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The Family Vacation Goes Overboard.
―Tagline.
Rugrats-gowld

Theatrical release poster

Rrthrad2

Promotional ad with the "beta" logo

Rugrats Go Wild is a 2003 animated comedy-drama crossover film, based off of Rugrats and The Wild Thornberrys. It was the third and last Rugrats film and is a sequel to both Rugrats in Paris: The Movie, and The Wild Thornberrys Movie. The film was released by Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount Pictures on June 13, 2003 (opposed to its original poster).

Plot[]

Rugrats go wild screenshot 1
Rugrats go wild screenshot 2

The Rugrats go on an adventure through the safari. Tommy impersonates Nigel Thornberry, who is his role model and spoofs his nature show. The babies' broadcast is cut short when they come across a tiger and then a crocodile, both of which threaten them. Just as they begin sinking in quicksand and are nearly attacked, this is revealed as only imagination; the babies and their families are about to go on vacation on the Lipschitz cruise ship.

When the families arrive at the dock, they miss the Lipschitz cruise. Tommy's father, Stu, has rented a ramshackle boat called the S.S. Nancy which he reveals to be their real mode of transportation, and their real vacation. The families are angered that Stu did not consult them on his plans, and soon the boat is flipped over by a rogue wave during a tropical storm. Everyone is forced to abandon the ship and board a life raft as the ship sinks. Everyone blames Stu for causing all of this and lose hope of being saved. Things start looking up when Angelica sings about having hope on her karaoke machine (which resembles a toy piano) she brought, until Spike's tail accidentally knocks both her Cynthia doll and karaoke machine into the ocean.

The next morning, they arrive on a small, seemingly uninhabited island (possibly in Southeast Asia) and Angelica finds her Cynthia doll on the beach. The adults argue about who should be the leader. When it gets out of hand, Betty suggests a test: she draws a circle around the fighting adults and tells everyone to step out of the circle, saying that it is the bad circle. They all step out and say that they all feel better, except Stu, and make Betty the leader, much to Stu's chagrin.

On the opposite side of the island is the famous globe-trotting family the Thornberrys (out to film a clouded leopard). Tommy, Chuckie, and the rest of the kids, except for Angelica, set off to find them, for they suspect they are somewhere on the island. Along the way, Chuckie gets lost and runs into the Thornberry's child Donnie, who steals Chuckie's clothes, forcing Chuckie to wear Donnie's shorts. He laments on looking like a "wild boy".

Meanwhile, Eliza, the gifted Thornberry, is exploring about the jungle with Darwin, her chimpanzee companion and runs into Spike, the Pickles' dog. Since Eliza can talk to animals, Spike (now voiced by Bruce Willis) talks for the first time (although he spoke in Chuckie's dream sequence in the episode "In the Dreamtime"); he informs her that his babies are lost somewhere on the island. Under the impression that Spike means he is looking for puppies, Eliza (and a reluctant Darwin) agree to help him find them. Following a close encounter with Siri, an angry clouded leopard whom Spike believes to be just a regular domestic cat, they learn that he meant the human babies.

Simultaneously, Eliza's father, Nigel, finds the lost babies. He heads in their direction but ends up tumbling down a hill and suffers amnesia after a coconut falls on his head. Angelica (going by "Angelitiki, the Island Princess") runs into Debbie, the teenage Thornberry, and takes off with Debbie in the Thornberry's all-purpose mobile communication vehicle (commvee). In order to get back faster, Angelica steals the Thornberry's bathysphere, accidentally sinking the commvee in her attempt to pilot it. She finds and retrieves the babies and Nigel.

Meanwhile Stu, who has managed to create a working coconut radio, and the other parents run into Donnie, who is still wearing Chuckie's shoes. After chasing him down the beach, they run into Marianne Thornberry, the mother of Eliza and Debbie and the wife of Nigel.

Stu's coconut radio picks up the babies, Angelica having accidentally turned on the bathysphere's radio. Angelica and Susie, while fighting for control, have crashed bathysphere at the bottom of the ocean. Nigel hits his head in the crash and regains his memories.

With the other parents' help, Marianne the raises the commvee and uses the automatic-retrieval system to rescue Nigel and the babies just as the air runs out. They are reunited with their families and forgive Stu, and everyone finally gets on board the Lipschitz cruise. The Thornberrys join them too, deciding that they should take a vacation, much to Debbie's delight. Spike vows never to lose his babies again. and the boat pulls the commvee across the ocean.

