Penguins of Madagascar
Penguins of Madagascar | |
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Directed by | |
Screenplay by |
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Story by |
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Based on | The Penguins of Madagascar by Tom McGrath Eric Darnell |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Edited by | Nick Kenway |
Music by | Lorne Balfe |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release dates |
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Running time | 92 minutes[5] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $132 million[6] |
Box office | $373.5 million[7] |
Penguins of Madagascar is a 2014 American animated spy action comedy film[8] produced by DreamWorks Animation and PDI/DreamWorks and distributed by 20th Century Fox. A spin-off of the Madagascar franchise and the fourth film overall in the series, the film was directed by series director Eric Darnell[9] and Simon J. Smith from a screenplay written by Brandon Sawyer and the writing team of Michael Colton and John Aboud,[2] based on a story conceived by Colton, Aboud, Alan Schoolcraft, and Brent Simons. Despite the title of the film, it is not directly related to the Nickelodeon animated television series The Penguins of Madagascar. Starring the voices of Tom McGrath, Chris Miller, Christopher Knights, Conrad Vernon, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ken Jeong, Annet Mahendru, Peter Stormare and John Malkovich, it takes place directly after the events of Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted (2012),[10] following the adventures of four Adélie penguins - Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private - as they join forces with the North Wind intelligence agency to stop the Giant Pacific octopus Dave, who seeks revenge on all Adélie penguins across the Earth for being upstaged by capturing them.[8]
Development of a direct-to-video (DTV) spin-off film featuring the four penguins began following the release of the first Madagascar film in 2005, and it was initially planned for a 2009 release date. However, the film did not come to fruition until March 2011, when it was announced that the penguins would be given their own theatrical film instead. By 2012, DreamWorks Animation announced that the film would be released in March 2015 before being pushed forward to November 2014 in May of that year. Cumberbatch and Malkovich signed in August 2013. Lorne Balfe composed the score, and Pitbull performed a song featuring DJ Frank E.
Penguins of Madagascar was released theatrically in China on November 14, 2014, and in the United States on November 26, 2014.[2] The film received generally positive reviews from critics, with specific praise going to the vocal performances (particularly Cumberbatch and Malkovich), but despite grossing $373.5 million on a $132 million budget, the film underperformed by DreamWorks' standards and lost the studio $57.1 million, along with Mr. Peabody & Sherman earlier that year.[11] This is the final DreamWorks Animation film to be produced by PDI/DreamWorks before its closure on January 22, 2015, with DreamWorks Animation (DWA) Glendale taking over until 2024.[12]
Plot
[edit]In Antarctica, penguin chicks Skipper, Rico, and Kowalski, upon seeing a runaway egg roll away from their colony, rescue it from leopard seals on an abandoned whaling ship and are set adrift on an iceberg. When the egg hatches, the trio adopt the chick as their brother, Private.
Ten years later, after defeating Captain Chantel DuBois,[a] the penguins leave Circus Zaragoza to celebrate Private's birthday by breaking into Fort Knox to get Cheesy Dibbles from a vending machine, despite Private's real wish of being recognized as an official team member. The penguins are subsequently kidnapped and taken to a submarine, where they are confronted by Dave, a Giant Pacific octopus who was once a star attraction at Central Park Zoo until the penguins upstaged him with their cuteness. After being repeatedly passed between zoos and aquariums, each time being upstaged by penguins, a bitter Dave disguised himself as a human scientist named Doctor Octavius Brine to enact his revenge. Rico swallows a vial of Dave's special sauce – the Medusa Serum – and his snow globe collection before the penguins escape.
Fleeing through Venice while pursued by Dave's henchmen, the penguins are rescued by the North Wind, an inter-species intelligence agency consisting of Eurasian wolf leader whose name is classified (Skipper calls him "Classified"), polar bear muscle Corporal, harp seal demolitionist Short Fuse, and snowy owl intelligence analyst Eva. After Rico shows the North Wind the Medusa Serum, Dave hacks into the North Wind's computers to reveal he has made more of it. Deeming Skipper's team a liability to the mission, Classified darts them and puts them on a plane bound for Madagascar.
