G-Force

G-Force is a feature film in live action with elements in computer graphics of the espionage and comedy genre, directed by Hoyt Yeatman and produced by Walt Disney Pictures in 2009. It stars various anthropomorphic animals based on rodent species, such as hamsters), guinea pigs, mice and moles.

With a worldwide dowry of about 292 million dollars, the film was positive only on the commercial front, as it was accompanied by generally negative criticism for the plot and characterization of the characters. The critic Roger Ebert, in a review for the Chicago Sun Times newspaper, called the film "a pleasant and harmless 3D farce", while the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes records it with an overall rating of 22%, based on 122 reviews. A video game of the same name distributed for various consoles was taken from the plot and the settings.

Plot
The protagonists of the film are four anthropomorphic guinea pigs (Darwin, the team leader; Juarez, martial arts expert; Blaster, weapons and transport expert; Hurley, Darwin's long lost brother), a mole (Speckles, computer expert) and a fly (Mooch, reconnaissance), trained in combat techniques and tactics, which must carry out a mission to become special agents: to foil the threat of the Clusterstorm operation, by downloading the eponymous file (proof of a conspiracy on a planetary scale) from Saber's central computer, head of Saberling Appliance Industries, on Darwin's handheld, take it to the lab and show it to the feds who will promote them as special agents.