Dexter's Laboratory: Ego Trip

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Dexter's Laboratory: Ego Trip
Ego Trip.jpg
"This is where it all ends, Mandark. Now it's just you, me, me, me and me."
Genre: Science fiction comedy
Science fantasy
Adventure
Directed By: Craig McCracken
Written By: Genndy Tartakovsky
Chris Savino
Amy Keating Rogers
John McIntyre
Paul Radish
Starring: Jeff Bennett
Christine Cavanaugh
Kat Cressida
Eddie Deezen
Tom Kenny
Kath Soucie
Distributed By: Warner Bros. Television Distribution
Cartoon Network
Release Date: December 10, 1999
Runtime: 48 minutes
Country: United States
Prequel: Dexter's Laboratory


Dexter's Laboratory: Ego Trip is an animated television special based on the Cartoon Network animated television series Dexter's Laboratory. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera Cartoons and originally aired on December 10, 1999. The special follows Dexter, the series' protagonist, as he travels forward through time and meets futuristic versions of himself and his rival Mandark.

Synopsis

Robots from the future come to destroy Dexter because he saved the future. Dexter defeats them and because of hearing that he saved the future, he travels into the future to find out what it is that he did.

Why It Goes Tripping

  1. This is Cartoon Network's first ever movie, and it's a great one too!
  2. The voice acting is still great as most actors reprised their roles.
  3. The animation is wonderfully colorful and detailed and is a huge step up from the TV show.
  4. Dexter is still his lovable, genius self, especially when he teams up with his future selves to stop the Mandarks.
  5. Mandark is still his charming, villainous self, as he teams up with his future selves to take over the world and defeat the Dexters.
  6. Despite Dee Dee only having a short appearance, she was surprisingly, the one to defeat the Mandarks in the end.
    • It was pretty simple, Dee Dee went to Dexter’s lab, but Dexter quickly told her to leave before she could do anything. While annoyed by this, she does leave but accidentally goes into the time machine, which sent her to the moment the Dexters were fighting the Mandarks to push the button. She then walks over to the buttons and pushes the green one, which was the one to foil the Mandarks, and she goes back into the time machine to the present time.
  7. The story is well-written, as Dexter goes to various times in the future to help and team up with his future selves, and fight against the Mandarks to save the future.
  8. There are lots of great action, such as many of the fight scenes involving the Dexters, the Mandarks, and the robots and inventions used.
  9. Many hilarious moments in the film, like the moment when Dee Dee was the one who saved the future.
  10. The ending is satisfying as the Mandarks were defeated and the world is saved.
  11. While the Dexters were mad and made robots to go after Dee Dee, feeling they should have been the ones to save the future, the moment Dexter goes back and sees himself destroying the robots, this ironically evens it out, and shows why the robots didn’t attack Dexter. Dexter himself who got back, decided it was not worth the trouble thinking about the time loop, and called it a day.
  12. Dexter does enjoy his lunch, and when Dee Dee comes into the kitchen, he simply walks away with his lunch, still mad at her. Dee Dee stands there confused and shrugs, not knowing that she saved the world and took Dexter’s glory. It was a decent final scene to the movie.
  13. This is where it all ends, Mandark. Now it's just you, me, me, me and me.

Bad Qualities

  1. The fact Dexter sent robots to go after Dee Dee was pretty mean-spirited, and also, that his robots were the reason the movie’s events happened in the first place. But thankfully, he ended up destroying the robots before they had a chance of finding Dee Dee, and decided to ignore the time loop to continue the normal side of his day.
  2. Although this is a small nitpick, the timeline is a little confusing as this movie is supposed to take place after the events of the revival seasons which aired in 2001-2003 while the movie was released in 1999.
  3. False advertising/Sequel-baiting: The poster said this movie was "The First Dexter Movie Ever!", which could imply a potential sequel, but this is the only Dexter's Laboratory film to be ever produced. Even when Cartoon Network wanted the show to have 2 more seasons, they didn’t say anything about wanting another movie.

Reception

Marc Bernardin of Entertainment Weekly called Ego Trip "drawn-out", saying that Dexter's Laboratory does not do as well in an hour-long format as it does in normal television episodes. Christine Cavanaugh, the voice actor for Dexter, received an Annie Award in 2000 for the category "Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Female Performer in an Animated Television Production" for her role in the movie.

Videos

TBA

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