The penguins escape the plane, and, using Dave's snow globes, realize Dave targets every zoo and aquarium he was kicked out of and kidnaps their penguins, with the Shanghai Zoo as his next target. Skipper's team forms a plan to stop Dave, and Private reluctantly agrees to be the bait. The other penguins manage to trap Dave with a dinosaur skeleton just as the North Wind shows up. Dave escapes via a drain and captures the Shanghai penguins along with Private. Skipper, Rico, and Kowalski hijack the North Wind's jet to pursue him. At Dave's lair, Private learns that Dave plans to use the Medusa Serum to turn penguins into mindless and disfigured monsters for the public to hate and exterminate.
Upon reaching Dave's hideout, the penguins and the North Wind clash over their different plans to infiltrate the submarine, before Skipper relents and goes with the North Wind's plan. The penguins distract the octopus guards while the North Wind sneak inside, but both teams are captured. Dave tests the Medusa Serum on Private, but he escapes using a paper clip he swallowed earlier, unbeknownst to everyone present, who believe Private has been vaporized. Private finds and frees the North Wind, but they refuse to help without their equipment, so Private goes alone.
As Dr. Brine, Dave unleashes the mutated penguins on New York City. Private obtains Dave's ray, finds Skipper, Kowalski, and Rico, and restores their sanity. As the penguins and the North Wind battle Dave and his henchmen, Private inserts himself into Dave's ray, using the power of his cuteness to restore the other penguins. This leaves Private mutated, and Dave shrunk and trapped inside one of his snow globes. Private earns his place as a qualified member of the team, to the approval of the North Wind. The North Wind gives the penguins jetpacks; the penguins fly back to Circus Zaragoza.
In a post credits scene the penguins (back at the circus) restore Private back to normal with Dave’s machine.
Voice cast
[edit]- Tom McGrath as Skipper, the leader of the Adélie penguins.[13]
- Chris Miller as Kowalski, the dedicated status reporter.[13]
- Christopher Knights as Private, the mild-mannered eager rookie of the Adélie penguins.[13]
- Conrad Vernon as Rico,[14] the "special" penguin in the group that is creepily obsessed with big booms. Vernon replaces John DiMaggio as the voice of Rico in the film.
- Benedict Cumberbatch as Agent Classified, an Eurasian wolf with a British accent. He is the North Wind's team leader.[2][15][16][17] Classified is not his actual name, but a nickname Skipper gives him after the latter told the former that his name was classified information.
- Ken Jeong as Short Fuse, a Belgian white-furred harp seal and a member of the North Wind who serves as their expert in pyrotechnics and demolitions.[9]
- Annet Mahendru as Eva, a Russian snowy owl with a matching accent, Kowalski's love interest/girlfriend, and the North Wind's intelligence analyst.[13]
- Peter Stormare as Corporal, a Norwegian polar bear and a member of the North Wind who serves as the muscle.[13]
- Jesse Palmer as Pretty Little Bears.
- John Malkovich as Dave / Dr. Octavius Brine, a villainous and disgruntled Giant Pacific octopus who has a human scientist disguise and has a one-sided grudge against Adélie penguins. He wants revenge on all Adélie penguins across the Earth for being upstaged by them at international zoos.[2][13][18]
- Werner Herzog as Himself (credited as the "Documentary Filmmaker").[19]
- Billy Eichner as the New York Reporter.
- Jim Pirri as an Italian gondolier.
- Danny Jacobs as King Julien XIII, a ring-tailed lemur who is the king of the lemurs in Madagascar. Jacobs replaces Sacha Baron Cohen from the previous three films.
- Andy Richter as Mort, a Goodman's mouse lemur and King Julien XIII's biggest fan.
