Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius | |
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Directed by | John A. Davis |
Screenplay by |
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Story by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Edited by |
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Music by | John Debney |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $30 million[2] |
Box office | $103 million |
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius is a 2001 American computer-animated science fiction comedy film produced by Nickelodeon Movies, O Entertainment and DNA Productions, and distributed by Paramount Pictures. The film was directed by John A. Davis and written by Davis and producer Steve Oedekerk. Its voice cast includes Debi Derryberry, Patrick Stewart, Martin Short, Rob Paulsen, and Jeffrey Garcia. The film follows the title character, a schoolboy with super-genius powers, who must save all of the parents of the world from a race of egg-like aliens known as the Yolkians.
The idea for Jimmy Neutron was first created by Davis in the 1980s, in which he wrote a script for a short film titled Runaway Rocketboy and starring a prototype character for Jimmy named Johnny Quasar. After coming across the abandoned script several years later, Davis decided that it would be a good idea to revisit it and retool it as a computer-animated short and potential TV series. A 40-second demo was animated using LightWave 3D and gained popularity at the 1995 SIGGRAPH convention where it was shown off, grabbing the attention of Oedekerk and leading DNA Productions to develop an extended TV Pilot. After a successful pitch to Nickelodeon, a 13-minute-long TV episode was developed, and Nickelodeon, impressed with both the character and the 3D technology, raised the possibility making both a TV series and a full-length feature film. Davis, in turn, suggested that the film be made first, so that the development team could create the assets at theatrical quality and reuse them in the TV series. Production officially began in early 2000 and was completed in roughly 24 months, with the studio considerably raising its staff count and expanding its studio space. Animation was done entirely using commercial software, including LightWave and project:messiah.
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius was released on December 21, 2001.[1] Backed by a strong pre-release campaign, the film was a box office success, grossing $103 million worldwide. It was nominated for the inaugural Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2001, ultimately losing to Shrek. It was the only animated Nickelodeon film to be nominated in that category for nearly a decade until Rango (2011) was nominated and won.
Due to its success, the film was spun off into an animated television series called The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius, which premiered on July 20, 2002 and ended on November 25, 2006. Four years later, another spin-off series (as well as a spin-off of the original) called Planet Sheen was produced, focusing on Jimmy's friend Sheen Estevez. This series premiered on October 2, 2010 and ended on February 15, 2013.
A simulator ride based on the film called Jimmy Neutron's Nicktoon Blast opened at Universal Studios Florida on April 11, 2003 and closed on August 18, 2011 and featured guest appearances by other Nicktoons characters.
Plot
James Isaac "Jimmy" Neutron is an extremely intelligent young boy who goes to elementary school in the fictional town and city of Retroville. Alongside his robotic dog, Goddard, he spends much of his time building complex inventions with the hopes of further advancing science, but is hampered by the protectiveness of his parents, Hugh and Judy Neutron. One day, Jimmy is attempting to launch a communications satellite made from his family's toaster into outer space after receiving a garbled radio signal from what he believes may be a message from extraterrestrial life. This irks Judy, who scolds him for trying to communicate with strangers. After school, Jimmy and his friends, Carl and Sheen, spot a poster for an amusement park called "Retroland." However, Hugh Neutron and Judy Neutron refuse to let him go that night because it is a school night, and he gets grounded for causing a fire with one of his inventions by sitting on the bed in the bedroom at night.
Meanwhile, Jimmy's communications satellite is picked up near the planet Yolkus, home to an alien race called the Yolkians, who commandeer their warships that look like a fleet of rubber chickens. King Goobot V and his assistant, Ooblar, watch a pre-recorded message from Jimmy, featuring him introducing himself and explaining about life on Earth, with Goobot declaring "the search is over". Jimmy, Carl, and Sheen subsequently choose to sneak out and visit the theme park on the advice of their popular classmate with cool personality and behavior boy named Nick Dean. As the three kids are at the amusement park, the Yolkians kidnap all the parents from all the houses in the suburban section of the city, leaving fake notes on the refrigerators in the kitchen to tell the kids that they have gone to Florida for an "extended vacation". Coincidentally, Carl spots a shooting star (actually a Yolkian ship), so he, Jimmy and Sheen wish for no more parental control so they be free and can have fun all the time and forever.
