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Genres:
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Animation /
Adventure /
Comedy /
Family /
Fantasy
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Release:
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Actors:
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Miley Cyrus,
J.P. Manoux,
Mark Walton,
James Lipton,
Randy Savage,
Ronn Moss,
Dan Fogelman,
John Travolta,
Susie Essman,
Malcolm McDowell,
Greg Germann,
Diedrich Bader,
Nick Swardson,
Kari Wahlgren,
Chloe Moretz
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Duration:
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96 min.
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Rating:
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(7.4/10)140.5
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Plot Summary:
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Bolt tells the story a dog who plays a stout-hearted dog in a shot TV guide and has some inconvenience recognizing that he doesn't even have superpowers. This becomes something of a hindrance when he is accidentally shipped from Hollywood to Changed York City. From there he has to make his way home with the help of a manky old cat and an overweight hamster in a meretricious ball.
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Tags:
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Bolt
Claudia PuigBolt is an action hero who firmly believes he possesses superpowers. Sounds like a spoof on the life of Arnold Schwarzenegger. Actually, Bolt is a friendly dog whose entire life has been spent as the heroic star of a popular television show. An enjoyable animated family film, Bolt features some engaging 3-D sequences and distinctly lump-in-the-throat moments for dog lovers. The lop-eared canine is likably voiced by John Travolta. Bolt's beloved "person" is young Penny, who has the chirpy voice of Miley Cyrus. The furry Bolt spends most of his waking hours fighting peril. If he bores his eyes into something, it explodes. With just a few flicks of his paw, he can bend steel bars and flip trucks off the highway. It hasn't exactly gone to his he...
Bolt
Disney's latest 3D animation is a comic odyssey, tracing three pets' journey through delusion towards some essential home truths
"That is totally unrealistic!" It is a reasonable enough assessment of the events in Bolt, and when the line comes from a talking hamster named Rhino with delusions of grandeur and an addiction to day-time television, you had better believe it. If Rhino (voiced by Mark Walton, in full Jack Black mode) thinks that he is larger than life, he looks it too, presented in eye-goggling 3D animation - and the medium, while certainly spectacular in its own right, also matches the message, in a film that repeatedly plays one type of reality off against another. Everything here comes in a form so vivid you can almost reach out and tou...
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