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Happy Feet

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Happy Feet
Happy Feet Official Poster
Directed byGeorge Miller
Written byWarren Coleman
John Collee
George Miller
Judy Morris
Produced byGeorge Miller
Doug Mitchell
Bill Miller
StarringElijah Wood
Robin Williams
Brittany Murphy
Hugh Jackman
Nicole Kidman
Hugo Weaving
Anthony LaPaglia
Magda Szubanski
Steve Irwin
Music byJohn Powell
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
November 17, 2006 (U.S.)
December 8, 2006 (UK)
December 26, 2006 (Australia)
Running time
108 min.
CountriesAustralia
United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$100,000,000

Happy Feet is an Australian-produced 2006 computer-animated comedy-drama musical film, directed and co-written by George Miller. It was produced at Sydney-based visual effects and animation studio Animal Logic for Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow Pictures and was released in North America on November 17, 2006. It is the first animated feature film produced by Kennedy Miller in association with Animal Logic. Though primarily an animated film, it does incorporate live action humans in certain scenes. The film was simultaneously released in both conventional theatres and in IMAX 2D format.[1] The studio has hinted that a future IMAX 3D release was a possibility.[2] Happy Feet won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and was nominated for the Annie Award for Best Animated Feature.

The film was dedicated in memory of Nick Enright, Michael Jonson, Robby McNeilly Green, and Steve Irwin.

Plot

File:Happyfeet1.jpg
Maurice, Baby Gloria and Memphis look on as Mumble's egg hatches

Set in an Antarctic emperor penguin colony, the film establishes that every penguin must sing a unique song called a "Heartsong" to attract a soul mate who will know how to complete their heartsong. This is based in fact, since emperor couples court each other and recognize one another by their unique calls. One penguin, Norma Jean (Nicole Kidman), sings the song "Kiss", whereupon a male penguin named Memphis (Hugh Jackman) sings "Heartbreak Hotel". Norma Jean chooses him as her mate. They couple and Norma Jean lays an egg. The egg is left in Memphis's care while Norma Jean and the other females leave to fish for several weeks. While the males are struggling through the harsh winter, Memphis drops the egg, briefly exposing it to the freezing Antarctic temperatures. The resulting chick - the film's protagonist, Mumble (Elijah Wood) - has a terrible singing voice. However, Mumble has an astute talent for something that none of the penguins had ever seen before: tap dancing.

This ability is frowned upon by the colony's elders, who don't tolerate deviance of any kind. As a result, Mumble is ostracized throughout his childhood, with only his mother and his friend Gloria to turn to for help. Mumble then grows to an adult, still half-covered in fluffy down. Through a series of mishaps - mainly getting chased by a hungry leopard seal - the penguin finds himself far from his home and within the carefree colony of adelie penguins - penguins small in stature, but fiercely loyal to those they call friends. He quickly befriends a small group of bachelors who form a club of sorts called the Amigos: the leader, Ramon (Robin Williams), the brothers Raul and Nestor, and twin brothers Rinaldo and Lombardo. The Amigos quickly embrace Mumble's dance moves and assimilate him into their misfit group.

Mumble's joy at finding acceptance for his difference is cut short when strange "alien discoveries" occur; after his accidentally starting an avalanche a long-frozen human excavator tumbles out from a glacier, and Mumble is intrigued. Driven by curiosity, he sets out to find the "aliens" responsible for the machine.