The next morning, the kids discover the parents have all disappeared and celebrate for the whole day. They eat tons of delicious junk food and do fun stuff whatever they want such as jumping on the bed and furniture, running up the down escalator in the shopping mall, and water skiing in the elementary school hall. However, the following day, all the children quickly begin to miss their parents by getting themselves hurt or sick such as tummy aches, broken bones, constipation, and bruises. After hearing a message from his parents that Goddard had recorded while posing as Jimmy last night, Jimmy becomes suspicious of the fact that his parents said that they would see him in the morning despite not being there. After discovering what has really happened, he rallies the town and city's other children to build intergalactic star space rocket ships from the Retroland amusement park rides to travel to Yolkus and get their parents back. While traveling in their intergalactic rocket star space ships made from Retroland amusement park rides, the kids are having to watch out for meteors from a meteor shower. After arriving on the asteroid for a safe place to sleep for a space camp, the kids tearfully recalled what their parents did every night at bedtime before they were abducted by aliens.
Upon arrival, they are captured by Goobot, who tells them that the parents are to be sacrificed to their goddess, Poultra. He shows the kids Jimmy's message video, thanking him for helping him find suitable species for their ritual, before having the children locked up in their cells, while Goddard is taken to a laboratory to be dismantled.
With Jimmy feeling sad, bad, depressed and guilty over the fact that his actions led to the Yolkans abducting the parents in the first place by crying like a baby, his classmate and rival next door girl named Cindy Vortex convinces him to buck up and stand up and think of an escape plan. After breaking out with the help of Goddard, the children (with the exception of Nick, as he turns out to be cowardly), in accordance with Jimmy's plan, manage to stop the parents from being sacrificed to Poultra, a giant space monster that looks a lot like a chicken. Everyone escapes aboard a Yolkian ship, but Goobot follows them in his ship at the head of the Yolkian fleet. With the exception of Goobot's ship, all of the Yolkian ships are destroyed when Jimmy baits them into flying too close to Yolkus' sun. Jimmy and Goddard then use an experimental shrink ray to grow to the size of a planet, and blow Goobot's ship into an asteroid: Goobot and Ooblar survive the explosion, and Goobot vows revenge. Jimmy and the rest of the human kids reconcile with their parents and head back home. On the return trip to Earth, Jimmy reconciles with his parents, admitting that despite his intelligence, he still depends on them.
The next day, Jimmy and Carl are having breakfast of eggs in an egg cup when Jimmy's parents drink one of his experiments (that causes significant belching), thinking it is real soda can, and they all laugh out loud funny while Goddard is seen outside flying to chase a bird by imitating like a bird. In the mid-credits scene, Mrs Fowl, who is in ant size, is seen riding on an apple worm named Mr. Wiggles on her way to the cafeteria in the elementary school hall.
Cast
- Patrick Stewart as King Goobot V
- Martin Short as Ooblar
- Debi Derryberry as Jimmy Neutron
- Carolyn Lawrence as Cindy Vortex
- Rob Paulsen as Carl Wheezer/Mr. and Mrs. Wheezer (credited as Carl’s Mom and Dad)
- Jeffrey Garcia as Sheen Estevez
- Crystal Scales as Libby Folfax
- Frank Welker as Goddard (uncredited)/Poultra
- Candi Milo as Nick Dean/Britney/PJ
- Megan Cavanagh as Judy Neutron (credited as Mom)/VOX/Mrs. Vortex (credited as Cindy's Mom)
- Mark DeCarlo as Hugh Neutron (credited as Dad)/Pilot/Arena Guard/Mr. Vortex (credited as Cindy's Dad)
- Carlos Alazraqui as Mr. Estevez (credited as Sheen’s Dad)
- Kimberly Brooks as Zachery/Reporter/Angie
- Andrea Martin as Ms. Winfred Fowl (Credited as Ms. Fowl)
- Billy West as Bobby's Twin Brother/Butch/Old Man Johnson/Robobarber
- West also did various other voices, according to the film's closing credits.
