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Madeline: Lost in Paris

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Madeline: Lost in Paris
Directed byStan Phillips
Written by
Based onMadeline
by Ludwig Bemelmans
Produced by
  • Stan Phillips
  • Riley Kathryn Ellis
Starring
Narrated byChristopher Plummer
Music byAndy Street
Production
company
Distributed byBuena Vista Home Entertainment[a][2]
Release date
  • August 3, 1999 (1999-08-03)
[1]
Running time
75 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Madeline: Lost in Paris is a 1999 American direct-to-video animated musical adventure comedy-drama film produced by DIC Entertainment, L.P. It was released on August 3, 1999, to VHS by Buena Vista Home Video under the Walt Disney Home Video imprint. In 2009, the film was released on iTunes for the film's 10th anniversary.

Plot

Madeline, an orphaned girl who attends a Parisian boarding school, receives a letter in the mail from her long-lost Uncle Horst from Vienna, who is planning on a visit. He arrives at the school later that week, where he announces that he has been designated Madeline's new legal guardian (shows the court papers to Miss Clavel, her teacher). Horst plans on taking her to his hometown Vienna, to attend a fine finishing school, and plan on leaving the following day via the Orient Express. Madeline and her classmates react with shock, elation, and sadness.

When Uncle Horst and his niece set off the next morning, he takes Madeline on the Paris Métro, rather than the Orient Express, to an unfamiliar part of the town ravaged with poverty and crime. Realizing she is being kidnapped, Madeline throws beads of her mother's treasured necklace to make a trail to where she is taken to. It is then revealed that Uncle Horst is not Madeline's uncle, but a Frenchman named Henri, who works for Madame LaCroque, the owner of a lace shop/factory. Henri takes Madeline to the lace shop's basement, full of orphan girls who are forced into making laces to sell. One of the girls, Fifi, befriends Madeline. It is then revealed that Madeline's court custody papers were forged by Madame LaCroque, and that the criminal duo plan to steal her family inheritance as she labors in the factory.

Shortly after Madeline left, Miss Clavel, the girls, and Pepito tried to stop her and Horst so that Pepito could give her his Halloween parting gift: a shrunken head from Brazil. They arrive at the train station, only to learn that the two had taken the Métro, not the Orient Express. They also find Genevieve abandoned at the station. Fearing the worst, Miss Clavel enlists the police to help them rescue Madeline.

At the lace shop, the child workers endure enormous amounts of emotional and physical abuse at the hands of LaCroque. Fifi tells Madeline of how LaCroque was once a cabaret dancer who experienced a performance disaster. In total humiliation, she stopped performing and sold her long hair to make lace. She and Henri then gained legal custody all of the orphan girls. Rather than taking care of them (as she promised to the courts), she uses them as her miserable slaves.

Through following the trail of Madeline's beads, Madeline's classmates and Pepito find their way to the factory. Pepito uses his shrunken head to first knock off LaCroque's wig from outside the window (revealing her bald head), and then frighten her to the ground. Meanwhile, Miss Clavel and the police catch Henri walking through the streets of Paris, planning to sell-off Madeline's belongings. Through a plea bargain deal, Henri agrees to lead them to the lace factory, in exchange for a lighter punishment. Madeline and all of her friends are able to tie up LaCroque in endless rolls of lace just as the police arrive with Henri and Miss Clavel. Henri makes one last attempt to escape, only to be tripped by Pepito's spool trick, allowing the girls to tangle him up as well. The criminal duo are arrested by the police and taken away. The factory girls, however, still have no place to call home.

Madeline receives a substantial financial reward for LaCroque's capture, and she uses it to start a school for her lace factory coworkers. The girls from both schools rejoice in the fact that they are all one whole family.

Production

In March 1999, the film was announced as the first project from DIC's new "video premieres" division.[3]

DVD releases

Shout! Factory released the film on DVD on April 3, 2010.[4] It was released in Australia in 2013 by Umbrella Entertainment.[5][6]

Voice cast

Songs

All tracks are written by Andy Street.

No.TitlePerformer(s)Length
1."Family"Madeline & 11 Little Girls 
2."We Can Sing! We Can Dance!"Madeline, 11 Little Girls, Uncle Horst, Miss Clavel and Ensemble 
3."Oh, Dear! Oh, Dear!"Miss Clavel, 11 Little Girls, Pepito, Madeline and Uncle Horst 
4."Where is the Hope That I Once Knew?"Madeline & Laceshop Girls 
5."Together"Madeline & Laceshop Girls 
6."Family (Reprise)"Madeline, 11 Little Girls, Pepito & Laceshop Girls 

Reception

William David Lee of DVD Town, criticized the special for its "not very memorable" songs and "simplistic and predictable" story. He did, however, recommend the film for young children audience.[7]

References

  1. ^ McCormick, Moira (1999-06-12). Buena Vista to Roll Out Promotions for End-Of-'99 Releases. p. 67. Retrieved 2019-07-09. {{cite book}}: |magazine= ignored (help)
  2. ^ McCormick, Moira (1999-06-12). Buena Vista to Roll Out Promotions for End-Of-'99 Releases. p. 67. Retrieved 2019-07-09. {{cite book}}: |magazine= ignored (help)
  3. ^ "DIC taps Ellis". Variety. Retrieved July 19, 2021.
  4. ^ "The Madeline Movie: Lost In Paris". Amazon.com. 13 April 2010. Retrieved 2019-07-12.
  5. ^ "Madeline Lost in Paris". Amazon.com. 12 November 2013. Retrieved 2019-07-12.
  6. ^ "MADELINE LOST IN PARIS |DVD & Blu-Ray". umbrellaent.com.au. Retrieved 2019-07-12.
  7. ^ William David Lee (2010-04-17). "Madeline Movie, The: Lost In Paris - DVD review". dvdtown.com. p. 2. Archived from the original on 2010-09-25. Retrieved 2019-07-12.
  1. ^ Under Walt Disney Home Video imprint