In Mumble's old home, it is mating season, and Gloria is the center of attention, as was Mumble's mother, though no other penguin knows the next verse to her heartsong. However, although she is surrounded by a large horde of suitors, none of their Heartsongs interest her what so ever. At this point, Ramon stands behind a newly come Mumble and sings a Spanish version of My Way. Gloria likes the song to a degree, but is only fooled for a moment, for she knows that Mumble can't sing. She pushes him forward, revealing Ramon. When Mumble tells her that the act was the best he could offer, Gloria turns back to the other males visibly distraught. Though she doesn't want Mumble to be alone and would like to be with him, Mumble clearly has no heartsong and she leaves him temporarily heartbroken. He then tries to persuade her to sing along to his tapping rhythm. Gloria is reluctant at first but complies, finding that Mumble's rhythm fits with her melody. As Mumble's beat speeds up Gloria finds the chorus to her heartsong, and realizes her song is "Boogie Wonderland", a dance song. Gloria's heartsong fits with Mumble's dancing talent. Both Gloria and Mumble are exhilarated, and the other penguins are equally worked up; they all begin dancing along to him, much to Mumble's delight.

Noah, the elder, sees the lack of fish as punishment from the Great 'Guin, their god, regarding Mumble's dancing. Noah exiles Mumble from the colony as a result; before Mumble leaves, he vows that he will find the real cause of the famine, and travels across vast territories with the Amigos and Lovelace, a self-worshipping rockhopper. Gloria tries to help him; Mumble, out of fear for her safety, does whatever it takes to get rid of her - namely, insulting her singing talents.

The Amigos, along with Mumble and Lovelace, travel many miles under harsh conditions. During their journey, they meet a group of elephant seals, who warn of "Annihilators", who are presumably the same "aliens" Mumble seeks. After narrowly escaping from two killer whales, the penguins finally come face to face with a legion of huge commercial trawlers, all laden with fish caught around the Antarctic coast. Mumble follows after them fearlessly, leaving his friends behind to bear testament to his legacy.

File:Happyfeet2.jpg
Adult Mumble with the 5 Adélie Amigos. Left to right: Néstor, Lombardo, Rinaldo, Mumble, Raul, and Ramón

After swimming and being tossed around by sea currents, Mumble ends up in a penguin exhibit at a marine park (closely resembling the Penguin Encounter at SeaWorld, a massive zoom-out hinting at the one in Orlando, Florida), and fervently tries to communicate with the "aliens" (humans) who surround him. When his pleas fail, Mumble nearly succumbs to madness after three months of confinement in the sterile glass prison. When a child taps on the glass wall one day, Mumble is woken from his stupor and dances in response, whereupon the child appears to run away. He becomes disappointed until she comes back with her mother. Soon, a large crowd gathers around the exhibit, taking pictures and telling their friends of this marvel. He is released to the wild, now with fewer of his fluffy down feathers and a tracking device strapped to his back, and leads the "aliens" home to his native colony. The other penguins, formerly skeptical, are now convinced that the aliens do exist.

Soon, a research team arrives and films the penguins dancing, and dances along with the rhythm. They bring this footage back to the human world. Different governments debate what to make of this footage and a worldwide debate ensues. They soon realize that they are overfishing the Antarctic waters, and conclude that perhaps the penguins were trying to communicate that to them. Antarctic fishing is banned, and the fish population recovers. At this, the Emperor Penguins and the Amigos dance and celebrate their triumph. A dancing baby penguin seen at the end is implied to be the child of Mumble and Gloria.

In the credits, the characters reunite to dance for the final number "Song of the Heart." During the credits, it could be said that the characters appear and disappear based on the relationships between each other.

Production

The animation in Happy Feet invested heavily in motion capture technology, with the dance scenes acted out by human dancers. The tap-dancing for Mumble in particular was provided by Savion Glover who was also co-choreographer for the dance sequences.[3] The dancers went through "Penguin School" to learn how to move like a penguin, and also wore head apparatus to mimic a penguin's beak.[4]

Happy Feet was partially inspired by earlier documentaries such as the BBC's Life in the Freezer.[5]

The film took four years to make. Ben Gunsberger, Lighting Supervisor and VFX Department Supervisor, says this was partly because they needed to build new infrastructure and tools. [6]

