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Teenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem | List Of Latest Animation Movies 2023 | Bolly4u | rdxhd | mp4 movies

    

Teenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem 2023

Teenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem | List Of Latest Animation Movies 2023



Release Date 

31-Jul-23(United Kingdom)

Language

English

Genre

Animation, Adventure, Action, comedy, Family, Fantasy, Sci-fi

Director

Jeff Rowe, Kyler Spears

Countries of origin

United states

Writer

Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, Jef Rowe

Cinematography

Tomasz Naumiuk

Music Director

Maksym Berezhnyak, Dakhabrakha, dario Vero

Production

Nickelodeon Animation Studios, Point Grey Pictures, Image Comics

Duration

1hr 39min 

Cast

Natasia demetriou, Ayo Edebiri, Rose Byrne, Jackie Chan, John Cena, Seth rogen, Paul Rud, Giancarlo Esposito, Maya Rudolph, Ice Cube,  Nicolas cantu, Brady Noon, Micah Abbey, Post malone, Hannibal buress, Shamon Brown jr. 



AbouTeenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem 2023

The Turtle brothers work to win the love of new York City while facing an army of mutants.


Photos of Teenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem 2023












Teenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem 2023 Trailer



Teenage mutant Ninja turtles: Mutant Mayhem 2023 in You Tube



Movies Review

Here are the famous comic book characters; they've been featured in movies and TV shows for years but they're still fresh in their grimness and even in their big, exciting concept - warrior ants fighting ants with love pizza and the names of Renaissance artists - it must be very. they are revealed again each time they are revived.

Well, this new animated origin story for the chelonian adventurers is unexpectedly funny, with a stylish twist. You've heard of Spider-Verse; This is the Prison-Verse, and it was directed by Jeff Rowe, creator of The Mitchells vs the Machines, and written by Rowe, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg with Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit.

We go back 15 years to when a tormented scientist, Dr Stockman (voiced by Giancarlo Esposito) goes rogue and creates a large number of mutant embryos in an underground laboratory. The efforts of his brothers who wanted to bring him ended in chaos; these four monsters are injured and run away but a light gooey gloop who seems to have caused the death accidentally crashes into the sewers of New York and infects the four turtles that Splinter is taking care of in there, a fugitive rat (voiced by Jackie Chan) who teaches them in the art field.

They grow up to be Donatello (Micah Abbey), Michelangelo (Shamon Brown Jr), Raphael (Brady Noon) and Leonardo (Nicolas Cantu), young turtles who love adventures in the sky. They take on Stockman's giant monster Superfly (Ice Cube) with the reluctant support of high school teacher and wannabe journalist April O'Neil (Ayo Edebiri). But every time their father Splinter warns them that people might catch them and try to "milk" them, even though they don't have nipples.

It's a controversy that sparks an X-Men style debate about how close humans and mutants can get. The idea of ​​the turtles fighting to save those ungrateful people who doubt them is fun and entertaining, although it's surprising that Rowe, Rogen et al skate about the well-established human secrets of their names. These writers are clearly happier about the classics about Chris Pine and others - and there are plenty of funny ones - and they don't want to go into Kenneth Clark/Civillisation territory, however. What a shame. Perhaps the sequel will take us to the Uffizi in Florence.

Well, this new animated origin story for the chelonian adventurers is unexpectedly funny, with a stylish twist. You've heard of Spider-Verse; This is the Prison-Verse, and it was directed by Jeff Rowe, creator of The Mitchells vs the Machines, and written by Rowe, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg with Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit.

We go back 15 years to when a tormented scientist, Dr Stockman (voiced by Giancarlo Esposito) goes rogue and creates a large number of mutant embryos in an underground laboratory. The efforts of his brothers who wanted to bring him ended in chaos; these four monsters are injured and run away but a light gooey gloop who seems to have caused the death accidentally crashes into the sewers of New York and infects the four turtles that Splinter is taking care of in there, a fugitive rat (voiced by Jackie Chan) who teaches them in the art field.

They grow up to be Donatello (Micah Abbey), Michelangelo (Shamon Brown Jr), Raphael (Brady Noon) and Leonardo (Nicolas Cantu), young turtles who love adventures in the sky. They take on Stockman's giant monster Superfly (Ice Cube) with the reluctant support of high school teacher and wannabe journalist April O'Neil (Ayo Edebiri). But every time their father Splinter warns them that people might catch them and try to "milk" them, even though they don't have nipples.

Well, this new animated origin story for the chelonian adventurers is unexpectedly funny, with a stylish twist. You've heard of Spider-Verse; This is the Prison-Verse, and it was directed by Jeff Rowe, creator of The Mitchells vs the Machines, and written by Rowe, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg with Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit.

We go back 15 years to when a tormented scientist, Dr Stockman (voiced by Giancarlo Esposito) goes rogue and creates a large number of mutant embryos in an underground laboratory. The efforts of his brothers who wanted to bring him ended in chaos; these four monsters are injured and run away but a light gooey gloop who seems to have caused the death accidentally crashes into the sewers of New York and infects the four turtles that Splinter is taking care of in there, a fugitive rat (voiced by Jackie Chan) who teaches them in the art field.

It's a controversy that sparks an X-Men style debate about how close humans and mutants can get. The idea of ​​the turtles fighting to save those ungrateful people who doubt them is fun and entertaining, although it's surprising that Rowe, Rogen et al skate about the well-established human secrets of their names. These writers are clearly happier about the classics about Chris Pine and others - and there are plenty of funny ones - and they don't want to go into Kenneth Clark/Civillisation territory, however. What a shame. Perhaps the sequel will take us to the Uffizi in Florence.

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