L'Île des Miam-nimaux : Tempête de boulettes géantes 2
- 2013
- Tous publics
- 1h 35min
Flint Lockwood travaille désormais à la Live Corp Company. Mais il est contraint de quitter son poste lorsqu'il apprend que sa machine la plus infâme est toujours opérationnelle et produit d... Tout lireFlint Lockwood travaille désormais à la Live Corp Company. Mais il est contraint de quitter son poste lorsqu'il apprend que sa machine la plus infâme est toujours opérationnelle et produit des hybrides nourriture-animal menaçants.Flint Lockwood travaille désormais à la Live Corp Company. Mais il est contraint de quitter son poste lorsqu'il apprend que sa machine la plus infâme est toujours opérationnelle et produit des hybrides nourriture-animal menaçants.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
- 16 nominations au total
- Flint Lockwood
- (voix)
- Sam Sparks
- (voix)
- Chester V
- (voix)
- Steve
- (voix)
- Tim Lockwood
- (voix)
- Brent McHale
- (voix)
- Manny
- (voix)
- Barb
- (voix)
- Barry
- (voix)
- …
- Sentinel Louise
- (voix)
- …
- Sentinel Peter
- (voix)
- …
Avis à la une
My kids saw and loved the first one (many times over). Then when my son saw a trailer for #2 he literally begged to see it today the 2nd day after opening.
The plot is a bit cliché but then not like it detracted from anything. The sights and sounds, the funny little cute things, etc., is what it is all about.
A point in about 20min in my younger son turned to me and said "I like this part!", and he really laughed a lot. I felt it's aimed mainly for kids, but then probably pretty enjoyable for adults too. Like they sprinkle in some humor in places that only teenagers and adults would get.
A fun film for the family, highly recommended.
Some of course might not like the lines but for me it was funny when needed :D
Everything was cute of course and was perfect for its intended audience (I watched this with at least 100 kids in the theaters...and all of them loved it..so much giggles and kid noise)
I was happy they didn't put much romance on it a hint as with the first movie but not overpowering to make it romantic
Storyline- hm well of course it is predictable and there aren't twist and turns you just know this will happen..it's a kids movie it should be simple with bright colors and lovable cute characters
and Cloudy 2 gave that.
Flint Lockwood (Bill Hader) lands a job with a shady corporation run by his childhood hero - funny how he wasn't mentioned in the first film - who decides to send Flint back to his home island for the post-first-film clean-up, whilst playing him off against his friends. The island itself is now inhabited by living beings made of food, including a cute little strawberry with the voice of Eric Cartman, a spider comprising Big Mac and fries, and a taco-dile that spits vegetables everywhere. Are you sure this script is ready? The problem, no doubt, is that Phil Lord and Chris Miller were only on hand to provide the story and exec-produce, with former South Park staffer Erica Rivinoja botching the writing job, and Cody Cameron (Shrek, Madagascar) and Cloudy contributor Kris Pearn taking care of the rest.
There are a few good jokes - the fishing trip, the translation, Steve the monkey generally - but it's largely overbearing sentiment, food creatures with punny names (essentially a Twitter hashtag that got out of hand), and Steve Jobs-based villainy, a sort of Robots/Wreck-It Ralph/Jurassic Park III hybrid, with a minimum of heart, wit and invention. I wanted something as anarchic and genuinely original as the first movie. Instead, I got a film that's not only aimed at kids, but doggedly conventional, and insultingly predictable, both in its re-treading of old ground and its telegraphing of old jokes.
It's the most disappointing movie I've seen for a couple of years at least.
It's a simple story. That wonderful machine created by Flint Lockwood (Bill Hader) that bestowed food falling from the sky for the island town of Swallow Falls has been deactivated, thanks to a plethora of food and a desire for people not to be harmed by chunks of sustenance dropping on them. Now the island must be cleaned up, and the corporation Live Corp., run by Flint's idol Chester V (Will Forte) gets the contract. The town's citizens are relocated temporarily while Flint realizes his lifelong dream and becomes an employee at Live Corp. The problem? It seems that the food created by the machine has become...sentient. And it's fighting back! Flint and his friends - Sam Sparks (Anna Faris), cameraman Manny (Benjamin Bratt), policeman Earl (Terry Crews, stepping in for Mr. T), Chicken Brent (Andy Samberg), Steve the Monkey, and Flint's dad Tim (James Caan) - head back to the island. The mission: locate the machine and shut it down. But it seems that Chester and his orangutan assistant Barb (Kristen Schaal) have other plans, plans too devious to mention in detail here, lest your eyes be singed.
Anyway, here's the cool thing. The sentient foodstuffs are basically tangible portmanteaus of food and animal, like the wild tacodile, the watermelephant, the pie-thon, the cheespider, and the bananostrich. Luckily, most of these creatures were benign to begin with. I mean, there aren't any lions or tigers or bears or scorpions. Now, setting aside the question of what these Foodimals would eat, since they themselves are made up of food, these are creative inventions. Almost makes you want to buy one or two as stuffed animals.
Meanwhile, back at the boat, Tim bonds with sentient pickles over fishing. I swear, I am so glad this movie was rooted in reality. I mean, sure, pickles probably couldn't cast that well, but still - kudos are deserved here.
This is about Flint's needing to choose between his idol and his friends and family, between doing what he knows will help his inventing career and what he knows is right. It's about being reminded about those closest to you, lest you disdain their influence. It's also about being able to change one's mind in light of new evidence, and it's about not killing anything that has eyes and/or talks. It's also about 95 minutes.
Hader is terrific, as is the supporting cast, even when they're not given much to do but run and hide. Or cackle evilly. I was more impressed with the vocalizations of the Foodimals, such as Barry the strawberry or the pickles, voiced by codirector Cody Cameron. Kind of thought Frank Welker had stumbled on set.
No meatballs, ironically enough.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFor the pickle voices, actors gargled water as they read their lines.
- GaffesAt the end of the first film, when Flint got dropped off by the Rat Birds, the explosion burned off half of his hair. At the beginning of this movie, Flint's hair has grown back.
- Citations
[from trailer]
Flint Lockwood: There's a leak in the boat!
[camera pans down to an actual leek who starts screaming in panic]
- Crédits fousSimilar to the Columbia Pictures title screen sequence from the first movie where the Torch Lady is dislodged off the pedestal by a giant banana that falls from the sky. That banana then turns into a banana-ostrich hybrid with Barry the strawberry hopping on it and riding away with it.
- ConnexionsEdited into Spider-Man: New Generation (2018)
- Bandes originalesNew
Written and Performed by Paul McCartney
Courtesy of MPL Communications Inc.
Under license from Concord Music Group
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Lluvia de hamburguesas 2: La venganza de las sobras
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 78 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 119 793 567 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 34 017 930 $US
- 29 sept. 2013
- Montant brut mondial
- 274 325 949 $US
- Durée1 heure 35 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1