Inspired by Leondis' love of Toy Story (1995), the film was fast tracked into production in July 2015 after the bidding war and the project was officially announced in April 2016, originally titled EmojiMovie: Express Yourself. Most of the lead cast members were hired throughout the rest of the year. The Emoji Movie had a production time of two years, shorter than most other animated films. The marketing of the film drew a negative response from the public and an internet backlash, before the film's release.
The Emoji Movie premiered on July 23, 2017, at the
Regency Village Theatre and was theatrically released in the United States five days later. It was a commercial success, after grossing over $217 million worldwide against a $50 million production budget. However, the film received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, who criticized its script, humor, use of
product placement,[4] tone, voice performances, lack of originality, and plot, with negative comparisons and similarities to other animated films, especially Wreck-It Ralph (2012), The Lego Movie (2014), and Inside Out (2015).[5]The Emoji Movie was nominated for five awards at the
38th Golden Raspberry Awards, a mock award show honoring the worst of cinema, winning four. It is the first animated film to win in any of those categories.[6] It is frequently ranked as the worst film of 2017, as well as one of the worst animated movies ever made.[7]
Plot
Gene is an
emoji that lives in Textopolis, a digital city inside the phone of his user, a teenager named Alex. He is the son of two
meh emojis named Mel and Mary and is able to make multiple expressions despite his parents' upbringing. His parents are hesitant about him going to work, but Gene insists so that he can feel useful. Upon receiving a
text from his love interest Addie McCallister, Alex decides to send her an emoji. When Gene is selected, he panics, makes a panicked expression, and wrecks the text center. Gene is called in by Smiler, a
smiley emoji and leader of the text center, who concludes that Gene is a "malfunction" and therefore must be deleted. Gene is chased by
bots but is rescued by Hi-5, a once-popular emoji who has since lost his fame due to lack of use. He tells Gene that he can be fixed if they find a
hacker, and Hi-5 accompanies him so that he can reclaim his fame.
Smiler sends more bots to look for Gene when she finds out that he has left Textopolis, as his actions have caused Alex to think that his phone needs to be fixed. Gene and Hi-5 come to a
piracyapp where they meet a hacker emoji named Jailbreak, who wants to reach
Dropbox so that she can live in the
cloud. The trio is attacked by Smiler's bots, but manage to escape into the game Candy Crush. Jailbreak reveals that Gene can be fixed in the cloud, and the group goes off into the Just Dance app. While there, Jailbreak is revealed to be a princess emoji who fled home after tiring of being
stereotyped. They are once again attacked by bots, and their actions cause Alex to delete the Just Dance app. Gene and Jailbreak escape, but Hi-5 is taken along with the app and ends up in the
trash.
Mel and Mary go searching for Gene and have a very lethargic argument. They make up in the
Instagram app when Mel reveals that he, too, is a malfunction, explaining Gene's behavior. While traveling through
Spotify, Jailbreak admits that she likes Gene just the way he is and that he should not be ashamed of his malfunction. The two start to fall in love and Gene silently debates his choice to change himself. They make it to the trash and rescue Hi-5, but are soon attacked by a bot upgraded with illegal malware. They evade it by entangling its arms and enter Dropbox, where they encounter a
firewall. After many tries, the gang gets past it with a
password being Addie's name and make it to the cloud, where Jailbreak prepares to reprogram Gene. Gene admits his feelings for Jailbreak, but she wishes to stick to her plan of venturing into the cloud, unintentionally causing Gene to revert to his apathetic programming out of heartbreak. Suddenly, the upgraded bot sneaks into the cloud and captures Gene, prompting Hi-5 and Jailbreak to go after him with a
Twitter bird summoned by Jailbreak in her princess form.
As Smiler prepares to delete Gene, Mel and Mary arrive. Mel reveals to everyone that he is also a malfunction, prompting Smiler to threaten to delete him as well. Jailbreak and Hi-5 arrive and disable the bot, which falls on top of Smiler. Alex has since taken his phone to a store in hopes that a
factory reset performed by
technical support would restore his phone's functionality, which would entail total destruction of Gene's world should such operation complete. Out of desperation, Gene prepares to have himself texted to Addie, making numerous faces to express himself. Realizing that Addie received a text from him, Alex cancels the factory reset just as it nearly finishes, saving the emoji and finally getting to speak with Addie, who likes the emoji Alex sent. Gene accepts himself for who he is and is celebrated by all of the emojis.
