    But the real kicker is the 3D presentation [available at certain cinemas in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch]. I can’t speak highly enough about how eye-poppingly amazing this looks. The opening action sequence, in particular, was made just so much more thrilling by the optical illusion of depth.

    Bolt suffers a little from a script that verges on formulaic; one that borrows rather than invents. But the combination of winning characters, heart-warming sentiment and well-choreographed action gets a big lick of approval.

    By Andrew Hedley, Flicks.co.nz

 Our Rating       4

The Peoples voice

  • it is sound

     5

    dude it is totally cool he rocks dude!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    By frank

  • wow

     5

    it was a brilliant breath taking movie and we were on the edge of our seats the whole time wondering what would happen to bolt

    By hannah

  • it rox

     5

    I love it.

    By Nicolene

 Collective Voice    0000000000005.00

Your review has been posted, you have spoken, and for that we thank you. – Ed.

Tell us all that is right or wrong with this flick:

  • 1 2 3 4 5

Press Reviews

  • The Press [Margaret Agnew]

    s far as family-friendly holiday movies go, Disney's latest animated flick, Bolt, has an ace up its faux-fur sleeve. Novelty value.
    Click to read the full review

Search the Archive

Win Yourself