- Ben Stiller as Alex (via audio from the previous film)
- Chris Rock as Marty (via audio from the previous film)
Production
[edit]A direct-to-video spin-off feature film featuring the Madagascar penguin characters had been in the works since 2005, when the first film was released, with a release date initially planned for 2009.[20] Years later, DreamWorks Animation announced in March 2011 that the penguins would be given their own theatrical film, directed by Simon J. Smith (the co-director of DreamWorks' Bee Movie) produced by Lara Breay, and written by Alan J. Schoolcraft and Brent Simons (the writers of DreamWorks' Megamind).[21][22]
At the July 2012 Comic-Con, DreamWorks Animation announced that the film, then titled The Penguins of Madagascar, would be released in 2015.[23] Bob Schooley, one of the developers of The Penguins of Madagascar series on Nickelodeon, said that the film would be unrelated to the TV series of the same name, but added that could always change.[24] In early September 2012, 20th Century Fox - the studio's new distributor - and DreamWorks Animation announced the film's release date of March 27, 2015 and a new team of screenwriters for the film, Michael Colton and John Aboud.[25] Benedict Cumberbatch and John Malkovich joined the cast in August 2013.[2] Malkovich, who had been offered the role of Dr. Octavius Brine three and a half years before the film's release, told an audience at the July 2014 Comic-Con that he thought that it "was a funny idea" to use his voice for an octopus.[26]
Music
[edit]On January 8, 2014, Lorne Balfe was announced to compose the film's musical score,[27] making it his first solo debut in a DreamWorks Animation film.[28][29] Balfe wrote the additional music for the previous two Madagascar films and helped Madagascar composer Hans Zimmer with the score for Megamind. The soundtrack album was released digitally on November 21, 2014, and through CDs on December 5, by Relativity Music Group.[27] Relativity also released an extended play, Penguins of Madagascar: Black & White Christmas Album, which featured five holiday songs.[27] Pitbull performed a non-album single titled "Celebrate" for the film, which was played during the film's end credits and released as a part of his eighth studio album Globalization.[30]
Release
[edit]Theatrical
[edit]Penguins of Madagascar was originally scheduled to be released on March 27, 2015.[25] On May 20, 2014, the film's release date was moved up to November 26, 2014 from its initial March 27, 2015 date, switching places with DreamWorks Animation's other film Home.[31] Jeffrey Katzenberg, DreamWorks Animation's CEO, explained that the film, coming from one of DWA's most successful franchises, would have an easier task to stand out around the Thanksgiving holiday season while Home was to try taking advantage of a less competitive spring release window and repeat successful spring launches of some of DWA's original films, such as The Croods and How to Train Your Dragon.[32] The film was released two weeks earlier in China on November 14, 2014, where it was released by Oriental DreamWorks.[33]
The film was released in RealD 3D, 4DX and Digital 3D formats.[4] It was digitally remastered into the IMAX format, and released in select theaters across Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America.[34] A four-issue comic book series based on the film was published by Titan Comics, written by Alex Matthews and drawn by Lucas Fereyra.[35]
Home media
[edit]Penguins of Madagascar was released on DVD, Blu-ray, and Blu-ray 3D on March 17, 2015.[36] It topped the home video sales chart in its first week.[37]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]Penguins of Madagascar grossed $83.4 million in North America and $290.2 million in foreign countries for a worldwide total of $373.6 million.[7] The film's production budget was $132 million, which, according to DreamWorks Animation's president Ann Dally, excluded "incentive-based compensation."[6] By the end of 2014, the studio had to take a $57.1 million write-down, primarily related to the performances of Penguins of Madagascar and another DreamWorks Animation film, Mr. Peabody & Sherman.[11]
In the United States and Canada, Penguins of Madagascar was released alongside Horrible Bosses 2, and was projected to $45–47 million from 3,764 theatres over its five-day opening weekend.[38] It earned $6.25 million on its opening day and $3.95 million the next day on Thanksgiving Day.[39] It earned $10.5 million on Black Friday.[40][41] The film underperformed during its opening weekend, earning $35.4 million and debuting at #2 at the box office behind The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1, for which 3D accounted for 24% of its opening-weekend gross.[41] The opening-weekend audience was nearly evenly split by age and gender, with 58% under the age of 25 and females accounting for 51%.[42]