- Bob Goen and Mary Hart as Yolkian newscasters
- Dee Bradley Baker as NORAD Officer
- Greg Eagles as Mr. Folfax (uncredited)
- David L. Lander as Yolkian Guard/Gus
- Jim Cummings as Ultra Lord/Mission Control/General Bob
- Keith Alcorn as Bobby/Control Yolkian
Production
Development
The idea for a series about a boy with super-genius powers was first conceived in the 1980s by John A. Davis, who scripted and storyboarded a short narrative titled Runaway Rocketboy, centering around a character named Johnny Quasar (inspired by a facetious nickname that his summer co-workers had coined for him in his youth[3] who builds a rocket ship and runs away from his parents.[4] Davis stated in an episode of the Nickelodeon Animation Podcast that he initially wrote the concept with the intention of creating it as a live-action film with special effects and matte shots, even going so far as to apply to receive a grant in order to fund the project, but found that getting such an investment was difficult since the film wasn't educational or informative.[3] The idea laid dormant for several years until Davis came across the abandoned script while in the process of moving.[3] Around the same time, Davis' Dallas-based studio, DNA Productions, had just began experimenting with the use of computer animation after obtaining copies of LightWave 3D. In turn, Davis realized that the film would be fitting as a CG film, since all of the science fiction set pieces could be entirely modeled in 3D.[3]
Davis, alongside studio co-founder Keith Alcorn, created a 40-second proof-of-concept demo film which depicted Johnny and his robot dog, Goddard, flying through an asteroid belt and greeting the viewers. Simultaneously, Davis and Alcorn worked to create a story bible outlining a potential television series. The demo short was shown off in 1995 at the SIGGRAPH CG convention, where it was entered into a competition for LightWave films. The demo quickly garnered notability in the computer animation industry, receiving frequent press coverage in magazines and winning two "Wavey" awards- one for Best Character Animation and another for Best in Show. Among people who caught wind of the film was Steve Oedekerk, the founder of O Entertainment, who saw a still shot of Johnny and Goddard in a CGI magazine. Oedekerk, a strong backer of computer animation, was impressed by the characters' designs – he stated in an interview that the image particularly stood out to him because it "seemed fun" compared to the mostly-photorealistic work being done with computer animation at the time.[5] He cold-called Davis requesting to see a tape of the full short. After watching the demo, as well as seeing the show bible which Davis and Alcorn had developed, Oedekerk expressed interest in helping to pitch their concept to different networks.[4][6]
After teaming up with O Entertainment, the company began working on developing a full-length episode for a TV series, titled The Adventures of Johnny Quasar, writing an expanded version of the original Runaway Rocket story and tweaking aspects of Johnny's design to make him look more like a child. In Fall 1995, the idea was pitched to Nickelodeon, who expressed immediate interest in the idea. Albie Hecht, the then-president of Nick, was particularly impressed- coining him to be "half Bart Simpson and half Albert Einstein," he strongly praised Johnny's blended personality as an adventurous and intelligent character and one grounded in the reality of childhood, which, according to him, made him "the perfect Nick kid."[5] Following positive reception, Nickelodeon commissioned for a 13-minute pilot episode to be created.[4] After several years of going through the review process, the episode began production in late 1997, and was completed in 1998. The name "Johnny Quasar" was changed at the request of Nickelodeon, who did not want the character to be confused with similarly-named ones such as Jonny Quest and Captain Quazar, so Davis brainstormed other character names while walking his dog around the neighborhood block, eventually coming up with the final name, "Jimmy Neutron."[3]
After the pilot was completed, Nickelodeon executives, who were impressed by the pilot and still enthusiastic about the show's potential, raised the prospect of creating a theatrical film to accompany the TV series, much to the surprise of Davis and his team at the studio. During the initial pitch to Nickelodeon, Oedekerk had highlighted the idea that using computer animation would allow the same models and assets to be reused between both a film and a TV show, an idea which Nick held strong faith in.[4] Davis further suggested that the feature film be created first, since the characters being modeled could be created at a higher quality than they would have with a TV budget. Although Nick was worried that it would be more difficult to attract a movie-going audience without the TV show to build an install base for the series, these concerns were answered with a series of short TV interstitials which would begin airing in order to build up hype for the upcoming film.[4][6]
