Osmosis Jones Full ((install)) Official
Here is everything you need to know about this biological buddy-cop flick, from its star-studded cast to its lasting legacy. The Premise: The City of Frank
The marketing struggled to target the right audience. The animated segments were highly sophisticated, featuring mature noir tropes and clever biological puns. Meanwhile, the live-action segments leaned heavily into gross-out humor (including pimple-popping and vomiting gags). This left parents unsure if it was a movie for young kids or teens. osmosis jones full
Osmosis Jones received mixed reviews upon release. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 55% Tomatometer score based on 108 reviews, with an average rating of 5.5/10. The site's consensus notes that "Osmosis Jones is a clever concept with top-notch animation but suffers from uneven execution". The audience score stands at 42%. On Metacritic, the film has a score of 57/100, indicating mixed or average reviews. IMDb users rate it slightly higher at 6.3/10. Here is everything you need to know about
When Frank eats a hard-boiled egg that fell into a monkey cage, he unknowingly ingests a deadly biological weapon: Thrax, a lethal virus known as "The Red Death." On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 55%
Inside Frank’s body, the city of "Frank" is populated by anthropomorphic cells and organs. Our hero, Osmosis Jones (Chris Rock), is a rebellious, rule-breaking white blood cell (a cop) who wants to be a hero. He is teamed up by-the-book cold pill, Drix (David Hyde Pierce), to stop Thrax before he melts Frank’s hypothalamus and kills him from the inside out.
The animation team crafted a visually stunning sci-fi cityscape out of human anatomy. The stomach is a smoky transit terminal, the brain is a high-tech command center run by Mayor Phlegmming (William Shatner), and the bladder is... exactly what you think it is. 2. The Memorable Villain
In the summer of 2001, Warner Bros. released a high-concept film that literally looked inside the human body. Directed by the Farrelly brothers (live-action sequences) and Piet Kroon and Tom Sito (animation), Osmosis Jones combined gross-out live-action comedy with a slick, neo-noir animated buddy-cop movie.