The film was released in China on November 14, 2014,[33] two weeks ahead of its North American debut, and earned $11.3 million from 3,500 screens, debuting at number two at the Chinese box office behind Interstellar ($42 million).[43] In its opening weekend, the film earned $36.5 million from 47 markets.[44] Overall, the top openings were in Russia ($8.2 million), Korea ($6 million), Italy ($4.63 million), Germany ($4.2 million), and Australia ($3.68 million).[45][46] The film's opening in Germany was the second-highest for an animated film in 2014, behind How to Train Your Dragon 2.[45]
Critical response
[edit]On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Penguins of Madagascar holds an approval rating of 74% based on 116 reviews, with an average rating of 6.2/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Penguins of Madagascar is fast and brightly colored enough to entertain small children, but too frantically silly to offer real filmgoing fun for the whole family."[47] On Metacritic, the film achieved a score of 53 out of 100 based on reviews from 31 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[48] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.[41]
Elizabeth Weitzman of the New York Daily News gave the film three out of five stars, saying "Granted, it's no classic, but a sassy script and good-natured voice work from Benedict Cumberbatch and John Malkovich should keep kids and grownups entertained over the holidays."[49] Ignatiy Vishnevetsky of The A.V. Club gave the film a B, saying "Frenetic and frequently funny, Penguins Of Madagascar represents the DreamWorks Animation franchise style—which boils down to self-aware, but naïve, talking animals who learn kid-friendly life lessons—at its most palatable."[50] Ben Kenigsberg of The New York Times gave the film a positive review, saying "The lack of originality is offset by sheer silliness, including Classified and Skipper's Abbott and Costello-style argument over whether there's a long I in 'diversion.' The word fits the movie."[51]
Bill Zwecker of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three out of four stars, saying "Once again the Madagascar team have come up with a winner – a nice way to kick off the Thanksgiving and holiday filmgoing experience for the whole family."[52] Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter gave the film a negative review, saying "While there are plenty of madcap antics to fill a feature, all that manic energy ultimately proves to be more exhausting than exhilarating."[53] Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a C−, saying "Penguins of Madagascar aims primarily for the kiddies, racing from one frenetic action sequence to another like some haywire Walter Lantz cartoon."[54]
Accolades
[edit]Award/Film Festival | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|
42nd Annie Awards[55] | Outstanding Achievement for Animated Effects in an Animated Production | Mitul Patel, Nicolas Delbecq, Santosh Khedkar and Yash Argawal | Nominated |
Outstanding Achievement for Character Animation in an Animated Feature Production | Ravi Kamble | Nominated | |
Outstanding Achievement for Character Design in an Animated Feature Production | Craig Kellman, Joe Moshier, Stevie Lewis and Todd Kurosawa | Nominated | |
51st Cinema Audio Society Awards[56] | Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Motion Picture - Animated | Tighe Sheldon, Paul N.J. Ottosson, Dennis Sands and Randy K. Singer | Nominated |
28th Kids' Choice Awards[57] | Favorite Animated Movie | Eric Darnell and Simon J. Smith | Nominated |
11th St. Louis Film Critics Association Awards[58] | Best Animated Film | Nominated |
Video game
[edit]A video game based on the film, titled Penguins of Madagascar, and published by Little Orbit, was released on November 25, 2014, for Nintendo 3DS, Wii, and Wii U.[citation needed]
Notes
[edit]- ^ As depicted at the end of Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted (2012)
References
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External links
[edit]- 2014 films
- Madagascar (franchise) films
- 2014 3D films
- 2014 computer-animated films
- 2014 action comedy films
- 2010s spy comedy films
- 2010s American animated films
- 2010s children's comedy films
- 2010s English-language films
- 20th Century Fox animated films
- 20th Century Fox films
- 3D animated films
- American 3D films
- American action comedy films
- American children's animated action films
- American children's animated comedy films
- American computer-animated films
- American spy comedy films
- Animated films about monkeys
- Animated films about penguins
- Animated films about polar bears
- Animated films about talking animals
- Animated films about wolves
- Animated films set in Manhattan
- Animated films set in Shanghai
- Animated films set in Venice
- Animated films set in zoos
- Animated films about owls
- DreamWorks Animation animated films
- Films directed by Eric Darnell
- Films directed by Simon J. Smith
- Films scored by Lorne Balfe
- Film spin-offs
- IMAX films
- Octopuses in popular culture
- Animated films about pinnipeds
- English-language action comedy films