With a budget of roughly $30 million, production of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius was greenlit in Fall 1999, and work began on a script for the film. Production officially started in February 2000 under the direction of Davis. In order to speed up the pace of work for a feature film, the company’s staff count was considerably increased from 30 to around 150 employees, and the studio's workspace was also reformed in order to fit such a team of filmmakers.[5] The film was completed in 24 months- roughly half that in which most other CGI films were completed.[4][6]
Writing
The screenplay for Jimmy Neutron was written by Davis and Oedekerk, as well as Rugrats show-writers David Weiss and J. David Stem.[6] In creating the many ideas in Jimmy Neutron, Davis and Oedekerk thought back to their childhoods, trying to think about "what a kid would create if he had the ability to create any kind of gadget."[4] The film was largely inspired by Davis' own love of science fiction which he had since childhood, drawing influence from various sources including The Thunderbirds and Ray Harryhausen's stop motion work. Oedekerk's 6-year-old daughter, Zoe, came up with the idea for "burp soda," which ultimately appeared in the movie as one of Jimmy's many inventions.[4] According to Davis, the Ultralord-obsessed Sheen Estevez was inspired by Davis' own love of collecting.[3] Sheen was initially intended to be Japanese, as he was named after the nickname of a Japanese employee who had worked for Davis, but the filmmaking team had trouble finding a good Japanese voice actor. Incidentally, they changed the character's nationality to Mexican after opening the role to a broader category and eventually settling on Mexican stand-up comic Jeff Garcia.[3][7]
Animation
Jimmy Neutron was the first computer animated film to be created entirely using commercial animation programs rather than proprietary software, with most animation done using both Lightwave and project:messiah.[4] Characters were first modeled in Lightwave, after which they were rigged and animated in Messiah. Texture painting was done via Adobe Photoshop, while compositing work was completed in Maya Fusion.[5] In addition to serving as executive producer, Alcorn was the film's lead character designer, and created actively simplistic and cartoonish designs in order to avoid overcomplicating production. To animate crowd scenes, methods of simplification were used to make animation less time-consuming- characters that were farther from the camera had less articulation, and animators would duplicate the same characters, offset them to different areas, and change their body parts to differentiate them. One particular scene shows a crowd of 6000 Yolkians, each of which uses one of 30 distinct animation loops.[5]
According to Davis, the character models were intentionally given a "sculpted, graphic look," both to avoid making them look overly realistic and to circumvent the prospect of having to deal with simulating cloth or hair.[5] The over-the-top character designs, in turn, influenced the film world's aesthetic (e.g. cars were modeled to be able to fit the characters' stylistically large heads).[5] Off-the-shelf shaders were favored over ones which created more photorealistic lighting in order to maintain a cartoonish appearance throughout.[5]
Casting
Jimmy Neutron was played by female voice actor Debi Derryberry, who would continue to play the character in the TV series. The film was Derryberry's biggest acting role at the time, as previously she had mostly provided minor roles in films and TV shows.[8]
Soundtrack
Official soundtrack
The movie soundtrack was released by Zomba Music, Jive Records, and Nick Records on November 20, 2001, a month prior to the film's release.[9][10] It includes covers of DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince's "Parents Just Don't Understand", Thomas Dolby's "She Blinded Me With Science" , and Kim Wilde's "Kids In America".
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
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1. | "Leave It Up to Me" | Aaron Carter | 2:59 |
2. | "Pop" (Deep Dish Cha-Ching Remix) | *NSYNC | 4:13 |
3. | "Parents Just Don't Understand" | Lil' Romeo, Nick Cannon, and 3LW | 3:55 |
4. | "Intimidated" | Britney Spears | 3:17 |
5. | "He Blinded Me with Science" | Melissa Lefton | 3:15 |
6. | "A.C.'s Alien Nation" | Aaron Carter | 3:23 |
7. | "Kids in America" | No Secrets | 3:07 |
8. | "The Answer to Our Life" | Backstreet Boys | 3:17 |
9. | "The Chicken Dance" | Werner Thomas | 1:32 |
10. | "I Can Count on You" | True Vibe | 3:46 |
11. | "We Got the Beat" | The Go-Go's | 2:31 |
12. | "Go Jimmy Jimmy" | Aaron Carter | 2:39 |
13. | "Parents Just Don't Understand (Bonux Mix)" | Lil' Romeo, 3LW, and Nick Cannon | 3:52 |
14. | "Blitzkrieg Bop" | The Ramones | 2:12 |
15. | "Jimmy Neutron Theme" | Bowling for Soup | 2:08 |
Original score
Additionally, a promotional CD containing the score by John Debney was released for Academy Award consideration.
