How old is puss in boots
Top Hat. Looking good never looked so good. Animation Adventure Comedy Family Fantasy. Rated PG for some adventure action and mild rude humor. Did you know Edit. Trivia A conscious decision was made to make the world of Puss in Boots very different from that depicted in the "Shrek" films. In the latter, the backgrounds and stylizations are very fairy tale. Here, it has a distinctly Spanish feel with warmer, more orange colors.
Goofs When Kitty softpaws, Humpty and puss are in the giants cloud lair, the high altitude causes their voices to raise in pitch, Humpty explains that is caused by the low pressure due to the height. However, when the trio exit the lair when they are falling their voices are normal in pitch and somehow not high at all.
Quotes [from trailer] Jill : [dangles Puss over a canyon] Is it true a cat always lands on its feet? Crazy credits Puss returns to the Glitter Box where he and Kitty Softpaws dance and the other cats spell out the voice actors' names with their bodies. User reviews Review. Top review. Better than expected, but far from greatness. And if I had gone to see it — and, to reiterate, I wouldn't have — there's simply no way I would have seen it in 3D. But it was free, so I did.
I guess you could say I had low expectations. Some background: I loved "Shrek", I basically couldn't stand "Shrek 2", in part because I found the Puss in Boots character more annoying than charming, and I never bothered with the other "Shrek" sequels.
Life is just too short. So I expected "Puss in Boots" to be, at best, tolerable, stupid, and intermittently funny. Imagine my surprise when I found that it was somewhat better than tolerable, more than intermittently funny, and actually kind of clever. The story, as should be expected from a member of the "Shrek" lineage, plays fast and loose with fairy tale characters, plot points, and conventions.
Puss, an orphaned cat now branded as an outlaw, joins forces with Humpty Dumpty, an egg of questionable intent, and Kitty Softpaws, a feline fatale, to steal the magic beans from Jack and Jill, grow a magic beanstalk, and find the golden goose of legend. Naturally, things don't go according to plan, and the plot thickens.
It's pointless, but fun. There are instances of real invention here. The first is the setting, which is sort of a medieval spaghetti western, although the western card was played better in "Rango". There are several great visual gags, like what happens to Humpty's covered wagon, and a dance fight that is easily the best part of the movie. Without giving anything away, I'll also say that, the more you think about the identity of the "monster", the funnier, and the more fitting, it becomes.
However, the storytelling is sloppy at times. There's at least one plot point that is dispensed with far too quickly, and the fate of one character simply doesn't make sense. Still, it all kind of works, and the good parts are good enough to help you forget the shortcomings. Ultimately, the movie is saved by its pacing and its animation, which, as much as I hate to admit it, is absolutely stunning in 3D. I can't recommend paying the 3D up-charge, but I will say that those who do will probably not be disappointed.
This isn't a cheap, gimmicky use of 3D, but one that actual adds depth and detail. Donkey had a particular rivalry with him, considering Puss a threat to his position as Shrek's best friend.
It is revealed that Puss has a litter of siblings, a sick mother and a father who lives off the garbage although he may have been lying so Shrek would spare his life. He has also stated that he "Hates Mondays". This could be a reference to Garfield, another famous orange cat, who hates Mondays. When Shrek and Donkey enter the castle to find Fiona and are being chased by guards; however in the Jail Tower after Shrek said "what you lack is the capacity," Puss appears to be in chains.
Puss repays his debt to Shrek by holding them off he removes his hat, looks at the guards cutely, and then attacks them when they stop and say "aww! Due to the friendship that has developed Puss decides to be Donkey's dronkies' uncle and becomes a permanent addition to their team. Donkey, Puss, Dragon and the Dronkeys remain in Far Far Away with Fiona and Shrek, helping the royal couple run the country in the place of the ailing king.
Puss joins Shrek and Donkey on their journey to find Artie Fiona's cousin and heir to the throne and later encourages Shrek to be kinder to Artie to gain the teenager's trust. He also tries, rather unsuccessfully, to advise Shrek who has just found out that Fiona is pregnant with his children, on fatherhood by suggesting they take his cousin's boat for two weeks of fishing and mojitos but Donkey is against that.
