SummaryFrank (voiced by Seth Rogen), Brenda (voiced by Kristen Wiig), Barry (voiced by Michael Cera), Sammy (voiced by Edward Norton), Kareem (voiced by David Krumholtz) find life after the revolution harder than they thought in the animated TV miniseries sequel to the 2016 film Sausage Party.
SummaryFrank (voiced by Seth Rogen), Brenda (voiced by Kristen Wiig), Barry (voiced by Michael Cera), Sammy (voiced by Edward Norton), Kareem (voiced by David Krumholtz) find life after the revolution harder than they thought in the animated TV miniseries sequel to the 2016 film Sausage Party.
"Sausage Party: Foodtopia" offers more of the same while also elevating things just enough to make this eight-course meal feel refreshing and hilarious all over again.
It definitely has to be your humor cup of tea and for me it hits. But I also laughed nearly uncontrollably at the movie as well. With comedy, it will ALWAYS be to each their own of course.
The series aims to expand the narrative established by the 2016 film, whose humorous tone suggests an unconventional approach. In “Sausage Party: Foodtopia”, this proposal is maintained, although it explores different themes that give the series a peculiar **** this series, we see the food trying to establish a specific order and developing a unique concept of freedom. However, they end up following a parallel path to humanity's journey, presenting different ideas with an ideological struggle between capitalism and socialism. To achieve this outcome in the narrative, it is essential to go through a variety of comic scenes that have become a trademark of this franchise, capable of captivating the audience from the **** series should not be taken seriously and will only appeal to a small portion of the public due to its acidic and explicit comedy tone. For those who appreciate this style of humor, they will certainly find pleasant moments of entertainment. However, if the 2016 movie wasn't to your taste, this series may not be right for you.Ultimately, the rating for “Sausage Party: Foodtopia” is average, as it falls under Prime Video's B-level production and features a less captivating narrative compared to the original film. Although the series contains some impactful scenes, other productions with more refined acid and satirical humor certainly stand out.
The series wobbles along the fine line between stupid and clever, falling — not by accident — to one side and then the other. You can’t call it tossed off — there is a lot of work that goes into making a cartoon — though much of the writing has the air of having been born in a smoky room in a fit of giggling.
Over eight episodes, this formula quickly wears thin. But to many, it’ll be worth the distraction. Dick jokes are an easy laugh — or a cheap one, depending on the eye of the beholder. And a show named for a dick joke has both in spades.
"Foodtopia" is very, very stupid, and knowingly, winkingly so. It's a delivery system for some of the most awful food puns you've ever heard or seen, delivered through an eye-stinging visual style and a cast of way-overqualified A-list actors.
A waste of time and talent. Nothing redeemable about the story, the characters, the allegories, the jokes, or anything else. Somehow, years after the movie, these people haven't learned how to be as funny as they were in Superbad. This show is even worse than the movie and I heard they screwed over the animators.