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
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1. | "Jimmy Neutron Theme" | Bowling for Soup | 2:08 |
2. | "Leave It Up to Me" | Aaron Carter | 2:59 |
3. | "Pop" (Deep Dish Cha-Ching Remix) | *NSYNC | 4:13 |
4. | "Parents Just Don't Understand" | Lil' Romeo, 3LW, and Nick Cannon | 3:55 |
5. | "Intimidated" | Britney Spears | 3:17 |
6. | "He Blinded Me With Science" | Melissa Lefton and The Matrix | 3:15 |
7. | "A.C.'s Alien Nation" | Aaron Carter | 3:23 |
8. | "Kids in America" | No Secrets | 3:07 |
9. | "The Answer to Our Life" | Backstreet Boys | 3:17 |
10. | "The Chicken Dance" | Werner Thomas | 1:32 |
11. | "I Can Count on You" | True Vibe | 3:46 |
12. | "We Got the Beat" | The Go-Go's | 2:31 |
13. | "Go Jimmy Jimmy" | Aaron Carter | 2:39 |
14. | "Parents Just Don't Understand (Bonux Mix)" | Lil' Romeo, 3LW, and Nick Cannon | 3:52 |
15. | "Blitzkrieg Bop" | The Ramones | 2:12 |
16. | "Nickelodeon Logo" | 0:14 | |
17. | "Air Force" | 1:00 | |
18. | "Jimmy's Rocket Machine" | 1:20 | |
19. | "Parents" | 1:17 | |
20. | "Ready-to-Go-to-School Machine" | 1:49 | |
21. | "The Plan (Part 1)" | 0:37 | |
22. | "The Plan (Part 2)" | 0:17 | |
23. | "Nick" | 0:50 | |
24. | "The Worm" | 0:20 | |
25. | "RetroLand Theme Park!" | 0:40 | |
26. | "Oyster & Diamond" | 0:34 | |
27. | "Alien Space Craft/Jimmy's Message" | 3:02 | |
28. | "Options" | 0:49 | |
29. | "Sneak Out" | 1:09 | |
30. | "Invasion Alert" | 0:34 | |
31. | "RetroLand Main" | 0:14 | |
32. | "Good Night" | 0:58 | |
33. | "Alien Abduction" | 1:13 | |
34. | "The Wish" | 0:47 | |
35. | "Say Goodbye/Angry Mob & 75/Launch" | 7:07 | |
36. | "Beauty of Space/Meteor" | 2:25 | |
37. | "The Alien Planet" | 1:12 | |
38. | "Flying Jimmy" | 0:50 | |
39. | "King Goobot's Shock" | 0:20 | |
40. | "Poultra: God of Wrath (Part 1)" | 0:10 | |
41. | "Poultra: God of Wrath (Part 2)" | 0:20 | |
42. | "Prisoners" | 1:10 | |
43. | "Cindy & Jimmy" | 1:34 | |
44. | "Ooblar's Danger/Cell Dog Phone/Rescue" | 3:09 | |
45. | "Stadium" | 0:23 | |
46. | "Bring on the Humans" | 0:47 | |
47. | "The Incubation" | 0:48 | |
48. | "Sacrifice" | 0:29 | |
49. | "The Plan" | 1:40 | |
50. | "Jimmy to the Rescue" | 2:02 | |
51. | "Escape from the Planet/The Big Chase" | 2:42 | |
52. | "Jimmy Is the Winner/Apologize" | 2:15 | |
53. | "The End" | 0:13 | |
Total length: | 82:58 |
Release
Movie Theatrical release
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius was released in theaters on December 21, 2001,[1] by Paramount Pictures.
Home media
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius was released on VHS and DVD by Paramount Home Entertainment on July 2, 2002.[11][12] It was re-released on DVD on June 22, 2011 and re-released again on DVD on April 25, 2017. The film has yet to be released on Blu-ray.
Film promotion
These shorts were used to promote the film. They have all been released on the official Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius DVD release of the film. All of the inventions in each short were seen again at some point on the television series (except for the Pain-Transference helmet). Clips from similar versions of these shorts, along with clips from the unaired "Runaway Rocketboy" pilot, appeared in the teaser trailer for Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius. The biggest difference between the clips seen in the trailer and the original shorts is that Jimmy wears the white and red striped shirt he wore in the pilot, rather than his trademark shirt.
