The movie is come in the cinemas in 19th,november
Voiced by Tom Kenny, Bill Fagerbakke, Rodger Bumpass, Doug Lawrence, Jeffrey Tambor, Clancy Brown, Alec Baldwin and Scarlett Johansson. Directed by Stephen Hillenburg. Written by Stephen Hillenburg, Derek Drymon, Tim Hill, Kent Osborne, Aaron Springer and Paul Tibbitt. Produced by Julia Pistor and Stephen Hillenburg. A Paramount release. Animated/Comedy. Rated PG for some mild crude humor. Running time: 84 min.
Nickelodeon's favorite Bikini Bottom dweller has got too big for his britches. "The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie," the large-screen adventure of the eternally optimistic squishy yellow creature so popular on TV, aims to be a whale of a tale but in the process dissipates some of the very clever hilarity usually squeezed into the brief small-screen episodes.
The guest artist voices should be a clue that the filmmakers haven't trusted entirely in what got 'em there -- the amusement, charm and irritations spawned by the love-hate relationships between the lead characters: the emotionally hyper SpongeBob, his goofy starfish pal Patrick, the money-hungry restaurant owner Mr. Krabs and the gloomy neighbor Squidward. Occupying too much screen time are King Neptune (voiced by Jeffrey Tambor), his dishy fishy mermaid daughter Mindy (voiced by Scarlett Johansson), and a big ugly biker hit man (voiced by Alec Baldwin). Although these characters are essential to the plotline of the slightly scary journey SpongeBob and Patrick take to try to recover Neptune's crown, which Mr. Krabs has been falsely accused of stealing by the evil Plankton, the big name (and presumably high-cost) voices that emerge from their mouths add nothing really wonderful to the whole. Better we'd been allowed to hear more of Rodger Bumpass as squelchy, wingeing Squidward or Clancy Brown's grating bossiness as the greedy Mr. Krabs, both of whom are reduced to sideline players as the story heads out of Bikini Bottom on the quest to the creepy Shell City.