Itâs krakens vs. mermaids in DreamWorksâ latest action-adventure and coming-of-age animated film âRuby Gillman, Teenage Krakenâ starring a stellar voice cast that includes Lana Condor, known for âTo All The Boys Iâve Loved Beforeâ franchise, in the titular character, along with OscarÂŽ nominee Toni Collette (as Rubyâs mom), Academy AwardÂŽ winner Jane Fonda (as Rubyâs grandmother) and Emmy winner Annie Murphy as Chelsea. The movie also stars an extraordinary supporting cast that includes Emmy winner Colman Domingo (Fear the Walking Dead) as Rubyâs supportive dad, Emmy nominee Sam Richardson (Veep) as Rubyâs enthusiastic uncle and Blue Chapman (Council of Dads) as Rubyâs cool little brother.
Directed by Academy AwardÂŽ nominated filmmaker Kirk DeMicco ( âThe Croodsâ), âRuby Gillman, Teenage Krakenâ is a sweet, awkward 16-year-old who is desperate to fit in at Oceanside High, but she mostly just feels invisible. Sheâs math-tutoring her skater-boy crush (Jaboukie Young-White from Ralph Breaks the Internet), who only seems to admire her for her fractals, and sheâs prevented from hanging out with the cool kids at the beach because her over-protective supermom and has forbade Ruby from ever getting in the water. But when she breaks her momâs #1 rule, Ruby will discover that she is a direct descendant of the warrior kraken queen and is destined to inherit the throne from her commanding grandmother, the Warrior Queen of the Seven Seas.
The krakens are sworn to protect the oceans of the world against the vain, power-hungry mermaids who have been battling with the kraken for eons. Thereâs one major, and immediate, problem with that: The schoolâs beautiful, popular new girl, Chelsea just happens to be a mermaid. Ruby will ultimately need to embrace who she is and go big to protect those she loves most.
âAs a filmmaker, Iâve always been interested in subverting expectations in my storytelling,â DeMicco says. âWhen it came to Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken, one of the things that excited me most was the opportunity to do just that with the mythology of the krakens and mermaids. Traditionally, the kraken has been portrayed as a monstrous creature, something to be feared and avoided at all costs. But in this film, we wanted to explore the idea of krakens as powerful and benevolent protectors of the sea. Similarly, we wanted to take the traditional image of mermaids and turn it on its head, creating a more complex and nuanced mythology that challenged audience expectations.â
The result is a visually stunning, emotionally resonantâand very funnyâaquatic coming-of-age tale about a girl searching for a sense of belonging in the world and learning more than she could have ever imagined. âDreamWorks Animation has a long, comic tradition of subverting the heroâs journey, whether itâs an ogre who saves a princess, a panda that becomes a warrior, or a progressive Viking teen and his injured dragon who change the course of their community,â says DreamWorks Animation President Margie Cohn. âRuby Gillman represents a new chapter to that tradition: a teen girl with unexpected and extraordinary powers.â
A DreamWorks film and Universal Pictures presentation, âRuby Gillman, Teenage Krakenâ swims in Philippine cinemas on June 28.






