Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation

    Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation
    2018

    Synopsis

    Dracula, Mavis, Johnny and the rest of the Drac Pack take a vacation on a luxury Monster Cruise Ship, where Dracula falls in love with the ship’s captain, Ericka, who’s secretly a descendant of Abraham Van Helsing, the notorious monster slayer.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Adam SandlerCount Dracula (voice)
    • Andy SambergJohnny Loughran (voice)
    • Selena GomezMavis Dracula (voice)
    • Kevin JamesFrankenstein (voice)
    • Fran DrescherEunice (voice)
    • Steve BuscemiWayne (voice)
    • Molly ShannonWanda (voice)
    • David SpadeGriffin (voice)
    • Keegan-Michael KeyMurray (voice)
    • Jim GaffiganProfessor Abraham Van Helsing (voice)

    Recommandations

    • 91

      IndieWire

      With plenty of laughs, truly dazzling animation, and some more of the franchise’s signature dance sequences, Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation is a summer treat worth savoring, and a reminder that if we can see past our differences, we’ll find we’re not that different after all.
    • 80

      TheWrap

      Hotel Transylvania 3 always goes for the joke and rarely misses.
    • 67

      The A.V. Club

      It’s pleasantly baffling to discover that not only is Hotel Transylvania 3 easily the best film of the series, but it also feels more at home thematically on a cruise ship than its predecessors did at a haunted Transylvanian castle.
    • 60

      ScreenCrush

      The’re not a lot of momentum to Hotel Transylvania 3; this is a children’s film after all. But the character and location designs are inventive and appealing, and there are several memorable set pieces, including a wordless scuba diving sequence that draws heavy inspiration from classic Warner Bros. cartoons.
    • 60

      Village Voice

      For all its frantic eager-to-please-ness, Hotel Transylvania 3 doesn’t quite achieve the blissfully reliable drumbeat of hilarious throwaway gags that the earlier films managed.
    • 50

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The movie flirts with the usual mixed-signals of romantic comedy, but is on much more solid ground with sight gags (as when Drac's jello-like blob friend happily absorbs the slice-and-smash violence Ericka aims at the vampire) and character work that depends less on celebrity voice talent than on body-language animation.
    • 50

      RogerEbert.com

      Genndy Tartakovsky brings back all the fan favorites from the previous two films and sets them all on an overcrowded, doomed cruise, but the thin plot feels less engaging than the previous films and the jokes less inspired.
    • 40

      Variety

      Tartakovsky’s instincts are to keep the action moving quickly and let one piece of kid-friendly slapstick tumble into the next, but when the jokes are this consistently uninspired, it doesn’t matter how fast they’re dispensed.

    Vu par

    • Ironchain87
    • Scarleth