Defictionalization: Disney designed, programmed, and constructed a working arcade machine of Fix-It Felix Jr.Deadpan Snarker: Ralph definitely is one.Constantly Curious: Vanellope when she first meets Ralph.game, Ralph says "I'm gonna wreck it!" at the beginning of every level. And outside the game cameos, Tiny, the Tyrannosaurus Rex from Meet the Robinsons, makes a background appearance in Game Central Station.
Also in the station is the Paperboy from.well, Paperboy.He also appears in the Game Central Station with numerous other characters from his game. Q*bert appears in the movie, and is the one to tell Felix where Ralph went.However, Zangief is not a villain in the games. Bison, a Beholder and a zombie from House of the Dead. The Cameo: Ralph's villain support group consists of Clyde, Kano, Scorpion, Neff, Bowser, Dr.Nobody appreciates the hard work you put into your villainy, you don't get any of the glory like the hero does, and in Ralph's case, he's constantly thrown off the edge of a tall building when Felix saves the day. Being Evil Sucks: It can really suck to be a video game villain.This big, lovable goof not only rates an F in evil, he clearly never took the test. Animated Actors: If you had to play the villain for thirty years, you'd be up for something different too.Pursued by Felix, who wants him to come back to their game, and by Sergeant Calhoun, who rightfully fears for the consequences of an alien let loose outside of Hero's Duty, as well by King Candy's police force, Ralph must find not only his medal, but the proper balance between being a bad guy and a nice guy without accidentally causing the destruction of his native game in the process.ĭirected by Rich Moore, who was a writer on The Simpsons and later on Futurama. Ralph ends up helping Vanellope build a race car of her own as part of a deal to get his medal back and in doing so runs afoul of King Candy as well. There he loses both the medal and the fighter, and encounters the supremely annoying Vanellope Von Schweetz ( Sarah Silverman) - a "glitch" character despised by the other racers in the game and hunted by the forces of King Candy, Sugar Rush's beloved (?) ruler. Escaping the tower in a tiny fighter craft (and unknowingly carrying along an alien egg), Ralph accidentally leaves Hero's Duty and crash lands in Sugar Rush, a Japanese Racing Game that's equal parts Mario Kart and Candy Land.
There, he learns that the medal he needs to prove himself a hero to the inhabitants of his native game is at the top of a tower filled with "bugs" - vicious, fast-breeding alien monsters.ĭodging both the monsters and the abrasive Sergeant Calhoun ( Jane Lynch), Ralph makes it to the top of the tower and gets the medal he needs - only to accidentally awaken all the aliens who are sleeping between plays of the game.
When an attempt to socialize with the rest of the game's population catastrophically fails, resulting in a sarcastic challenge to prove himself a hero, Ralph "pulls a Turbo" in the parlance of the arcade population, and jumps from his game through their shared power strip to one of the newest ones in the arcade - the sci-fi FPS Hero's Duty. Reilly) is the not-really-villainous villain who just wants a little friendship, a little respect, and a little recognition for making the game possible. ( Jack McBrayer), as one of the many machines in an arcade center.
The 52nd animated film from Disney's canon line-up, Wreck-It Ralph is about the antagonist of a 1980s eight-bit video game starring Fix-It Felix Jr.