
Trolls
After the monstrous Bergens invade Troll Village, Princess Poppy, the happiest Troll ever born, and overly-cautious, curmudgeonly outcast Branch set off on a journey to rescue her friends. Their mission is full of adventure and mishaps, as this mismatched duo try to tolerate each other long enough to get the job done.
Director(s)
Mike Mitchell
Jillian Gomez
Where to watch

Amazon Prime Video
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Apple TV Store
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Zee5
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Amazon Video
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Apple TV Store
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Cast & crew

Russell Brand
Creek (voice)

Jeffrey Tambor
King Peppy (voice)

John Cleese
Roi Gristle (voice)

Frank Welker
Barnebis (voice) (uncredited)

Anna Kendrick
Poppy (voice)

Justin Timberlake
Branch (voice)

Zooey Deschanel
Bridget (voice)

Kunal Nayyar
Guy Diamond (voice)

Christopher Mintz-Plasse
King Gristle (voice)

Ron Funches
Cooper (voice)

Aino Jawo
Satin (voice)

Caroline Hjelt
Chenille (voice)

Glozell Green
Grandma Rosiepuff (voice)

Walt Dohrn
Cloud Guy/Smidge/Fuzzbert/Mr. Dinkles/Tunnel Troll/Wedgie Bergen (voice)
Iris Dohrn
Baby Poppy (voice)
Nina Zoe Bakshi
Bini Troll / Nora Troll (voice)
Emmett Mitchell
Anxious Troll Child / Keith (voice)
Ollie Mitchell
Olley Troll (voice)

Mike Mitchell
Darius / Vinny the Phone / Capt. Starfunkle / Spider / Wedgie Bergen #1 / Chad / Card (voice)

Christine Baranski
Chef (voice)

James Corden
Biggie (voice)

Quvenzhané Wallis
Harper (voice)

Gwen Stefani
DJ Suki (voice)
Liam Henry
Young Branch (voice)

Meg DeAngelis
Moxie (voice)

Ricky Dillon
Aspen Heitz (voice)

Kandee Johnson
Mandy Sparkledust (voice)

Rhys Darby
Bibbly (voice)

Grace Helbig
Sugar Cookieloaf (voice)

Curtis Stone
Bergen Guard - Todd (voice)
Zoë Crawford
McKenzie Troll (voice)
Riley Crawford
Sean Troll (voice)
Phoebe Dohrn
Bergen Girl (voice)
Jillian Gomez
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Details
Reviews
Reno
**The message was about teaching the truth behind falsified believes.** This is a good film than how it was labelled. At least I enjoyed it, despite being an adult, particularly a male and a bachelor. It looks more a little kids' film than for anyone else. Because the film was based on the famous dolls. Usually film comes first and then follows its dolls to the markets. But this film has a reverse concept and a very much acceptable. Yes, it was not great as Disney's or Pixar's animations, but the DreamWorks animation is always there behind these two, considered the third best and according to that limit, you should expect the film. It's a musical like most of the animations are and one of the tracks made into the 2017 Oscars for best film songs list, but the film did not make into best the animated feature. Directed by the director of one of the sequels of 'Shrek' series. Technically, it sounds awesome with cute character models, colours, songs, music and particularly the voice-overs. The story wise, it's not bad, except the concept of eating trolls makes the real young kids go fright. Good for families and even better if you choose to watch it in digital 3D format. The runtime was good with a fine pace. In the line of smurfs, gnomes, fairies, and now these trolls to add in the list for children to watch growing up. Don't bother watching it if you are an adult and only like and enjoy adult films, other than seeing it neutral, as well as opinioning. Purely an entertaining film and I strongly suggest it for the little ones. _7/10_
CinemaSerf
Anyone recall the toys you used to get where you could push play-dough up through the body and it would come out through holes in the head like coloured hair? Well that's what these "Trolls" reminded me of - a wet dream for marketeers, toy makers. and burger chains. The actual plot centres around the peaceable trolls who must flee their home when the menacing "Bergen" arrive bent on eating them all for a "trollstice" treat. "King Peppy" and his annoyingly optimistic daughter "Poppy" lead their people to a safe hideaway but a surprise visit from their nemeses means "Poppy" and her pal "Branch" have to set off to rescue them from the merciless cleaver of the "Chef" and the new young "King Gristle". What now ensues is a series of escapades as they quite literally have to escape from the pot and the fire, stop their entire population ending up garnished and maybe, just maybe, convince their foes that happiness does not, in fact, come from eating a troll - well not unless it's a chocolate one. This will probably play well to very young children - there are lots of vibrant colours, a few songs to liven things up and just a hint of "Janet and John" moralising about what truly matters in life. It's a film you'll watch once, but I doubt it needs revisiting.
r96sk
<em>'Trolls'</em> is quite enjoyable, unexpectedly so. I admit that I didn't know much about it before watching, but I did know of the troll dolls - well, just the quintessential (?) pink-haired geezer tbh - growing up so I didn't think a movie about them would move the needle at all. In actuality, it's good, light fun and suitably amusing. The film has a brisk pace to it and the (toe-tapping, I'm afraid) music is expertly chosen, all the tunes fit their respective scenes. You could argue there are a few too many songs, at least compared to the standard scenes, but I'm not even sure that's the case myself. The voice cast are also praiseworthy. Anna Kendrick is a smartly chosen lead, with Justin Timberlake, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Zooey Deschanel and Christine Baranski offering firm support. There are plenty of familiar voices behind those aforementioned actors too, including Russell Brand (eerily playing his future self?) and John Cleese. A pleasant surprise, this. I now wonder if they did as well as this with the two sequels, I plan to soon see.