When the group is magically sent back to Far Far Away by Merlin , Puss and Donkey accidentally have their bodies switched. The two swapped animals later join forces with the Far Far Away princesses and other captives of Prince Charming and help rescue Shrek.
Towards the end of the movie, they confront Merlin and demand he put them in their correct bodies. He does so, although their tails seem to have been switched this time in the next scene, this is shown to have been corrected as well.
At the end of the movie, Puss helps Shrek and Fiona care for their new born triplets. He has trouble with them pulling his fur and tail. In the fourth film, Puss is seen as a regular guest at Shrek's home, eating dinner with Shrek's family and telling the children of the tale of how Shrek met Fiona. He is not properly seen again until Shrek has entered the alternate reality made by Rumpelstiltskin.
Here, he has retired from swordsmanship and has become obese and shiftless, and Fiona's pet as well. He befriends Shrek when he realizes there was a spark of romantic interest between Shrek and Fiona. Puss takes part in the ambush on Rumplestiltskin's ogre hunt, but Fiona's army of ogres are captured by the Pied Piper.
Puss and Donkey rescue Shrek and Fiona from the Piper, but Fiona leaves in anger when she thought Puss told Shrek everything about her. Puss and Donkey later lead the ogres in the battle against Rumpelstiltskin's forces, and helps save Shrek and Fiona from Dragon. Puss eventually disappears with everything else when Fiona's curse is broken and reality is restored. In the real world, Puss celebrates the ogre babies' first birthday with everyone else.
Puss tells the story of Santa Claus as a smooth Spanish cat similar to himself. He is distracted from telling the tale when he sees a glass Christmas tree ornament and begins batting at it. When he realises what he was doing, he walks away muttering "I have shamed myself".
Later, when Shrek explains that he never celebrated Christmas before and wanted it to come right, Puss tells his friend "Christmas just comes".
In Shrek 2 he also appeared as a boss. He also appears in Shrek Super Slam as one of the 10 starting characters. His Super Slam is that he uses his "cute face" and stuns the opponents with that.
He also appears in Shrek Smash and Crash Racing. Puss in Boots is one of the eight unlockable racers in this game. Puss's kart is a Bull and his personal item is his hat. Puss is an orange tabby cat with green eyes and a Spanish accent.
He wears a leather, broad-brimmed hat lined with red with a fluffy yellow feather , a black leather cape, a belt with a scabbard that contains his sword, and his famed leather boots. He has very sharp claws which he uses in his adventures. His whiskers were curly in the Shrek movies. In Puss in Boots however, his whiskers weren't curly, presumably due to the film being a prequel, which also suggests that Puss didn't curl his whiskers until later in his life.
He is a proud and honorable fighter. Puss is also a "ladies' cat". Puss likes to tell stories and sing and dance. Despite Donkey's antagonizing nature towards him, Puss is normally the less proactive of the two, as well as often trying to be the voice of reason between conflicting parties. Also, in Thriller Night , he spoke the poetic section of Thriller.
WikiShrek Explore. Shrek the Halls Scared Shrekless. Sexy Stuff. What parents need to know Parents need to know that this spin-off of the popular Shrek franchise has some mild innuendo, cartoonish violence, and one character death. Continue reading Show less. Stay up to date on new reviews. Get full reviews, ratings, and advice delivered weekly to your inbox. User Reviews Parents say Kids say. Adult Written by Holly R.
October 15, Inappropriate humor It's inappropriate and all the humor that is actually funny is aimed at adults. There's a reference to marijuana usage by comparison to catnip and it Continue reading. Report this review. Adult Written by Will loves movies June 1, Pray for mercy. Puss in Boots, the spin-off from the Shrek movies, is a great family movie.
The positve messages are that of redemption, and that as Puss says: "it is nev Teen, 14 years old Written by ferret lover February 21, Just to let parents with young kids now, the movie begins with puss describing himsel Teen, 14 years old Written by Alex. Fierro February 5, What's the story?
Is it any good? Talk to your kids about Our editors recommend. Gross-out laughs meet a marvelous fairy tale mix. Shrek 2. Just as much fairy tale fun as the first one. Shrek the Third. Cute but not as fun as past movies; some cartoon violence.
Shrek Forever After. Fiona's fierce, Shrek's lovable in still-funny 4th movie. Shrek the Halls. Christmas in the swamp is great family fun.
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