Turbo is a 2013 animated film produced by DreamWorks Animation about a garden snail named Turbo whose dream is to become the fastest snail in the world. The film features the voices of Ryan Reynolds, Paul Giamatti, and Samuel L. Jackson and follows Turbo as he gains super speed but must prove himself in the world of racing snails. While the film earned over $282 million, it lost $15.6 million for the studio due to its $127 million budget. A TV series and plans for a sequel film were later produced.
Turbo is a 2013 animated film produced by DreamWorks Animation about a garden snail named Turbo whose dream is to become the fastest snail in the world. The film features the voices of Ryan Reynolds, Paul Giamatti, and Samuel L. Jackson and follows Turbo as he gains super speed but must prove himself in the world of racing snails. While the film earned over $282 million, it lost $15.6 million for the studio due to its $127 million budget. A TV series and plans for a sequel film were later produced.
Turbo is a 2013 animated film produced by DreamWorks Animation about a garden snail named Turbo whose dream is to become the fastest snail in the world. The film features the voices of Ryan Reynolds, Paul Giamatti, and Samuel L. Jackson and follows Turbo as he gains super speed but must prove himself in the world of racing snails. While the film earned over $282 million, it lost $15.6 million for the studio due to its $127 million budget. A TV series and plans for a sequel film were later produced.
is a 2013 American computer-animated sports comedy film produced by DreamWorks
Animation and distributed by 20th Century Fox. It is based on an original idea by David Soren, who also directed the film in his feature debut.[8] Set in Los Angeles, the film features an ordinary garden snail named Turbo whose dream of becoming the world's fastest snail comes true. The film was released on July 17, 2013.[9] The film stars the voices of Ryan Reynolds, Paul Giamatti, Michael Peña, Snoop Dogg, Maya Rudolph, Michelle Rodriguez and Samuel L. Jackson.[8] The film was met with mixed to positive reviews. Despite earning $282.5 million on a $127 million budget, the studio had to take a total of $15.6 million write-down on behalf of the film. A television series based on the film, titled Turbo Fast, with only Ken Jeong and Michael Patrick Bell reprising their roles, was put into production a year before the film's release,[10] and it first aired on Netflix on December 24, 2013.[11] The film was dedicated to Nicholas Sanger Hoppe, who died of brain cancer before the film was released. Despite that the first film was a box office disappointment, the sequel titled Turbo 2 was in development, it will be in production in January 17, 2021, the sequel was scheduled to be theatrically released by Universal Pictures in the US on September 22, 2021.