Production[]

The Rugrats Meet the Wild Thornberrys was originally made by Klasky Csupo's television unit (directed by Mark Risley and written by Kate Boutilier), but after wildly successful screenings, Paramount decided it should be shelved and remade into a feature film. The television version, a 90-minute special, presumably still exists somewhere in the Klasky Csupo / Nickelodeon vaults.

Rugrats Go Wild Odorama card

The Odorama cards from the film's original release.

Among the biggest hype this movie received was Bruce Willis voicing Spike, and the use of "Odorama" cards to enhance the viewing experience, Burger King and Blockbuster released a scratch-and-sniff piece of cardboard that was to be scratched and sniffed during the run of the movie. A number would appear and the viewers had to scratch the number shown on the screen when it turns green and smell the number from the screen on the card. The cards were also included in the DVD release, which includes the option to watch the film with the "Odorama" visual cues. However, later reissues of the same disc (such as The Rugrats Movie Trilogy Collection set) do not include the cards.

Reception[]

This film was released in the summer of 2003 to mixed reviews, gaining a 39% on Rotten Tomatoes.[1] It later received negative reviews as of it being considered to be either the weakest of the Rugrats films, earning mixed-to-negative reviews and not performing as well as the other two did (although it did manage to earn back its budget of $25 million).

There were also many complaints that the only thing that the "Odorama" cards smelled like was cardboard. The Odorama card was somewhat of an homage to John Waters' film Polyester. Despite the homage, Waters felt he was ripped off and realized that New Line Cinema, the studio that released Polyester, didn't renew the copyright for Odorama. He later said that "a check would have been an homage".[2]

Box office[]

The film opened at #4 at the box office and ended up grossing about $40 million. The film made about $39,402,572 in domestic grossing and $55,405,466 worldwide, making it a box office disappointment, and didn't make a box office hit like the previous two movies. However, it still grossed enough money to cover up its $25 million budget.

Trivia[]

  • The Wild Thornberrys will be the second Nickelodeon Movies film to become a franchise, after The Rugrats Movie.
  • During the tsunami scene, Chas says "We're gonna need a bigger boat". This is a reference to the famous Steven Spielberg film Jaws.
  • To date, this is the only theatrical Nickelodeon Movie to be a crossover.
  • This was the first and only Rugrats film to not be released in November.
  • Prior to the release of The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run in 2020 (making SpongeBob the second Nicktoon to have three theatrical films), this made Rugrats the only Nicktoon to have three theatrical films.
  • During the chase, the song "Frustrated Unnoticed" plays a reference to a Scooby-Doo chase scene, when a song is played when Tommy, Chuckie, Phil, Lil, Kimi, Susie, Dil, and Nigel being chased by Sira the Clouded Leopard.
  • This was the first and only Rugrats film to be shot in the 2.35:1 aspect ratio, and the second Nickelodeon film shot in the 2:35:1 aspect ratio overall.
  • This was the only Klasky-Csupo film to be released during the summer.
  • It's also the only Klasky-Csupo film to use an exclusive 2003 rooster logo instead of the 1998-present robot logo, and for the logo to be played at the beginning of the movie asside from the end.
  • This film was released less than a year after the The Wild Thornberrys Movie, making this the first Nickelodeon sequel to do so.
  • This is the first animated sequel to be rated PG by the MPAA, unlike the previous installments which were rated G.
  • This is the first animated sequel to be produced in a 2.35:1 aspect ratio, unlike the previous installments, which were produced at 1.85:1.

Cast[]

Soundtrack[]

Main article: Rugrats Go Wild (soundtrack)

A soundtrack was released on June 10, 2003.

Track listing[]

  1. "Message in a Bottle" - American Hi-Fi
  2. "Big Bad Cat" - Bruce Willis
  3. "She's on Fire" - Train
  4. "Island Princess" - Cheryl Chase and Cree summer
  5. "Lizard Love" - Aerosmith
  6. "Ready to Roll" - Flashlight Brown
  7. "The Morning After" - Cheryl Chase, Cree Summer
  8. "Atomic Dog" - George Clinton
  9. "Dresses and Shoes (Precious & Few)" - Cheryl Chase, Cree Summer
  10. "Should I Stay or Should I Go" - Clash
  11. "Lust for Life" - Bruce Willis
  12. "Phil's Diapey's Hanging Low" - Tim Curry
  13. "It's a Jungle Out Here" - The Rugrats
  14. "Changing Faces" - E.G. Daily

Video game[]

Main article: Rugrats Go Wild (video game)

Videos[]

Trailers[]

Movie clips[]

Gallery[]

References[]

External links[]

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The article or pieces of the original article was at Rugrats Go Wild. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Nickipedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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