Ratchet & Clank is a 2016 American-Canadian 3D computer-animated science fiction action comedy film based on the first game of the platforming video game series of the same name. The film stars the voices of James Arnold Taylor, David Kaye, Paul Giamatti, John Goodman, Bella Thorne, Rosario Dawson, and Sylvester Stallone.
Ratchet and Clank Remastered is a three-dimensional platform-shooter video game developed by Insomniac Games and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment. It is a re-imagining of the first game in the series, based on the film adaptation by Rainmaker Entertainment and Blockade Entertainment. The game was originally planned to be released on the PlayStation 4 in 2015, but was delayed, along.
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Series creators Insomniac Games helped with the film’s production, screenplay, character development and animation. The film was directed by Jericca Cleland and Kevin Munroe, featuring an original story written by Munroe, Gerry Swallow and former Insomniac Games Senior Writer T.J. Fixman, who started writing for the series with the Future saga. Several cast members from the games reprised their respective voice roles, and assets from the video games were utilized in the film. The film was released on April 29, 2016, by Gramercy Pictures. It received negative reviews from critics.
Above planet Tenemule in the Solana Galaxy, Chairman Drek (Paul Giamatti) stands poised with his fellow Blarg aboard the Deplanetizer, a space station with the power to destroy entire planets. The Blarg fire the Deplanetizer at Tenemule, completely destroying it.
Above planet Tenemule in the Solana Galaxy, Chairman Drek (Paul Giamatti) stands poised with his fellow Blarg aboard the Deplanetizer, a space station with the power to destroy entire planets. The Blarg fire the Deplanetizer at Tenemule, completely destroying it.
On planet Veldin, a young spaceship mechanic named Ratchet (James Arnold Taylor) learns that three planets have mysteriously disappeared and the peacekeeping Galactic Rangers are being dispatched to address the situation. He also learns that their leader, the egocentric Captain Qwark (Jim Ward), plans to visit Veldin in search of a new recruit to the team. To the reluctance of his mentor Grimroth Razz (John Goodman), Ratchet attempts to join, only to be rejected by Qwark moments later.
In a warbot factory on planet Quartu, a diminutive yet intelligent defective robot is created. Having acquired Drek’s plans, he escapes Drek’s lieutenant Victor Von Ion (Sylvester Stallone) and attempts to travel to planet Kerwan to warn the Rangers. The defect crash-lands on Veldin, where Ratchet takes him in and names him Clank (David Kaye). Learning of Drek’s plot, Ratchet flies Clank to Kerwan, where the two save the cornered Rangers from Drek’s warbots and become instant celebrities, much to Qwark’s jealousy. Under pressure from reporters, Qwark makes Ratchet and Clank honorary Rangers. Ratchet joins Brax Lectrus (Vincent Tong) and Cora Veralux (Bella Thorne) in the field while Clank is assigned to the Rangers’ support team with Elaris (Rosario Dawson), who is routinely ignored by Qwark. Studying the destroyed planets, they discover that the Blarg have been extracting portions containing famous landmarks from each.
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- It jostles along an action-packed 94 minutes that look and feel no different from the titles upon which it's based.
- The repetition didn't bother me. I just was hoping we'd get some new twists and more original storytelling this time around.
- There's a fair amount to appreciate about 'Ratchet & Clank,' especially its desire to send up the genre conventions at play here. It's a shame, then, that the movie ultimately finds itself becoming so conventional.
- Feels like watching four episodes of a Saturday morning cartoon mashed into a feature-length film.
- Children will be entertained, and parents won't regret tagging along.
- Core fans used to the duo's style and humor will be pleased, others need not press start.
- San Francisco Chronicle4/29/2016 by Peter HartlaubMy 8-year-old loved it. But he would eat dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets for every meal if I let him, so let's not consider his opinion.
- Small fry will learn an important lesson taking in the recycled storylines of 'Ratchet & Clank': Like nearly all recycling, it's garbage.
- It's a story set in space. Where all you can hear is the screaming. And screeching.
- It has little story to tell and few ideas to offer. Just a great deal of product to sell.
- So profoundly bad that it represents the worst of two entirely different mediums, Ratchet & Clank doesn't blur the line between movies and videogames so much as it flushes them both in a toilet and watches as they swirl together down the drain.
- Generic animated cash-grab.
- Feels thoroughly mechanical, as if it should come with the type of amusement-park announcement that departing moviegoers should exit to the right, so the next group can take their seats from the left.
- A few jokes try to be clever (for example, there's a Wilhelm Scream joke that your kids aren't going to appreciate), but more often than not they keep it simple -- and sometimes stupid.
- There's just enough blaring sound and color to this knowingly silly tale of interplanetary derring-do to adequately offset its impersonal corporate sheen.
- 'Ratchet & Clank' will, in all likelihood, make the younger-than-10 crowd laugh - and everyone else cringe.
- It's cute and entertaining, in a Saturday morning cartoon kind of way, but this one is just for the kiddies, because anyone who has seen more than a 10-year-old's worth of movies already knows the 'Ratchet & Clank' playbook.
- Like a lot of entertainment pitched at the family matinee audience, it sits at the zero point of watchability.
- Stuffed with that snarky, sarky adolescent humour that so many modern screenwriters seem to mistake for wit.
- It is a given that 'Ratchet & Clank' will be a spellbinding spectacle to the young viewers but for the rest of us let's hope that a nostalgic rerun of 'Josie And The Pussycats In Outer Space' will suffice