Sausage Party- Foodtopia -
The animation has received a noticeable budget bump from the film’s relatively modest $19 million. The food textures look more appetizing (and thus more disturbing when ripped apart). The action sequences are more inventive, including a jaw-dropping set piece where Foodtopia fends off a siege of sentient silverware. Sausage Party: Foodtopia will not win over anyone who hated the original. The dialogue is still wall-to-wall with F-bombs, graphic sexual innuendo, and startlingly violent food deaths. If the thought of a potato being peeled alive or a live-action cooking show (presented as a snuff film for food) makes you wince, this isn’t for you.
Stream it with a six-pack and a strong stomach. Just don’t look your dinner in the eye. Sausage Party- Foodtopia
The new series begins with a seemingly utopian premise. Frank, Brenda, and their friends (including the returning Barry, a deformed, murderous hot dog) have built a society free from human tyranny. But as any political theorist will tell you, building a functioning government is a lot harder than a good revenge massacre. The eight-episode season cleverly deconstructs the "happily ever after." Foodtopia quickly descends into chaos. Without the threat of humans to unite them, the food begins to turn on itself. Issues of labor, class, and resource allocation rear their ugly heads. Who does the menial work? How are laws enforced? And what happens when a charismatic leader (a returning Edward Norton as the anxiety-ridden bagel, Sammy) starts preaching a new, more radical vision? The animation has received a noticeable budget bump