In a
mid-credits scene, Smiler has been relegated to the "loser lounge" with the other unused and forgotten emojis for her crimes, wearing numerous braces due to her teeth being chipped by the bot, and playing and losing a game of
Go Fish.
Liam Aiken as Ronnie Ramtech, one of the two programmers that select which Emoji to display on a phone
Production
Development
The film was inspired by director Tony Leondis' love of Toy Story (1995).[22] Wanting to make a new take on the concept, he began asking himself, "What is the new toy out there that hasn't been explored?" At the same time, Leondis received a text message with an emoji, which helped him realize that this was the world he wanted to explore.[22] In fleshing out the story, Leondis considered having the emojis visit the real world. However, his producer felt that the world inside a phone was much more interesting, which inspired Leondis to create the story of where and how the emojis lived.[22] As Leondis is gay, he connected to Gene's plight of "being different in a world that expects you to be one thing", and in eventually realizing that the feeling held true for most people, Leondis has said the film "was very personal".[22]
In July 2015, it was announced that
Sony Pictures Animation had won a bidding war against
Warner Bros. Pictures and
Paramount Pictures over production rights to make the film,[23] with the official announcement occurring at the 2016
CinemaCon.[24] The film was fast tracked into production by the studio after the bidding war. Unlike most other animated films, the film had a production time of two years, as there were concerns that the movie would become outdated due to the evolution of phone technology.[25]
Casting
On
World Emoji Day on July 17, 2016, Miller was announced as the lead.[9] Leondis created the part with Miller in mind, although the actor was initially hesitant to play the role, only accepting after Leondis briefed him on the story.[26] Leondis chose Miller because "when you think of irrepressible, you think of TJ. But he also has this surprising ability to break your heart".[26] In addition, Miller also contributed some re-writes.[27] In October 2016, it was announced that
Ilana Glazer and Corden would join the cast as well.[10] Glazer was later replaced by
Anna Faris.[12]Jordan Peele stated that he was initially offered the role of "Poop" (a part that would ultimately go to Patrick Stewart), which he said led to his decision to retire from acting.[28]
Music
The film's score was composed by
Patrick Doyle,[29] who previously composed the score for Leondis' Igor (2008).[30] Singer
Ricky Reed recorded an original song, "Good Vibrations", for the film.[31] While also voicing a character in the film,
Christina Aguilera's song "
Feel This Moment" was also used during the film and the end credits.[32]
Marketing
On December 20, 2016, a teaser trailer for the film was released, which received overwhelming criticism from
social media users,[33] collecting almost 22,000 "dislikes" against 4,000 "likes" within the first 24 hours of its release.[34][8] A second trailer was released on May 16, 2017, which also received an extremely negative reception.[35][36] Sony promoted the release of the latter trailer by hosting a press conference in Cannes, the day before the
2017 Cannes Film Festival, which featured T. J. Miller
parasailing in.[37]Variety called the event "slightly awkward",[38] and The Hollywood Reporter described it as "promotional ridiculousness".[37]
Sony Pictures was later criticized after the film's official Twitter account posted a promotional picture of a parody of The Handmaid's Tale, featuring Smiler. The parody was considered to be "tasteless" due to the overall themes of the work, and the image was deleted afterward.[39][40]
On July 20, 2017, Sony Pictures invited YouTube personality
Jacksfilms to the world premiere and sent him a package containing various Emoji Movie memorabilia including
fidget spinners, face masks, and a plushie of the poop emoji. Jacksfilms had sarcastically praised the movie on his YouTube channel four months prior.[47][48]
Release
The Emoji Movie premiered on July 23, 2017, at the
Regency Village Theatre in Los Angeles.[49] It was initially scheduled for release on August 11,[50] but was later moved up to August 4,[51] and finally July 28.[52] In theaters, The Emoji Movie was accompanied by the short film Puppy! (2017)[53]
