Bull, an average, all-around good dog, discovers he's going to be neutered in the morning. He realizes he needs one last adventure with his pack of buddies, as these are the last 24 hours wi... Read allBull, an average, all-around good dog, discovers he's going to be neutered in the morning. He realizes he needs one last adventure with his pack of buddies, as these are the last 24 hours with his balls. What could go wrong?Bull, an average, all-around good dog, discovers he's going to be neutered in the morning. He realizes he needs one last adventure with his pack of buddies, as these are the last 24 hours with his balls. What could go wrong?
Adam Devine
- Bull
- (voice)
Idris Elba
- Rocco
- (voice)
Kathryn Hahn
- Honey
- (voice)
Fred Armisen
- Fetch
- (voice)
Bobby Moynihan
- Lucky
- (voice)
Beck Bennett
- Sterling
- (voice)
Michelle Buteau
- Molasses
- (voice)
River Gallo
- Frankie
- (voice)
Scott Weil
- Alex
- (voice)
Aaron LaPlante
- Luther
- (voice)
- …
Julie Nathanson
- Julia
- (voice)
- …
Michelle Ruff
- Emma
- (voice)
- …
Kari Wahlgren
- Honey's Mom
- (voice)
- …
Grey DeLisle
- Nana
- (voice)
- …
Sean Chiplock
- Ol' Spice
- (voice)
Daran Norris
- Napoleon
- (voice)
Jon Bailey
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Eric Bauza
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Featured reviews
I was very excited due to the director and names attached to this movie but even they couldn't save it. The animation is beautiful, the soundtrack is great, and the voice acting is okay. BUT, the pacing is weird, the editing is choppy, and voice acting could have been better. It felt cheap and offbeat as if it was supposed to be a TV show. It's okay, just don't expect a Sausage Party.
It's very obvious from the first minute that this is a adult animation and you need to go into it with that in mind. This movie is funny as hell and if you're a fan of South Park level comedy you'll love it. Despite the humor it actually has a great plot with everything you could ask for in this kind of adult comedy.
Fixed is exactly what the trailers showed! The 2D animation looks beautiful. It makes you miss that animation style because it can look 10 times better modern day. This movie just shows us how bright it could look, if they still did 2D! It comes off as colorful! Representing the film! And all the voice actors do an incredible job. Even if a joke doesn't land. It's thanks to their voice acting that the scene is 10 times more enjoyable. They're definitely the main strong point of the movie and carry the movie the entire time. They do an incredible job! And this is a comedy, some jokes do land. Pacifically more at the end than the entire film. But, the main selling point on this is that R rated animated comedy. And yet again it doesn't work! The entire movie is trying to be so R Rated, that it doesn't really come across as funny. Because they're trying so hard to make you laugh and trying so hard to make this as R rated as possible! Making it come off as not that funny. Don't give me wrong, there's a few moments in there that I did love, that I wish the entire movie did instead of just this one segment. But the rest of the movie just feels forced. And kind of unrelated, but not really, I didn't really like sausage party because of the main story they had. I did not want to watch food attacking humans. And I was not really interested in this story either, it's just boring. You're watching a comedy and there trying to make you care for the actual plot. When in reality I did not care what was happening. I was there to laugh and even then they were trying too hard to make you laugh. It's a comedy that feels completely forced with everything it is doing. But does have nice animation and great voice acting!
Bull (Adam DeVine) is a mutt bulldog who unlike the rest of his friends is not neutered which often leads to him getting in to shenanigans around his household where he tries to find sexual release on either peoples' legs or household objects. Bull carries a crush for his next door neighbor and friend, Honey (Kathryn Hahn), a Borzoi and show dog, but feels inadequate to approach her especially in the presence of his rival Sterling (Beck Bennett), another Borzoi show dog with an impressive lineage. When Bull learns his family plans to have him neutered, he runs away with his friends boxer Rocco (Idris Elba), dashund Fetch (Fred Armisen), and beagle Lucky (Bobby Mynihan) for a debauchery filled night of last hurrahs before he has to say goodbye to his testicles.
Fixed is the long in development directorial project from animator Genndy Tartakovsky, whose prolific work includes the likes of Samurai Jack, Dexter's Laboratory, and Hotel Transylvania to name but a few of his contributions to animation. The film stemmed from Tartakovsky's desire to do an animal roadtrip movie that would carry a similar dynamic to him and his real life group of friends which served as the basis for what would become fixed and presumably due tot the success of Hotel Transylvania, Tartakovsky was able to start development in 2018 at Sony Pictures Animation. Despite being produced by Sony, the film was intended to be released by New Line Cinema for 2023 only to fall victim to Warner Bros. Cost saving initiatives of canceling completed releases. As the rights reverted back to Sony, they were free to shop for alternate distribution with Netflix taking up the offer having released a number of Sony Pictures Animation films on their platform. After a tortuously road to release, Fixed.....isn't awful, but it's not exactly Tartakovsky's best work either.
