GLENDALE, Calif., Feb. 24, 2012 — DreamWorks Animation SKG, Inc. (Nasdaq: DWA) today announced that Ryan Reynolds will lead an all-star cast including Paul Giamatti, Michael Pena, Luis Guzman, Bill Hader, Richard Jenkins, Ken Jeong, Michelle Rodriguez, Maya Rudolph, Ben Schwartz, Kurtwood Smith, Snoop Dogg and Samuel L. Jackson in the Company’s upcoming original film Turbo, which tells the story of an ordinary garden snail with dreams of racing greatness. Turbo is scheduled to come to the big screen on July 19, 2013.
David Soren (Merry Madagascar), a DreamWorks Animation veteran as a story artist, voice actor and director, is set to direct the film based on his own original concept. Soren is co-writing the script with Robert Siegel (The Wrestler) and Darren Lemke (Shrek Forever After). Lisa Stewart (Monsters vs. Aliens, Almost Famous) is producing with Susan Rogers serving as co-producer.
Turbo is a snail who dreams of being the greatest racer in the world, just like his hero, 5-time Indianapolis 500 champ, Guy Gagne. His obsession with speed and all things fast has made him an oddity and outsider in the slow and cautious snail community, and a constant embarrassment to his careful older brother, Chet. Turbo desperately wishes he could escape the slow-paced life he’s living. As luck would have it, he gets that chance one fateful day after a freak accident when he suddenly finds himself vested with the power of incredible speed. Turbo embarks on an extraordinary journey to achieve the impossible: racing against the best that IndyCar has to offer. Turbo is the ultimate underdog who achieves the impossible by refusing to let his limitations get in the way of his dreams.



“…which tells the story of an ordinary garden snail with dreams of racing greatness.”
Are you kidding me!? The three-toed sloth didn’t want any of that? All the hermit crab scripts were sold?
C’mon.
Ryan Reynolds is great. He must have a great agent as well.
It amazing to me why time and time again they make these fine funny movies but then question why they don’t sell toys and merchandise. Pixar even gets it wrong. And it’s all about the merchandise.
Great another kids movie wasting money on voice talent. Children don’t know who than Reynolds is and don’t care who voices an animated dog ditto for Guzman. I like almost all actors involved but its just a shame that so many roles go to the same people and you don’t need to be good looking to do voices
Go, Turbo, go!
“Turbo is the ultimate underdog who achieves the impossible by refusing to let his limitations get in the way of his dreams.”
According to this story, Turbo comes out in summer 2013. It should now be well into production to make this date as most of these animated features take far longer than 18 months from start to release.
Therefore, one would think the basic writing and direction started some time ago, unless Jeffrey K. can now turn these puppies out overnight….
Why spend money on these actors when kids could cares less?
More wasteful spending by the morons who churn out hits like Cowboys & Aliens, John Carter, Pluto Nash, and the list of flops goes on.
This is what happens in an industry where the only qualifications for being a studio development executive are (A) a desire to be in the business and (B) the willingness to take crap on a desk answering phones.
Keep makin’ those smart calls, suits.
You do know first picture voice over deals top out at $10K per session before box office bonuses, right? I’m not suggesting that money couldn’t be better spent but, with a budget north of $100M, I’m sure they’ll have plenty of money left over to make a movie they hope kids will want to see.
RE: The rest of your post: Decaf, bro.
I’m sorry but this movie sounds like it’s going to be stupid.
Animation isn’t always for the kids. Big names means the parents will go see it WITH their kids or alone. I don’t have kids and I could care less who the animation voice overs area. But I will still go see a movie and I’m an adult.