The Emoji Movie grossed $86.1 million in the United States and Canada and $131.7 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $217.8 million, against a production budget of $50 million.[3]
The film was released on July 28, 2017.[56]The Emoji Movie grossed $10.1 million on its first day, including $900,000 from Thursday night previews.[57] The film debuted at second place behind Dunkirk, grossing $25.7 million from 4,075 theaters.[58] Its second weekend earnings dropped by 50 percent to $12.4 million,[59] and followed by another $6.5 million the third weekend.[60]The Emoji Movie completed its theatrical run in the United States and Canada on November 30, 2017.[61]
Review embargoes for the film were lifted midday July 27, only a few hours before the film premiered to the general public, in a move considered among several tactics studios are using to try to curb bad
Rotten Tomatoes ratings.[62] Speaking of the effect embargoing reviews until last minute had on the film's debut, Josh Greenstein, Sony Pictures president of worldwide marketing and distribution, said, "The Emoji Movie was built for people under 18 ... so we wanted to give the movie its best chance. What other wide release with a score under 8 percent has opened north of $20 million? I don't think there is one."[62]
Critical response
On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, The Emoji Movie has an approval rating of 6% based on 134 professional reviews, with an average rating of 2.9/10. The website's critics' consensus displays a
no symbol emoji (🚫) in place of text.[63]Metacritic (which uses a weighted average) assigned The Emoji Movie a score of 12 out of 100 based on 26 critics, indicating "overwhelming dislike", becoming the lowest-rated animated film on the site.[64] Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[56]
David Ehrlich of IndieWire gave the film a D, writing: "Make no mistake, The Emoji Movie is very, very, very bad (we're talking about a hyperactive piece of corporate propaganda in which Spotify saves the world and Sir Patrick Stewart voices a living turd), but real life is just too hard to compete with right now."[65]Alonso Duralde of TheWrap was also critical of the film, calling it "a soul-crushing disaster because it lacks humor, wit, ideas, visual style, compelling performances, a point of view or any other distinguishing characteristic that would make it anything but a complete waste of your time".[20]
Glen Kenny of The New York Times described the film as "nakedly idiotic", stating that the film plays off a
Hollywood idea that the "panderingly, trendily idiotic can be made to seem less so".[66]Owen Gleiberman of Variety lambasted the film as "hectic situational overkill" and "lazy", writing, "[t]here have been worse ideas, but in this case the execution isn't good enough to bring the notion of an emoji movie to funky, surprising life."[19] Writing in The Guardian, Charles Bramesco called the film "insidious evil" and wrote that it was little more than an exercise in
advertising smartphone downloads to children.[67] Reviewers like The Washington Post, The Guardian, the
Associated Press, The New Republic, and the Hindustan Times also cited the film's negative comparisons and similarities to Inside Out (2015), Toy Story (1995), The Lego Movie (2014), Wreck-It Ralph (2012), and Bee Movie (2007), among others.[a]
Nigel Andrews of the Financial Times, however, gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "Occasionally it's as if The Lego Movie is reaching out a long, friendly arm to Inside Out and falling into the chasm between. But the film is inventive too",[79] while Jake Wilson of The Sydney Morning Herald gave the film 4/5 stars, calling it "a rare attempt by Hollywood to come to grips with the online world".[80]
Screen Rant later placed it at #6 of their 10 Terrible Movies You Don't Have to See to Know They're Bad list.[81]
Steve Baker,
Ricky Blitt, Will Carlough, Tobias Carlson, Jacob Fleisher, Patrik Forsberg, Will Graham,
James Gunn, Claes Kjellstrom, Jack Kukoda,
Bob Odenkirk, Bill O'Malley, Matthew Alec Portenoy,
Greg Pritikin, Rocky Russo,
Olle Sarri, Elizabeth Wright Shapiro,
Jeremy Sosenko, Jonathan van Tulleken, and Jonas Wittenmark – Movie 43 (2013)