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Patrick Star Wears Pirate Outfit All Wrong in Exclusive The SpongeBob Movie Poster

Patrick Star Wears Pirate Outfit All Wrong in Exclusive The SpongeBob Movie Poster

sondramedia is debuting an unique poster for The SpongeBob Film: Seek for SquarePants, the most recent journey comedy from Paramount Photos. The subsequent film installment to Nickelodeon‘s common animated franchise is slated to premiere in theaters on December 19, 2025.

“SpongeBob and his Bikini Backside mates set sail of their largest, all-new, can’t miss cinematic occasion ever . . . The SpongeBob Film: Seek for SquarePants. Determined to be an enormous man, SpongeBob units out to show his bravery to Mr. Krabs by following The Flying Dutchman — a mysterious swashbuckling ghost pirate — on a seafaring comedy-adventure that takes him to the deepest depths of the deep sea, the place no Sponge has gone earlier than,” reads the film’s official synopsis.

What does The SpongeBob Film poster present?

The brand new poster reveals off a better have a look at Patrick Star, who might be seen sporting a pirate-inspired outfit. Nonetheless, his hook and eyepatch are hilariously positioned mistaken. The fan-favorite character will as soon as once more be voiced by Invoice Fagerbakke.

The SpongeBob Film: Seek for SquarePants is directed by Derek Drymon from a screenplay written by Pam Brady and Matt Lieberman, based mostly on a narrative by Marc Ceccarelli, Kaz, and Brady. The voice solid additionally contains Tom Kenny as SpongeBob, Carolyn Lawrence as Sandy, Clancy Brown as Mr. Krabs, Rodger Bumpass as Squidward, Mr. Lawrence as Plankton, and Mark Hamill as The Flying Dutchman, with Regina Corridor, Sherry Cola, Arturo Castro, George Lopez, and Ice Spice in undisclosed roles.

Government producers are Marc Ceccarelli, Vincent Waller, Pete Chiappetta, Anthony Tittanegro, and Andrew Lary, with Brady, Lisa Stewart, and Aaron Dem serving as producers. It’s a manufacturing of Paramount Animation and Nickelodeon Films in affiliation with Area Leisure and MRC. The film has been granted a PG score for “impolite humor, some thematic components, and delicate language.”

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