Per Tartakovsky's reputation, the animation is very expressive and energized with a lot of energy and good timing. There's a good sense of personality and character in the designs even if I'm more mixed on for what they're used. This brings us to what Fixed actually is, which is essentially The Secret Life of Pets by way of The 40 Year Old Virgin. Animation is certainly no stranger to sexcapades like Fritz the Cat or even the more recent Sausage Party, but despite Fixed being filled with raunch and vulgarity a plenty, I wouldn't exactly qualify it as "adult" animation. While both Fritz the Cat and Sausage Party were filled with plenty of vulgar language and sexual situations, it was also clear they had something to say with Fritz the Cat spoofing the counterculture of the 60s and 70s (somewhat incorrectly according to R. Crumb) or Sausage Party skewering organized religion so there were actual ideas backing up what was presented. Going even broader to sex comedies, movies like 10 and to an extent the first American Pie took shots at middle aged insecurity and superficiality and the vapid understanding by adolescent high school males who had a very base and shallow understanding of sex. With Fixed, it often feels like the joke begins and ends with sex and aside from being slighty more graphic with dog behaviors as it pertains to pee, poo, and even blood a lot of the time it feels like you're watching something like Secret Life of Pets only with more sex jokes. The only moment that really feels fresh or particularly insightful is a brief sequence where Bobby Moynihan's Lucky falls in love with an intersex doberman named Frankie played by River Gallo, and it's honestly a pretty good moment character wise where his friends are supportive and non-judgmental and it makes you realize there was potential for this concept...only for it to be surrounded by material that aims low.
I didn't hate Fixed, but aside from appreciating some of the animation and vocal performances (particularly Elba, Hahn, and Gallo) I didn't feel Fixed really offered much with its mixture of an R-Rating and animation that wasn't done better elsewhere. It's maybe worth a one time viewing for Tartakovsky (depending on your tolerance for a parade of mainly pee, poo, and sex jokes) but not only has Tartakovsky done better, but so have raunchy animations and sex comedies.
Fixed is the long in development directorial project from animator Genndy Tartakovsky, whose prolific work includes the likes of Samurai Jack, Dexter's Laboratory, and Hotel Transylvania to name but a few of his contributions to animation. The film stemmed from Tartakovsky's desire to do an animal roadtrip movie that would carry a similar dynamic to him and his real life group of friends which served as the basis for what would become fixed and presumably due tot the success of Hotel Transylvania, Tartakovsky was able to start development in 2018 at Sony Pictures Animation. Despite being produced by Sony, the film was intended to be released by New Line Cinema for 2023 only to fall victim to Warner Bros. Cost saving initiatives of canceling completed releases. As the rights reverted back to Sony, they were free to shop for alternate distribution with Netflix taking up the offer having released a number of Sony Pictures Animation films on their platform. After a tortuously road to release, Fixed.....isn't awful, but it's not exactly Tartakovsky's best work either.
Per Tartakovsky's reputation, the animation is very expressive and energized with a lot of energy and good timing. There's a good sense of personality and character in the designs even if I'm more mixed on for what they're used. This brings us to what Fixed actually is, which is essentially The Secret Life of Pets by way of The 40 Year Old Virgin. Animation is certainly no stranger to sexcapades like Fritz the Cat or even the more recent Sausage Party, but despite Fixed being filled with raunch and vulgarity a plenty, I wouldn't exactly qualify it as "adult" animation. While both Fritz the Cat and Sausage Party were filled with plenty of vulgar language and sexual situations, it was also clear they had something to say with Fritz the Cat spoofing the counterculture of the 60s and 70s (somewhat incorrectly according to R. Crumb) or Sausage Party skewering organized religion so there were actual ideas backing up what was presented. Going even broader to sex comedies, movies like 10 and to an extent the first American Pie took shots at middle aged insecurity and superficiality and the vapid understanding by adolescent high school males who had a very base and shallow understanding of sex. With Fixed, it often feels like the joke begins and ends with sex and aside from being slighty more graphic with dog behaviors as it pertains to pee, poo, and even blood a lot of the time it feels like you're watching something like Secret Life of Pets only with more sex jokes. The only moment that really feels fresh or particularly insightful is a brief sequence where Bobby Moynihan's Lucky falls in love with an intersex doberman named Frankie played by River Gallo, and it's honestly a pretty good moment character wise where his friends are supportive and non-judgmental and it makes you realize there was potential for this concept...only for it to be surrounded by material that aims low.
I didn't hate Fixed, but aside from appreciating some of the animation and vocal performances (particularly Elba, Hahn, and Gallo) I didn't feel Fixed really offered much with its mixture of an R-Rating and animation that wasn't done better elsewhere. It's maybe worth a one time viewing for Tartakovsky (depending on your tolerance for a parade of mainly pee, poo, and sex jokes) but not only has Tartakovsky done better, but so have raunchy animations and sex comedies.
Cannot be viewed seriously, take it for what it is...
A foul-mouthed comedy in cartoon format about a dog about to have his bits off...
It's like South Park meets lady and the tramp...
I caught the kids watching it a quickly had to turn it off but decided to watch it later in the evening. Killed some time but can't say I'd watch it again.
Did you know
- TriviaSony's first fully traditionally animated film since Les 8 Folles Nuits d'Adam Sandler (2002).
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: How I Spent My Vacation (2018)
- SoundtracksMr. Big Stuff
Written by Joseph Broussard, Carrol Washington and Ralph Williams
Performed by Lyn Collins
Courtesy of Republic Records
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
- How long is Fixed?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $30,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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