Characters

Actor Penguin and/or Other Animal
Elijah Wood Mumble
Brittany Murphy Gloria
Hugh Jackman Memphis
Nicole Kidman Norma Jean
Robin Williams Ramón / Lovelace
Hugo Weaving Noah the Elder
Carlos Alazraqui Néstor
Lombardo Boyar Raul
Jeff Garcia Rinaldo
Johnny A. Sanchez Lombardo
Fat Joe Seymour
Magda Szubanski Miss Viola
Miriam Margolyes Mrs. Astrakhan
Dee Bradley Baker Maurice
Chrissie Hynde Michelle
E.G. Daily Baby Mumble
Alyssa Shafer Baby Gloria
César Flores Baby Seymour
Anthony LaPaglia Boss Skua
Danny Mann Dino/Zoo Penguin
Mark Klastorin Vinnie
Michael Cornacchia Frankie
Nicholas McKay Nev
Tiriel Mora Kev
Steve Irwin Trev
Richard Carter Barry
Roger Rose The Leopard Seal
Peter Carroll Elder
Larry Moss Elder
Lee Perry Elder/Zoo Penguin
Alan Shearman Elder
Giselle Loren Adélie Chica
Denise Blasor Adélie Chica
Michelle Arthur Adélie Chica

Music

Happy Feet is a jukebox musical, taking previously recorded songs and working them into the film's soundtrack to fit with the mood of the scene or character. Two soundtrack albums were released for the film; one containing songs from and inspired by the film, and another featuring John Powell's instrumental score. They were released on October 31, 2006 and December 19, 2006, respectively.

Release dates

Region Release date
United States November 17, 2006
United Kingdom December 8, 2006
Australia December 26, 2006
Mexico January 12, 2007

Awards

Won

Academy Awards

60th British Academy Film Awards

  • Best Animated Feature Film

Golden Globes

American Film Institute Awards 2006

  • Honored as one of the Top Ten Best Films of the Year

Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards

  • Best Animation

New York Film Critics Circle Awards

  • Best Animated Film

Golden Trailer Awards[7]

  • Best Music

Heartland Awards

  • The Truly Moving Picture Award

Kids' Choice Awards

  • Favorite Animated Movie

British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Children's Awards

  • Best Feature Film

Nominations

Golden Globe Award

  • Best Animated Feature

Annie Awards

  • Best Animated Feature
  • Best Writing in an Animated Feature Production

Satellite Awards

  • Nominated for Best Motion Picture, Animated or Mixed Media

Home video

Happy Feet was released on March 27, 2007[8] in the United States in three formats; DVD (in separate widescreen and pan and scan editions), Blu-ray Disc, and an HD DVD/DVD combo disc.[9]

Among the DVD's special features is a scene that was cut from the film where Mumble meets a blue whale and an albatross. The albatross was Steve Irwin's first voice role in the film before he voiced the elephant seal in the final cut. The scene was finished and included on the DVD in memory of Steve Irwin. This scene is done in Steve's classic documentary style, with the albatross telling the viewer all about the other characters in the scene, and the impact people are having on their environment.

Video games

A video game based on the film was developed by A2M and published by Midway Games. It has the same main cast as the film. It was released for the following platforms: PC, PlayStation 2, GameCube, GBA, NDS, and Wii.[10] Screenshots and demo clips of the various versions of the Happy Feet game can be seen at the official website.

Artificial Life, Inc. has also developed a Happy Feet mobile game for the Japan market.[11]

Reception

Box office

Weekend Gross Rank Total
1 $41,533,568 1 $41,533,432
2 $37,038,046 1 $99,256,766
3 $17,545,418 1 $121,501,018
4 $12,904,413 2 $137,932,841
5 $8,358,421 4 $149,244,791
6 $5,163,474 8 $160,521,910
7 $7,650,181 9 $179,152,000
8 $4,004,462 13 $185,414,182

