Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles meet their match -- Literally! The modern, gritty Ninja Turtles must team up with their classic cartoon counterparts to stop two Shredders and their plans of... Leggi tuttoThe Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles meet their match -- Literally! The modern, gritty Ninja Turtles must team up with their classic cartoon counterparts to stop two Shredders and their plans of multi-dimensional scale.The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles meet their match -- Literally! The modern, gritty Ninja Turtles must team up with their classic cartoon counterparts to stop two Shredders and their plans of multi-dimensional scale.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Donatello
- (voce)
- (as Sam Regal)
- Raphael
- (voce)
- (as Greg Abbey)
- Splinter
- (voce)
- Casey Jones
- (voce)
- The Shredder
- (voce)
- (as Scottie Ray)
- …
- Hun
- (voce)
- Karai
- (voce)
- (as Karen Neill)
- Leonardo 1987
- (voce)
- Michelangelo 1987
- (voce)
- (as Johnny Castro)
- …
- Donatello 1987
- (voce)
- (as Anthony Haden Salerno)
- Splinter 1987
- (voce)
- …
- Krang
- (voce)
- (as Braford Cameron)
- …
Recensioni in evidenza
Filled with fan service of all generations, from the Mirage Comics, the 80's TV-show, the then present TV-series on top of a solid plot of stopping the One True Shredder who despite his eternal exile to a lonely asteroid in outer space.
And even though the art style is style of the weaker side of the show, the animators' put in a lot of work to make each generation true to its respective tone and style with some surprised thrown in to finish it off.
This is a must see for every Turtle fan!
Yeah, it sounds confusing, and a little too geeky to get into, but somehow it works. It should be interesting to see the reactions from fans of the 2003 animated series, or just younger folks, who aren't as familiar with the 80's animated series let alone the original comics. It's a blast from the past though, and the kind of movie that would probably be interesting to watch with young kids with their parents who may have grown up on the show themselves. We get the wacky (and sometimes just stupid and goofy) antics of the old turtles, but contrasted with the self-serious newer turtles (who do have their own merits as a ninja-style show) it makes a lot more sense and the two even compliment each other. It's like watching an awesome evolution given homage and a new creative story like something out of Roger Rabbit: what happens if the entire dimensions are destroyed by means of cutting off the source? Everything, it would seem, would just disappear.
There's plenty of solid action, corny one-liners, and some genuinely funny scenes (my favorite was the old-school April having to be saved by a banana monster, among other creatures), put against a backdrop of cool animation, and some mocking of both young and old. It works, more or less, as its own self-contained movie, and as a lasting tribute to the boys in green.
The only thing I slightly disliked about this movie, was that the older versions of the characters, both good and bad, are depicted as being somewhat helpless in the 21st century Turtle universe. They mostly get the goofy lines and carefree attitude. However, to be fair the old show was never as serious as the newer one apparently is, and there were excellent tributes to the old show. One running gag in the movie I really enjoyed, was that the older turtles would sometimes direct their attention to the viewer, which would confuse the 21st generation characters. At some point a turtle is actually asked; "Who are you talking to? There is nobody there!"
Although there is definite goofiness and corniness present, this movie offers a nice look at the turtles through time, and is a nice way to end this saga of the turtles (as Nickelodeon is apparently planning to make the next show fully CGI).
And man was it entertaining. I loved it. I really enjoy the concept of the Turtles meeting versions of themselves from other dimensions. Very cool.
I'm not a die hard Turtles fan or anything, although I did like Turtles when I was a kid, but this movie just entertained the hell out of me anyway.
The story is pretty good, and the dimension-stuff is awesome. The fighting and action is very good. And maybe the best part of the whole movie is the dialogue between the turtles, and the differences between the dimensions. The movie is kind of self aware, and that's cool.
This is actually the first 9 I've given in quite a while, if I remember correctly.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn the original Tartarughe Ninja alla riscossa (1987) series from the 1980s, the Turtles often broke the fourth wall, and talked directly to the audience. This wasn't the case however with the Tartarughe Ninja (2003) series. This is made reference to in this movie, as the 1980s Turtles break the fourth wall several times. Until finally, Hun gets fed up and begins to violently shake the 1980s Raphael, while asking, "Why do you keep doing that?! Who are you talking to?! There's no one there!"
- BlooperIt's a bit odd that while the 80's Shredder finds the Utrom Shredder off-world simply by doing a scan, Krang is not found at all, even though an Utrom named Krang had a rather brief cameo during the run of the 2003 series.
- Citazioni
Casey Jones: So... I still don't get it. Which Shredder is back? Doing what? To who?
1988 Michelangelo: All I know is we wouldn't be in this mess if it wasn't for your stupid Shredder.
Raphael: OUR Shredder? YOUR Shredder started this whole "stupid mess" with his stupid Technodrome in the stupid first place!
1988 Raphael: Yeah, but your Shredder's like totally psycho-evil.
1988 Donatello: Ours is just decaf.
1988 Leonardo: Yeah. He won't keep you up at night.
Casey Jones: ...Your doubles ain't exactly playing with a full deck, are they?
Michelangelo: And they're really annoying.
Casey Jones: Gotcha. Up to speed now.
- Versioni alternativeFor several months, 4kids' website featured a "Director's Cut" of the movie which contained eight minutes of footage that were cut from the TV broadcast, and eventually Paramount's 2010 DVD as well. Among the scenes restored:
- The Turtles using sonar to search for the Technodrome underground
- Karai explaining that she found the Technodrome when her monitoring systems revealed that Ch'rell had changed location
- Karai claiming the Technodrome for the Foot Clan
- Splinter settling an argument between the 1988 and 2003 Turtles
- Casey and April fighting robotic Foot Ninjas
- Leonardo detailing Shredder's scheme to the Mirage Turtles
- Shredder nearly disintegrating himself and Karai (among others) while strangling the Mirage Turtles
- Various gags and one-liners
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Nostalgia Critic: Turtles Forever Review (2010)
- Colonne sonoreSKBNA
Written by John Siegler and Lloyd Goldfine
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- Celebre anche come
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles Forever
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro