If you have or even know someone who has a passing interest in video games, you probably don’t need me to tell you who Sonic the Hedgehog is. But just in case, he’s a very fast alien hedgehog who loves chili dogs and is obsessed with speed. He’s a lot like me in some ways, although I generally prefer my speed in car form and not by running. I don’t have the knees for that. The chili dog thing is the same, though. Now he’s Earthbound, living in Green Hills, Colorado with Cyclops, his wife, and their dog. Along the way in the films, he’s picked up some friends, including Miles “Tails” Prower (my favorite when I was a kid), a multi-tailed fox who can fly like a helicopter and is also a pilot and Knuckles the Echidna, who punches stuff really hard. They’re also pretty fast, but for Sonic, speed is the be all and end all. Sonic’s games have been a bit of a mixed bag (one day it might get its Super Mario Odyssey moment, but not yet) and the movies have been no different. The first was an affable, but baffling road trip movie between him and a small town cop. The second was a better, albeit convoluted and slightly too long movie with a very human-centric B-plot at a wedding in Hawaii. Don’t get me wrong, I liked them both to varying degrees, but neither were what I was expecting out of a Sonic movie franchise.
The third movie, refreshingly plainly named Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (no Spider-Man confusion here), then, came as a welcomed addition to the franchise back when it released in 2024. But I again didn’t know what to expect. Let’s get into it.
Humans take a backseat in Sonic 3, and while I didn’t mind their inclusion in the first two films (even the sojourn to Hawaii, while confusing, was largely pleasant), it was nice to let the cartoon characters really shine in this one. We have enough of them now that they can be the focus instead of supplementing them with more human protagonists. Sonic and his team have an unwelcome visitor in the midst of some celebrations and are whisked away to deal with an emerging incident that they seem uniquely qualified to handle. Krysten Ritter (Jessica Jones, Don’t Trust the B) plays GUN Director Rockwell, who is their main contact in this one and even though her role is pretty small, it’s always nice to see Jessica Jones on the big screen. In typical Sonic fashion, he runs full speed, headstrong and head first into danger.
In this case, the danger is Shadow, another otherworldly hedgehog with chaos energy superpowers. Taken aback, Team Sonic is dealt a defeat and a mystery to solve. Shadow, as we learn in the opening scene, was being held in stasis in a top secret GUN facility for 50 years. Some poor GUN agents had the Sisyphean task of going and watching him everyday, an alien hedgehog who never so much as twitches a muscle (although, then again, no sympathy for jackboots). Until one day he does. The GUN system, not as secure as they think it is, gets hacked by an outside force and Shadow wakes up. And after 5 decades being imprisoned, Shadow is very, very angry. And he’s taking it out on Tokyo (I swear, for an agency whose every agent seems to have an American accent except for the doorman in London, their facilities seem to be anywhere but the US). GUN is as scared of Shadow as he is angry at them. It makes you wonder: if a top secret extrajudicial government agency is that afraid of him, is he dangerous or is he dangerous to them? Because there is a difference. Like I said, Shadow did handily dispatch with Sonic, Tails, and Knuckles, so he’s clearly very powerful. And he’s hell bent on doling out pain to GUN. He’s one little fuzzball of rage. But about 20 minutes in, we get a glimpse into why he’s so mad and I can’t say that I would feel very different. Of course, I’m not a superpowered alien, so I’d probably just angrily tweet about it. No one’s listening there anyway, it’s the same as screaming into a pillow (except occasionally you get called a slur). But Shadow, oh no, he’s got the exact opposite of futile rage. He’s angry and he has the power to do something catastrophic about it. They don’t call it chaos energy for nothing. It gets intense, especially as Shadow is voiced by Keanu Reeves (Hardball, The Lake House), so it gets his particular brand of smoldering intensity. I can’t say I’m always the biggest fan of screen actors doing VA because it is a different skill and there are so many incredibly talented VAs out there that it almost seems a shame to pass one of them over for marquee appeal. But I absolutely adore Keanu Reeves, even before John Wick rebirthed the action film and as someone who’s never even liked The Matrix movies all that much, I’ve always loved Keanu. So I’m okay with Johnny Silverhand getting the voice here. I’m just always happy when I hear Keanu Reeves talk, so I’m totally biased.
Returning as Sonic is Ben Schwartz (Parks & Rec, Space Force), Idris Elba (Zootopia 2, Finding Dory) is Knuckles once again, and the very talented VA for Tails pretty much across the franchise is back too, Colleen O’Shaughnessey (you’ve heard her voice before). So too is Sonic’s de facto dad Tom, played by James Marsden (Jury Duty, Disenchanted), his mom Maddie, played by Tika Sumpter (Ride Along), and, of course, Jim Carrey returns as Dr. Robotnik/Eggman/whatever Sonic’s nickname for him is next. Even Lee Majdoub and Adam Pally return as Robotnik’s stalwart assistant Agent Stone and Knuckles’s confidant Wade (though just for a cameo; give me Knuckles season 2 already!). And you know what? They all do fine. Carrey does embody the role of Robotnik very well, even if that’s not really what I imagined him to be and Ben Schwartz does an admirable job of succeeding Jaleel White as the voice of Sonic. But you don’t watch this movie for the acting. There’s nothing wrong with the acting, it’s just not that important.
What is important, though, is the sense of fun that a movie like this is supposed to have. There is a lot of joy and levity in a film like this and even if you don’t find yourself laughing out loud all the time, it’s still a very pleasant place to be. And what really sets it apart from mindless, flashy, bright kids’ movies is that it does have depth to it and it does approach serious topics. So while it very easily could have been A Minecraft Movie or as bad as Illumination’s The Super Mario Bros. Movie, it’s not. It’s much better those movies; all three of the Sonic films are. There’s actually a story here, not just a collection of references, memes, and references to memes. So as we’re on the precipice of being subjected to another Illumination Mario film, I wanted to take a moment to celebrate Sonic; it’ll never win an Oscar, but if they gave out most improved player awards for movie franchises somewhere, Sonic would have to be in the running.
The Sonic movies have been an incredibly strange journey. First, there was the fan backlash over Sonic’s teeth, among other things, which led to a redesign (which, fair, those teeth were creepy). Then, the titular hedgehog, known for running everywhere, spends most of the runtime in the passenger seat of a pickup truck. I thought it was a silly movie. Then, against all odds, the movie grew on me. The strength of Ben Schwartz’s VA, the oddly endearing performances of the unexpectedly human cast; they wormed their way into my heart somehow. Maybe it was nostalgia, I loved Sonic when I was a kid. The second one was a winner for me from the first viewing. I ended up so smitten with the franchise that I even watched and was full of praise for millennial fever dream that is the Knuckles show. So much so that Sonic 3 was the first movie I went to the theaters to see after the pandemic.
Sonic 3 is a tale of two hedgehogs, differentiated not by their powers, but by their experiences. Sonic found his Earth family after he lost Longclaw. He was met with kindness and caring. Shadow didn’t have that luxury. Yes, he found friendship and family, but that didn’t last. Shadow was part of GUN, held hostage at first, until the kindness he was shown was ripped from him in horrible fashion. Where Sonic found acceptance, Shadow found only cruelty and isolation. Given this, his anger turned to rage. Rage into violence. Violence into hopelessness. It’s a cycle that feeds itself ouroboros-like on the parts of you that want to believe in good things.
People say it’s easy to give up. Easy to give up on humanity, easy to give up on yourself, easy to give up hope. It’s not. Giving up is no one’s Plan A, B, or C. Someone only gives up when they feel like there’s no hope left. No, it’s not easy at all. Giving up is one of the hardest things a person can do. The things they had to endure that brought them to that point. Alone, it can be too much. It can force you to close yourself off. Soldiering on is difficult, of course; even harder still is trying to change things and hold on to hope that seems to be perpetually slipping out of your grasp. This is what Sonic 3 is about. Not the bravery of it, no. That’s a part of it for sure, but it’s about the sheer will to continue to believe and the shoulders to lean on that it takes not to give up and give in to hate, rage, and hopelessness. It’s a testament to the idea that no matter how powerful hate and cruelty are, kindness and empathy are stronger. Pain can change who you are. It can turn you cold. It can make you feel isolated and it can make you isolate yourself. It can sap all the joy and color out of your life. It’s hard to move on when pain is all you feel. And pain never goes away. Not really.
It’s hard, but a burden shared is a burden lessened. These things are easier to carry when someone is there to carry it with you. But it’s also easier said than done. Not everyone has people to lean on. Not everyone has a support structure. Some people even have people around them who want to plunge them deeper into that hate and rage for their own benefit. Which makes it all the more important to reach out with kindness first. I’m reminded of Paden, Kevin Kline’s character from Silverado, who says that he can either walk around the world like everybody’s his friend or nobody is and it doesn’t make much of a difference. Now, I probably wouldn’t go that far; after all, when we meet Paden, he had just been robbed and left for dead in the desert in his underwear by his supposed friends. But Sonic posits that the simple act of leading with kindness is the kind of thing that can make a difference in or even save the world. And I think that’s a pretty damn cool message.
Not everything about Sonic 3 works and it’s definitely not high art. No one is going to mention Sonic 3 in the same sentence as Sinners or Breathless (except this sentence). But it’s not just empty calories, bright colors, and mindless hypnotic distraction for kids either. Like Zootopia, there’s a lesson to learn here and it’s one that everyone could do with, not just kids. I think that’s part of what makes Sonic one of the most fun family franchises out there right now. Rated PG, running 1 hour, 50 minutes, and streaming on Paramount+ and Prime Video, this one’s worth watching through to the end credits. Because it’s not just fun. But it is really fun.