Spongebob Squarepants SpongeBob (voice by Tom Kenny) has a ready-made legion of
fans who follow his adventures every Saturday morning on Nickelodeon.
I even know parents who like the show, which is fast-paced
and goofy and involves SpongeBob's determination to amount
to something in this world. In the movie, he dreams of becoming
manager of Krusty Krab II, the new outlet being opened by
Eugene H. Krabs (Clancy Brown), the most successful businesscrab
in the ocean-floor community of Bikini Bottom. SpongeBob may
only be a kid, but he's smart and learns fast, and reminded
me of Ed, the hero of the live-action Nickelodeon series "Good
Burger" ("Welcome to Good Burger, home of the Good
Burger! Can I take your order PLEASE?").
SpongeBob, like all sponges I suppose, has a thing about
cleanliness, and to watch him take a shower is inspiring.
First he eats a cake of soap. Then he plunges a hose into
the top of his head and fills up with water, exuding soap
bubbles from every pore, or would that be orifice, or crevice?
Then he pulls on his SquarePants and hurries off for what
he expects to be a richly deserved promotion.
- advertisement -
Alas, the job goes to Squidward Tentacles (Rodger Bumpass),
who has no rapport with the customers but does have seniority.
A kid can't handle the responsibility, Eugene Krabs tells
SpongeBob. This is a bitter verdict, but meanwhile intrigue
is brewing in Bikini Bottom. Plankton, who runs the spectacularly
unsuccessful rival food stand named the Chum Bucket, plans
to steal Eugene's famous recipe for Krabby Patties. As part
of this plot, Plankton (Mr. Lawrence) has King Neptune's crown
stolen, and frames Eugene Krabs with the crime, so it's up
to SpongeBob and his starfish friend Patrick (Bill Fagerbakke)
to venture to the forbidden no-go zone of Shell City (which
is no doubt near Shell Beach, and you remember Shell Beach).
There they hope to recapture the crown, restore it to King
Neptune (Jeffrey Tambor), save Mr. Krabs from execution, and
get SpongeBob the promotion.
All of this happens in jolly animation with bright colors
and is ever so much more entertaining than you are probably
imagining. No doubt right now you're asking yourself why you
have read this far in the review, given the near-certainty
that you will not be going anywhere near a SpongeBob SquarePants
movie, unless you are the parent or adult guardian of a SpongeBob
SquarePants fan, in which case your fate is sealed. Assuming
that few members of SpongeBob's primary audience are reading
this (or can read), all I can tell you is, the movie is likely
to be more fun than you expect.
The opening, for example, is inexplicable, unexpected and
very funny, as a boatload of pirates crowd into the front
of a movie theater to see SpongeBob. These are real flesh-and-blood
pirates, not animated ones, and part of the scene's charm
comes because it is completely gratuitous. So, for that matter,
is the appearance of another flesh-and-blood actor in the
movie, David Hasselhoff, who gives SpongeBob and Patrick a
high-speed lift back to Bikini Bottom and then propels them
to the deeps by placing them between his pectoral muscles
and flexing and popping. This is not quite as disgusting as
it sounds, but it comes close.
I confess I'm not exactly sure if the residents of Bikini
Bottom are cannibals; what, exactly, is in Eugene H. Krabs'
Krabby Patties if not ... krabs? Does the Chum Bucket sell
chum? No doubt faithful viewers of the show will know. I am
reminded of the scene in "Shark Tale" when Lenny,
the vegetarian shark, becomes an activist and frees a shrimp
cocktail.
One of the stranger scenes in "SBSP" comes when
SpongeBob and Patrick get wasted at Goofy Goober's nightclub,
where ice cream performs the same function as booze. This
leads to the ice cream version of a pie fight, and terrible
hangovers the next morning; no wonder, as anyone who has ever
used a sponge on ice cream can testify.