The film opened at number one in the United States on its first weekend of release (November 17-November 19) grossing $41.6M and beating Casino Royale for the top spot.[12] It remained number one for the Thanksgiving weekend, making $51.6 million over the five-day period. In total, the film was the top grosser for three weeks, a 2006 box office feat matched only by Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. As of June 8, 2008, Happy Feet has grossed $198.0 million in the U.S. and $186.3 million overseas, making about $384.3 million dollars worldwide. The film has been released in about 35 international territories at the close of 2006.[13][14][15]

The production budget was $100 million.[16]

Critical reviews

Happy Feet has received better than average reviews from film critics, and received a 75% "fresh" approval in the Rotten Tomatoes movie review aggregate site, with an 82% percent from the Top Critics .[17]

  • Kirk Honeycutt said that Happy Feet "astonishes," it has brilliant choreography and orchestration, and is entertaining for younger viewers. Honeycutt also said that, "[George] Miller boldly reaches for spiritual themes," and "happily, it all works."[18]
  • Gene Seymour described Happy Feet as "a rich, absorbing story that isn't content to dazzle you with effects, but rouse your spirits." Seymour adds "nothing prepares you for its sweeping visual design and its conceptual energy."[19]
  • Lou Lumenick praised Happy Feet for its "stunning visuals," calling the film "inspired" and "uplifting." Lumenick further added that "It's Dumbo meets Footloose," and "Happy Feet is not only the year's best animated movie, it's one of the year's best movies, period. Go."[20]
  • The film received a "two thumbs up" rating on the television show Ebert & Roeper. A. O. Scott, Roger Ebert's temporary replacement, is quoted as saying "Happy Feet was made with enough skill, and enough heart, to get a thumbs up from me." Richard Roeper agreed, saying "I think kids will love it, because penguins are cute."[21]
  • Jordan Harper of The Village Voice was quoted as saying "If anything could tempt an adult to go see a dancing-penguin movie, it's the phrase 'from the guy who brought you Babe.' That movie got everything right about talking animals, but alas, George Miller does not live up to his earlier work here. Even the wee ones may start to notice something's amiss when the movie's theme goes from 'be yourself' to 'we must regulate the overfishing of the Antarctic oceans.' No, for real." [22]
  • Andrez Bergen of The Daily Yomiuri in Japan said that "[Robin] Williams is a revelation in both his roles, there are some choice vignettes from Anthony LaPaglia (as the leader of the mafialike gulls) and Steve Irwin (an ocker elephant seal), while - on a visual level - the brilliant rollercoaster avalanche scene makes all the song-and-dance redundant... It's through knowing references to movies like Dirty Dancing, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Dumbo, and Moby-Dick, that this movie really is riotous, while a leopard seal attack that comes straight after Mumble's botched graduation ceremony is right up there with the suspense and horror of the shark attacks in Jaws, sans John Williams' score." [23]
  • Jay Millikan of Stylus Magazine says of the film, "as an example of a film that transcends its kiddie origins and becomes a thoughtful, well-crafted movie that appeals to intelligent adults, Hollywood rarely does better than Happy Feet.[24]
  • Match Cuts, the film literacy and analysis blog ran by a full-time film lecturer at Platt College in San Diego, called it "George Miller's masterpiece," and goes on to say, "Miller’s haunting mise-en-scene frames each character through blue hued ice caps, bleached white horizons, and countless roving tracking shots of a world in motion and slightly out of whack." And on, "Happy Feet will inevitably be one of the most important children’s films released in a long time, most notably because it connects with the viewer not through browbeating messages or sensationalist slants, but via a universal story."[25]
  • Fred Topal, of CanMag, says of the film, "I may have spent more than 2/3 confused but man, when it all comes together, it’s one of the most brilliant pieces of story construction in modern cinema. Probably George Miller’s most powerful statement since the Mad Max films... I thought the first alien riff was just a non sequitur. When they brought it back and started with the heavy machinery, it felt gimmicky. But the payoff pulls everything together and makes a profound statement about unscientific faith and ineffective politics. And it’s the biggest surprise ending in years."[26]
  • Josh Tyler writes, in his review for Cinema Blend, "Miller...takes what might have been a rather simple story of an outsider finding a way to fit in and turns it into a grand and beautiful work of cinematic art," and goes on to say of it, "Miller doesn't settle just for large-scale adventure though, the movie is packed with thematic depth and complexity beyond the ken of this relatively short review to describe.[27]

