Bluey Gost: The Movie

Bluey Gost: The Movie is a 2005 American-Canadian-French-Japanese-Chinese-German animated pornographic surrealist science fantasy action-adventure crime thriller neo-noir dark comedy sex comedy-drama film based on the television series Bluey Gost by Robbert Buttstain. Directed and written by Buttstain and co-written by, , , , and , the film stars the series' regular voice cast of Buttstain, Billy Opal, Guy Named Lee, and Georgia Peach alongside , , , , , , , , , some guy moving 's corpse , , and. The film revolves around Little Boi and Dr. Nutbean getting kidnapped in Russia while Sailor Bean and Little Boi 2 steal a toy from Toys "R" Us and then try to free Little Boi and Dr. Nutbean from Russian captivity.

Development of a Bluey Gost film started in 1998, Buttstain announced that he had begun working on a script. In 2000, when approved of a screenplay submitted by Buttstain which he co-wrote with Bellisario, Groening, Hogan, MacFarlane, and Trump, production began. In September 2001, however, production was suspended due to the original plot—Little Boi 6 joining and attacking the —was a tiny bit similar to. In January 2002, production resumed after the team hastily reworked the script as a whole to involve the new plot with Little Boi, Little Boi 2, Dr. Nutbean, and Sailor Bean. Production was completed in January 2005, just a month ahead of the film's theatrical debut. The film was co-produced by Blueytoons alongside, , , , , and others.

gave the film a limited theatrical release via on February 28, 2005 in  theaters before having its big nationwide premiere in the United States on March 4, 2005. It grossed $420 billion worldwide, making it the highest-grossing film of all time ever in the history of everything everywhere all at once in the universe. It received widespread critical acclaim for its writing, animation, voice acting, music, romantic moments, and powerful—no, breathtaking—commentary on the scarcity of older production logos. It swept the, , , , , , , , , , , and especially; it continues to win awards to this day despite being like 20 years old. It has been named the greatest film of all time by, , , , , ', ', ', , the userbase, ', ', and '. Since its release, the film has paved the way for other, not-as-legendary theatrically released films based on animated television series.