Shorts
Short | Overview |
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"Carl Squared" | Carl asks Jimmy many questions when he clones himself. The cloning machine is seen again in "Send in the Clones" and "The Trouble with Clones". |
"Calling All Aliens" (Parts 1-5) | Jimmy receives a message, thinking that it is from aliens. But when he says "school Goddard", he gets teleported to school. He tries several attempts to try to communicate with the aliens. Aliens are also mentioned in Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius. It serves as the prologue to the movie. |
"Cookie Time" | Jimmy has a remote control that controls time. He asks his mom for a cookie and gets it. He keeps rewinding but Goddard bites the remote and sends them back to the prehistoric era. The remote is seen again in "Sorry, Wrong Era". |
"Hyper Corn" | Jimmy invents his HyperCube, to store infinite items in one small place. But, it is dinner time and they are having creamed corn, which Jimmy hides in his Hyper Cube. After Jimmy's dad thinks it is a brain teaser puzzle and breaks it, Jimmy finds out that he likes it after all. The Hyper Cube makes appearances in the episodes "Hypno Birthday to You" and "Holly Jolly Jimmy", although it looks different from in the original short. |
"New Dog, Old Tricks" | Jimmy introduces his robotic dog, Goddard, to Cindy and her dog, Humphrey, who Cindy says is the best dog in Retroville. However, after showing each other new tricks, Goddard wins the argument. Humphrey makes brief cameos in other episodes. Note: A clip from a slightly different version of this short appeared in the original theatrical trailer for Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius. This version ends with Goddard putting himself back together after Jimmy says, "I can fix that." |
"Pain Pain Go Away" | Jimmy visits Dr. Pane, the dentist, using his Pain-Transference Helmet to transfer the pain to Cindy. He gets in trouble, though, when Cindy snatches the helmet the next day and retaliates by injuring herself and sending the pain to Jimmy. |
"Sea Minus" | Jimmy accidentally uses his Matter Transporter to move the Neutron's House underwater! The Matter Transporter is seen again in "My Son, the Hamster". |
"Ultralord vs. The Squirrels" | Sheen gets his new Ultralord Action Figure in a tree. Jimmy must get it back with his Hypno Ray invention to keep it away from the squirrels. The Hypno Ray is seen again in "Hypno Birthday to You". Note: A clip from a slightly different version of this short appeared in the original theatrical trailer for Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius. In the trailer version, the scenes take place in the park, rather than in Jimmy's backyard, while Sheen is replaced by Nick Dean. |
Reception
Critical response
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius received generally positive reviews from critics and audiences. The film has a 74% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 76 reviews, with an average rating of 6.37/10. The critics' consensus reads: "What Jimmy Neutron lacks in computer animation, it makes up for in charm and cleverness."[13] According to Metacritic, the film also scored 65/100, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[14] Rita Kempley of Washington Post praised the film, saying that "this little charmer both celebrates and kids the corny conventions of family sitcoms". Nell Minow of Common Sense Media enjoyed the "stylish 3-D computer animation, good characters", giving the film 3 out of 5 stars.[15] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave this film a B+, calling it "a lickety-split, madly packed, roller-coaster entertainment that might almost have been designed to make you scared of how much smarter your kids are than you".[16] Paul Tatara of CNN.com called the film "the most delightfully original children's film of 2001".[17] Roger Ebert of Chicago Sun-Times gave the film a 3/4 score, saying that "it doesn't have the little in-jokes that make Shrek and Monsters, Inc. fun for grown-ups. But adults who appreciate the art of animation may enjoy the look of the picture".[18]
Box office
The film was financially successful, grossing $13,833,228 on its opening weekend in third place behind The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring and Ocean's Eleven and ended up with a total of $80,936,232 domestically, and the film did better overseas grossing $22,056,304 which made a total of $102,992,536 worldwide. It had a budget of roughly $30 million. It is one of only twelve feature films to be released in over 3,000 theaters and still improve on its box office performance in its second weekend, increasing 8.7% from $13,832,786 to $15,035,649.[19]
Awards
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius was nominated for the first Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, losing to Shrek. It was the first release from Nickelodeon Movies to receive an Academy Award nomination.
