Synopsis
When a ruptured water main creates an enormous sinkhole right in front of Bob's Burgers, it blocks the entrance indefinitely and ruins the Belchers’ plans for a successful summer. While Bob and Linda struggle to keep the business afloat, the kids try to solve a mystery that could save their family's restaurant. As the dangers mount, these underdogs help each other find hope and fight to get back behind the counter, where they belong.
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Cast
- H. Jon BenjaminBob Belcher / Jimmy Jr. / Ms. Labonz (voice)
- Kristen SchaalLouise Belcher (voice)
- John RobertsLinda Belcher / Jocelyn (voice)
- Dan MintzTina Belcher (voice)
- Eugene MirmanGene Belcher (voice)
- Larry MurphyTeddy (voice)
- Kevin KlineCalvin Fischoeder (voice)
- Zach GalifianakisFelix Fischoeder (voice)
- David WainGrover Fischoeder (voice)
- Gary ColeSgt. Bosco (voice)
- 83
Consequence
We waited literal years for a Bob’s Burgers movie to hit screens, and it’s here, and it’s a whole lot of fun. - 80
Variety
Nothing in here makes an argument to be on the big screen. But it’s darned delightful, like a fizzy soda on a hot day. - 75
The A.V. Club
The Bob’s Burgers Movie can’t functionally change too much about the characters’ inside the animated snow globe that is its serialized namesake, so instead it picks them up, plays with them, and then puts them back like you would a Kuchi Kopi or Horselain. - 75
Collider
The Bob’s Burgers Movie isn’t exactly breaking new ground for this world and these characters, but instead, is showing how impeccably crafted and brilliant this world is when it's firing on all cylinders. - 75
IndieWire
It’s a charmer — let’s just put a bit more spice on the next one. - 70
IGN
The Bob’s Burgers Movie is a glorified episode of the series, but that’s hardly a bad thing. - 70
Screen Rant
The Bob's Burgers Movie struggles to keep up the energetic pace set early on, but overall packs in plenty of jokes and musical numbers for a fun time. - 68
TheWrap
It’s a tricky balance to build a world where characters are both absurd and believable — and on top of that, exist in a world where musical numbers can break out at any time (even the Wonder Wharf carnies get a song) — but Bouchard pulls it off.