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Wreck-It Ralph is a 2012 American animated comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures.It was directed by Rich Moore and produced by Clark Spencer, from a screenplay written by Phil Johnston and Jennifer Lee, and a story by Moore, Johnston, and Jim Reardon.
When the film was officially announced in June 2016 as Ralph Breaks the Internet: Wreck-It Ralph 2, much of the original cast confirmed they had signed on, with new cast members added in 2018. [7] It is Walt Disney Animation Studios' first computer-animated film sequel and is the first sequel from the studio to be created by the original film's ...
Wreck-It Ralph: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack album to the 2012 animated film Wreck-It Ralph. [1] The film's score was composed by Henry Jackman , [ 2 ] and the soundtrack featured three original songs and three incorporated songs, with Jackman's score accompanying the remainder of it.
NatGeo's "Rewind the '90s" looks at the birth and significance of the web's dancing baby.
After 'Dancing With the Stars' crowned the season 31 winner on Disney Plus, former host Tom Bergeron shared he will appear on an episode of NBC's 'The Wheel' soon.
Wreck-It Ralph appears in the 2019 video game Kingdom Hearts III as a Link. When summoned, he will place explosive blocks and destroy them, causing damage to nearby enemies. [9] A world based on Wreck-It Ralph was added to the 2017 mobile game Kingdom Hearts Union χ as part of an update in April 2019. The world adapts the events of the ...
Disney has officially announced the title to the sequel of 'Wreck-It Ralph,' and it takes an unexpected cue from the reality star: "Ralph Breaks The Internet: Wreck-It Ralph 2" is slated for ...
On September 19, 2018, the soundtrack's first single, an end-credit song titled "Zero", performed by Imagine Dragons, was released.Dan Reynolds, the band's frontman, said that "[the] song speaks to" the title character's struggle for self-acceptance, which the band resonated with, while the film's co-director, Rich Moore, called the song "a bold choice for an end-credit song because it's about ...