Stella: An Angry Birds Movie

 is a 2022 American-Finnish computer-animated comedy film based on Rovio Entertainment's Angry Birds video game series and a spin-off of 2016's The Angry Birds Movie and its 2019 sequel. Directed by Sean Charmatz and Rich Moore and written by Josh Klausner and Darren Lemke, the film is loosely based on Angry Birds Stella, and it stars Kate McKinnon, Rachel Bloom, Kate Micucci, Javon Walton, Charli XCX, Alison Brie, and Cree Summer.

Stella: An Angry Birds Movie premiered on August 9, 2022 at Empire, Leicester Square and was theatrically released in the United States on August 19, 2022 by Sony Pictures Releasing in 3D and Dolby Cinema. The film received generally positive reviews with praise on the cast as well as the faithfulness to the source material and humor, with several critics deeming the film superior to the previous installments, although its lack of ambition and its plot issues received criticism. The film has grossed over $477 million worldwide and became the highest grossing Angry Birds movie worldwide.

Plot
Stella, is a pink bird who lives on Bird Island, and eventually gets bored of living on the island. After a long time in planning and investigating, Stella decides to go to the ancient Golden Island and invites her friends Silver, Willow, Gale, Poppy, Dahlia, and Luca while being warned about the dangers of that island by Red but Stella ends up ignoring his warnings and goes anyways.

More to be added

Cast
Additionally, Jason Sudeikis, Josh Gad, and Danny McBride all reprise their roles from the previous installments as Red, Chuck, and Bomb respectively.
 * Kate McKinnon as Stella
 * Rachel Bloom as Silver
 * Charli XCX as Willow
 * Alison Brie as Dahlia
 * Javon Walton as Luca
 * Cree Summer as Gale
 * Kate Micucci as Poppy. The character was briefly voiced by Maya Rudolph in The Angry Birds Movie.
 * Nicki Minaj as Pinky
 * Dove Cameron as Ella
 * Ian Hecox as Bubbles
 * Pierce Gagnon, JoJo Siwa and Owen Wilder Vaccaro as The Blues
 * Tony Hale as Mime

Production
Coming soon!

Release
The film was released on August 19, 2022 by Sony Pictures Releasing. The film was originally scheduled to be released on June 10, 2022, July 15, and July 29. Early access screenings occurred in the United States on August 6, 2022. It is the first Sony Pictures Animation film since Ico (2019) to receive a worldwide theatrical release after The Mitchells vs. the Machines (2021), Wish Dragon (2021), Vivo (2021), and Hotel Transylvania: Transformania (2022) were assigned VOD and direct-to-streaming releases in response to the closure of cinema theaters due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Marketing
A teaser poster was released on April 12, 2022. The film's official trailer was released online on April 20, 2022. The film's second full trailer was later released online on June 30.

Home media
Stella: An Angry Birds Movie is slated for released on digital on October 18, 2022 and on Blu-Ray, 4K UHD and DVD on November 8, 2022.

In April 2021, Sony signed deals with Netflix and Disney for the rights to their 2022 to 2026 film slate, following the films' theatrical and home media windows. Netflix signed for exclusive "pay 1 window" streaming rights, which is typically an 18-month window and included the sequel to Araceli; this deal built on an existing output deal that Netflix had signed with Sony Pictures Animation in 2014. Disney signed for "pay 2 window" rights for the films, which would be streamed on Disney+ and Hulu as well as broadcast on Disney's linear television networks.

Box office
As of September 29, 2022, Stella: An Angry Birds Movie has grossed $149.6 million in the United States and Canada and $328.1 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $477.7 million. It is the highest grossing film of the Angry Birds franchise as well as Sony's highest grossing film of 2022.

Stella: An Angry Birds Movie was released alongside Beast and Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero and was initially projected to gross $20 million in its opening weekend at 4,100 locations. After making $15.9 million on its first day, including $4.5 million in Thursday previews, the biggest for the Angry Birds franchise, weekend estimates were raised to $50 million. It ended up topping box office and making $53.7 million, the biggest opening for an Angry Birds movie and more than the total lifeline gross of The Angry Birds Movie 2 ($41.7 million). The film dropped a larger than expected -64.3% and made $18.6 million in its second weekend, dropping to second behind holdover Hailey. On September 2, 2022, its 15th day of release, the film surpassed The Angry Birds Movie ($107.5 million) lifeline gross to become the highest grossing Angry Birds film domestically. It remained in second behind Hailey once again in its third this time dropping -26.2% making an estimated $13.8 million over the weekend and $17.7 million during the extended Labor Day weekend. In its fourth weekend, it dropped -44.4%, while making $7.6 million, placing third behind Barbarian and Hailey. In it's fifth weekend, the film dropped -52.4% and made $3.6 million. The film dropped -25.8% and made $2.7 million in it's sixth weekend placing seventh.

Internationally, the film opened up to $58.1 million for a worldwide debut of $111.8 million. In it's second weekend, the film's overseas and worldwide gross surpassed The Angry Birds Movie 2's respective $110.1 million and $152.8 million grosses. In its third, it made $35 million. In its fourth, it opened up in China and Australia to $48.9 and $16.2 million respectively, both the biggest for the franchise, propelling the film past The Angry Birds Movie to become the highest grossing Angry Birds movie worldwide. In it's fifth international weekend, it opened in Japan and made $15.9 million in it's opening weekend while crossing $300 million overseas.

Critical response
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 76% based on 252 reviews, and an average rating of 6.5/10. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100, based on 44 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale, an improvement over the main films' "B+", while those at PostTrak gave it an 84% positive score.

Future
Before the film's release, Kate McKinnon stated that a sequel could be produced as long as enough audiences show up to see the original film.