Film

His Pants May Be Square, but SpongeBob is Hip

Syracusans can note that all of those silly movie sounds come from our own Tom Kenny

The kids in the crowd sure enjoyed the antics of SpongeBob. And Patrick and Plankton. Mr. Krabs and Squidward. Burger Beard and Karen the Computer Wife. The wee watchers were tittering at the Saturday matinee showing of SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water. Pretty much, it seemed that their adult escorts were happy with the 93 minutes of silliness, too. And why not? The children had all of the things that they’ve come to love on the famous Nickelodeon cartoons that feature SpongeBob SquarePants, the character from the pineapple beneath the sea, living in his wild world of Bikini Bottom, down there working as a cook serving up Crabby Patties to all of the funny critters who share that peculiar but amazingly comfortable habitat. We adults, meanwhile, had the knowledge that the squeaks and squeals and squelches coming out of that SpongeBob mouth of his were from the imagination and vocal cords of one of own, East Syracuse native Tom Kenny, the Hollywood voice meister who also provided the soundtrack funnies as Dog in CatDog and The Mayor in PowderPuff Girls and in his storied past was called Tomcat when he paired with another funny guy named Bobcat Goldthwait in a troupe called the Generic Comics before the rest became quite cool history. And, oh, yeah, the story and dialogue from writers Glenn Berger and Jonathan Aibel and director Paul Tibbitt was filled with plenty of puns that likely went over the head of the young ‘uns but certainly made this older one smile. In short, and not to spoil too much, SpongeBob is not only entrusted by boss Mr. Krabs to cook all those tasty Crabby Patties, he’s supposed to help guard the secret recipe stowed in the safe from the always scheming Plankton, whose Chum Bucket restaurant he runs across the way with his computer wife Karen is forever desolate because of its lousy food. But something odd occurs to that recipe as SpongeBob and Plankton grapple for a grip, and that leads to strange partnerships, new bonds, time travel — and a trip to real-live movie Hollywood, where everybody seems to be musclebound and all characters must ramp up their games a notch or 12.
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