He's never been off the set and truly believes he's Bolt the superdog, that is until the show ends in a cliff-hanger ending with Penny kidnapped and Bolt freaking out. It's a lot to pack into the first five minutes of the movie, until we realize that it is all part of a TV show and Bolt does not realize that the whole thing is a sham. We see Bolt in action: super speed, heat vision, and the all-powerful super bark - a scene that would make any action movie 100 times better. In the process, Penny and Bolt are chased by the GEM's henchmen in high-tech helicopters and motorcycles. The movie opens in standard action-movie style as Bolt the superdog and his trusty human Penny try to rescue her scientist father from the clutches of the Green-Eyed Man. The title of the post is an actual quote from my 5-year-old, who has not been able to stop quoting the "I eat danger for breakfast" line of Rhino the hamster since we first glimpsed the trailer at Igor. Director Byron Howard and Chris Williams and screenwriter Dan Fogelman have all worked in the trenches of some of Disney's better animated flicks and have put together an entertaining, fun gem of a movie. The gags are hilarious, the characters endearing and believable, and the settings and action are rendered with high craft. ![]() Lasseter has assembled a hardcore Disney and PIxar-ish team for Bolt and it shows. ![]() John Lasseter, the mastermind behind Toy Story is also the Executive Producer of Bolt, the animated feel-good, buddy film of the season. ![]() He is ripped from his familiar world and forced to confront the reality that he is just ordinary in a world run by humans, while making friends and discovering himself along the way. Naive hero is convinced he has amazing abilities and must defend against evil-doers at every turn.
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