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Tripping the Rift: The Movie (2008)

Tripping the Rift: The Movie (2008)

GENRESAnimation,Comedy,Sci-Fi
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Stephen RootMaurice LaMarcheJenny McCarthyJohn Melendez
DIRECTOR
Bernie Denk

SYNOPSICS

Tripping the Rift: The Movie (2008) is a English movie. Bernie Denk has directed this movie. Stephen Root,Maurice LaMarche,Jenny McCarthy,John Melendez are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2008. Tripping the Rift: The Movie (2008) is considered one of the best Animation,Comedy,Sci-Fi movie in India and around the world.

What begins for Chode and crew as a routine mission to protect a pissed-off princess will soon become a filth- splattered saga of dismembered royalty, indestructible clown assassins and desperately horny housewives. What vile act has Chode committed to bring down the ultimate wrath of Bobo? Can Gus, Six, T'nuk, Whip and Bob stop a time-traveling killing machine from ruining a booze-soaked birthday party? How much does a lap- dance cost at the Grope-A-Cabana on Omicron 9? The voices of Stephen Root, Maurice LaMarche, Jenny McCarthy, John Melendez, Gayle Garfinkle and Rick Jones star in this all-new feature length movie packed with plenty of sex, violence and &^%!#* too extreme for broadcast TV!

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Tripping the Rift: The Movie (2008) Reviews

  • Pretty funny

    JoeB1312008-04-07

    Wow, am I the first to comment on this? This was a little gem, actually. If you are a fan of the Sci-Fi channel series, you'll enjoy this film version. The plot is that Chode McBlob and his crew are planning for a birthday party/scam. Meanwhile, a killer-clown android from the future, the Arnie-3000, has traveled to terminate Chode before he can impregnate the daughter of Dark Clown leader, Darf Bobo. The film rips on classic horror movies, Indiana Jones, the Terminator, and Desperate Housewives. The film was a compilation of TTR's third season episodes (which didn't air in the US) linked together with some new animation. There really are four separate stories going on here. Still, they seem to flow together reasonably well. Update- Having now seen the episodes this movies was edited from, I have to say it isn't quite as good as I thought it was. The episodes were much better.

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  • This 'movie' contains very little original content.

    d-snake12017-08-20

    The movie is just three episodes stitched together into a loose narrative. There are some extra scenes, which aren't bad, but this is an extended clip show at best and a blatant cash grab at worst. It actually changes some of the plot points from the episodes it uses as a base in order to change the narrative. The added scenes really don't add enough to call this a movie. In all honesty, this is best used to scratch the itch of wanting to watch the show a year after you finish the series, not the day after. Either way, I wouldn't recommend paying money for this alone, but if you have access to it, it's probably worth a watch after you give yourself some time away from the show.

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  • Though tripping and stumbling through a disjointed passage of scenes and skits, the film just about holds weight due to a small number of things in what is a 70 minute sprint.

    johnnyboyz2009-08-14

    The film adaptation of Tripping the Rift cannot much hold a candle to the cinematic transitions of both South Park and The Simpsons, but for what it is, the picture is a delirious and riotous journey through a very original and very creative diegetic world that seems to acknowledge the rules before deliberately setting out to break them. Going into it, I was unaware that such a show even existed; turns out, it's a meekly successful Canadian cable TV series that began at the start of the decade and ran for a while. The comparison I came to, and it might seem pretty obvious to those up on the show, was that it resembled a more adult version of Futurama. Some have complained, I read, that the film is nothing much more than previous episodes or ideas stitched together but, as someone walking in blind, this didn't affect my rating nor view. I respect that, with others, this will differentiate. Tripping the Rift: The Movie sets the bar pretty low, but it hits slightly above where it aims. The film is all over the place, rough around the edges; inconsistent in its humour and feels the need to jump from jokes of the spoof variety to of the bodily function variety. But it's fine, if only to a degree; it's rude without ever really stooping to a level of demonisation or specific 'group' targeting while its screenplay, much to my surprise, actually provides its lead character with some genuinely funny lines. If you're basing your rating or recommendation factor on laughs alone, it provides enough for a watch, and at a mere seventy odd minutes, the piece shoots along at a rate that doesn't necessarily see it outstay its welcome. It arrives; it gives us a broad, broad palette of different sorts of humour; zips all over the place and leaves again without much fuss. The body of the film is, in essence, just a bunch of stuff that happens to a crew of a spaceship. Whatever narrative it has, hasn't actually happened yet based on the equilibriums we're given. It concerns future events and a killer clown, gloriously sending up the T-800 from the Terminator films, sent back to kill the film's lead character, Chode (Root). But whatever, the plot isn't important to those that produced this; what is, is utilising whatever short runtime they have to deliver gags in the form of what Chode says; cramming in as many references to films that, presumably, the people that made this grew up on as well as somewhat pandering to a younger, more adolescent crowd with gross-out humour and sex jokes. Chode's crew are an odd bunch of aliens, animals and robots; thrown together for whatever reasons by whatever events. There-in exists T'Nuk Layor (Garfinkle), an odd horse shaped alien; Whip (Jones), a chameleon-like character; Gus (LaMarche), a robot that, for some reason, comes across as to have a sexual preference as well as Spaceship Bob (Melendez), the ship's computer. Another crew member is Six, a would-be spitting image of the talent voicing her, namely Jenny McCarthy; whose character, rather disappointingly so, is a cyborg that exists purely for the gratification of the lead. The makers would like you to think the name is a pun on a TV show called Star Trek: Voyager, but let's all be honest with one another: it's so that adolescent boys can giggle at what her name might be if you were to drop the vowel and insert another one, thus, you transform her from her name into what she exists for. You could take any of what happens in Tripping the Rift: The Movie and unfold it in any order you like. It is made up of a series of events and stuff that just happens, which forms the basis of some sort of adventure. It doesn't really matter what order a lot of what happens unfolds in, just as long as it does. But it's certainly chock full of energy, and there are certainly laughs along the way. Take the opening 'skit' for example, in which the crew are charged with protecting a young princess, on a separate planet, just prior to an address to a crowd. Nobody ever stops, looks up, and says "Hey, hold on. Why are we in a place called 'Solvinia', which looks like a set straight out of Frankenstein, and which seems to be populated by a mixture of people with French and German accents but all of whom speak in English, in which a five foot tongue, who sounds distinctly like Michael Madsen, is protecting someone we have had time to invest zilch affection with?" But hey, what can you do? But the sporadic nature of the film doesn't grate as much as it most definitely should, even if it shoots from one scenario to the next; one minute in the aforementioned horror setting before zipping off to a jungle for some sort of out of the blue treasure hunt and then over to a suburban housing estate for a Desperate Housewives pastiche; all the time these odd episodes punctuated by near death experiences with the T-800 spoof character. Tripping the Rift: The Movie plays out like some sort of animation feature that a band of students have completed right at the very end of an animation course of some kind. True, it overly relies on other films and TV shows for the majority of its gags, which come about visually, but against all odds and for someone who went in blind; it actually-miraculously-kind of works out.

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