Analysis

The film has also garnered, since its release, quite a bit of analysis and dissection from various places. Film critic Yar Habnegnal (Ray Langenbach's on and off pseudonym) has written an essay, published in Forum on Contemporary Art and Society, that examines the themes of encroachment presented throughout the film, as well as various other subtexts and themes. [28]

Sequel

A follow-up to the film is currently in production at Dr. D Studios[29]. The estimated release date is 2011.[30]

Environmental message

As things progress there is increasing emphasis on environmental problems in the Antarctic.

The film's denouement shows a group of researchers taking video of the colony of dancing emperor penguins, and the footage is broadcast globally. After many heated arguments this publicity generates considerable pressure to stop commercial overfishing of the Antarctic.

According to the director, George Miller, the environmental message was not a major part of the original script, but "In Australia, we're very, very aware of the ozone hole," he said, "and Antarctica is literally the canary in the coal mine for this stuff. So it sort of had to go in that direction." This influence led to a film with a more environmental tone. Miller said, "You can't tell a story about Antarctica and the penguins without giving that dimension."[31]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Happy Feet: The IMAX Experience". IMAX. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  2. ^ "Happy Feet Won't Debut in IMAX 3-D". VFXWorld. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  3. ^ Savion Glover (2007). Happy Feet (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  4. ^ Kelley Abbey (2007). Happy Feet (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  5. ^ "Penguin suits up for a cinema hit". The Australian. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  6. ^ UNSWorld (2007) 'Bring on the dancing penguins' in UNSWorld, Issue 6, May 2007, pp. 14-15
  7. ^ Golden Trailer Awards
  8. ^ Happy Feet (2006) - Elijah Wood, Nicole Kidman, Hugh Jackman
  9. ^ 'Happy Feet' to Dance on Blu-ray, HD DVD This March | High-Def Digest
  10. ^ Happy Feet
  11. ^ Parthajit; "Happy Feet Goes Mobile"; Softpedia; April 24, 2007
  12. ^ Weekend Box Office Results for November 17–19, 2006
  13. ^ Happy Feet (2006) - Weekend Box Office Results
  14. ^ IMDb Charts
  15. ^ Weekend Box Office Results for February 1–3, 2008
  16. ^ Happy Feet (2006)
  17. ^ Happy Feet - Movie Reviews, Trailers, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes
  18. ^ The Hollywood Reporter
  19. ^ Happily, 'Feet' runs deep - Newsday.com
  20. ^ Ice Ice, Baby!
  21. ^ Ebert & Roeper, Reviews for the Weekend of November 18 - 19, 2006
  22. ^ village voice > film > Tracking Shots: 'Happy Feet' by Jordan Harper
  23. ^ Happy Feet Shakes Its Tail Feather, Andrez Bergen. Daily Yomiuri, December 2006.
  24. ^ [1]
  25. ^ [http://www.matchcuts.wordpress.com/2008/01/03/happy-feet-miller-2006-a/
  26. ^ [http://www.canmag.com/news/4/3/5770
  27. ^ [http://www.cinemablend.com/reviews/Happy-Feet-1917.html
  28. ^ Yar Habnegnal on Happy Feet
  29. ^ About Dr. D Studios
  30. ^ [2]Sky News: Happy Feet sequel in the works]
  31. ^ Kelly, Kate (2006-11-17). "The New Animated Film 'Happy Feet' Doesn't Dance Around Serious Issues". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2007-03-15.

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Awards
Preceded by
New award
BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film
2006
Succeeded by