Other media
Cancelled sequel and possible reboot film plans
In February 2002, a sequel was reported in development for a summer 2004 release. Producer Albie Hecht reported to The Los Angeles Times that the sequel "would be made on the same budget as the first, but with a new batch of inventions and adventures in Jimmy's town of Retroville."[20] On June 20, 2002, The Hollywood Reporter reported that writer Kate Boutilier had signed a writing deal with Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount Pictures to write a sequel to the film, but the sequel was never materialized.[21] The film was cancelled because the writers could not agree on a story and Alcorn later stated in an interview that "once the TV series came out, there wasn't a lot of incentive to make a movie when fans could simply watch Jimmy Neutron for free at home."[22]
In 2016, director John A. Davis has stated that he has a story for a Jimmy Neutron reboot feature that he would like to make, but he is waiting for the "right situation" to make it.[23]
When asked about a reboot in 2020, Rob Paulsen stated "Well, I've got to tell you, man. I go all over the world when we don't have the coronavirus, and people love Carl. They love Carl. I don't think it would be a bad thing at all to reboot Jimmy Neutron. I think that's one of those shows that a lot of people would love to see again. It was very good. Really smart. That wouldn't surprise me."[24]
Television series spin-offs
Due to the film's successful box office performance, it lead to a spin-off television series The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius, that ran from July 2002 to November 2006. Four years later, another spin-off series (as well as a spin-off of the original) titled Planet Sheen, focusing on Sheen Estevez, ran from October 2, 2010 to February 15, 2013.
Genius, Sheenius or Inbetweenius
An event that aired on May 19, 2007, Nickelodeon rehired Debi Derryberry, Jeffrey Garcia and Rob Paulsen to return for a special audio commentary version of the film that features their animated counterparts' silhouettes, spoofing Mystery Science Theater 3000.
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius". RottenTomatoes.com. Retrieved October 21, 2013.
- ^ "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved February 6, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e f g Hector Navarro (September 1, 2016). "Nick Animation Podcast: John Davis". soundcloud.com (Podcast). Nick Animation. Retrieved November 10, 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Rise of Jimmy Neutron". Awn.com. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Neu Kid on the Block". Cgw.com. January 1, 2002. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
- ^ a b c d Mallory, Michael (November 11, 2001). "A Boy and His Franchise". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
- ^ Stacey Grant (December 21, 2016). "How Jimmy Neutron Went From A Childhood Nickname To A Major Franchise". MTV. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
- ^ https://poststar.com/lifestyles/surprise-jimmy-neutron-is-a-woman/article_baf46f3e-7261-57bf-ae8a-d055936d3e7c.html
- ^ "Various - Music From The Motion Picture 'Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius'". Discogs.com. Discogs. Retrieved January 10, 2014.
- ^ "Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius - Original Television Soundtrack | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved March 27, 2020.
- ^ Bovberg, Jason (July 18, 2002). "Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius". DVD Talk. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
- ^ Wolf, Jessica (May 9, 2002). "Jimmy Neutron Blasts To Class". Hive4media.com. Archived from the original on May 27, 2002. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
- ^ "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (2001)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
- ^ "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius". Metacritic. Retrieved December 8, 2012.
- ^ "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius Movie Review". Commonsensemedia.org. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
- ^ Gleiberman, Owen (January 4, 2002). "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius Review | Movie Reviews and News". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
- ^ "CNN.com International - Breaking, World, Business, Sports, Entertainment and Video News". Archives.cnn.com. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
- ^ Emerson, Jim (December 21, 2001). "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius Movie Review (2001) | Roger Ebert". Rogerebert.suntimes.com. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
- ^ "Smallest Second Weekend Drops". boxofficemojo.com. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 27, 2014.
- ^ "From One Screen to Another". Los Angeles Times. 2002-02-15. Retrieved 2020-02-02.
- ^ "'Jimmy Neutron' Sequel Gets 'Thornberrys' Scribe". Killer Movies. June 20, 2002. Retrieved November 12, 2016.
- ^ "Keith Alcorn on JIMMY NEUTRON and PLANET SHEEN". karereviews.net. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
- ^ Gruppetstudios (October 14, 2016), Cartoons VS Cancer Ep. 11 - (The One with John Davis!), retrieved November 24, 2017
- ^ https://comicbook.com/anime/2020/04/04/jimmy-neutron-reboot-is-possible-rob-paulsen-says/
External links
- 2001 films
- 2001 comedy films
- 2001 computer-animated films
- 2000s American animated films
- 2000s adventure comedy films
- 2000s science fiction comedy films
- Alien abduction films
- Alien visitations in films
- American children's animated space adventure films
- American children's animated comic science fiction films
- American computer-animated films
- American films
- American robot films
- English-language films
- Films scored by John Debney
- Films about missing people
- Films adapted into television shows
- Films directed by John A. Davis
- Films set on fictional planets
- Jimmy Neutron films
- Fiction about size change
- DNA Productions films
- Nickelodeon Movies films
- Paramount Pictures films
- Paramount Pictures animated films
- Films with screenplays by John A. Davis
- Films with screenplays by Steve Oedekerk