The Rugrats Movie
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| The Rugrats Movie | |
|---|---|
DVD cover | |
| Directed by | Igor Kovalyov Norton Virgien |
| Produced by | Gabor Csupo Arlene Klasky |
| Written by | David N. Weiss J. David Stem |
| Starring | Elizabeth Daily (voice) Christine Cavanaugh (voice) Kath Soucie (voice) Cheryl Chase Cree Summer Tara Strong |
| Music by | Elvis Costello Nigel Harrison Mark Mothersbaugh Jamshied Sharifi |
| Editing by | John Bryant Kimberly Rettberg |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures Nickelodeon Movies |
| Release date(s) | November 20, 1998 |
| Running time | 81 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $28,000,000 (estimated) |
| IMDb profile | |
The Rugrats Movie is a 1998 animated film, produced by Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies. This film introduced Tommy's baby brother Dil Pickles named after Didi Pickles's cousin. Dil later appeared in the Rugrats series the next year, and is considered the darkest of the Rugrats films ever to be produced due to its tone and aspects of the storyline (Babies lost in dangerous woods, interior conflicts between the group over being lost and Dil himself), being radical departures from the series' usual light-hearted appeal. There are mixed opinions on The Rugrats Movie as a result.
The film's plot itself concerns the babies attempting to get along with Dil, whether at the Pickles's house, or in the forest they somehow find themselves in (with monkeys) while trying to return Dil to the hospital. Busta Rhymes is among the notable guest voices, and there is a scene featuring several professional musicians(including Lou Rawls, Iggy Pop, Patti Smith, Lenny Kravitz, Beck, Lisa Loeb, The B-52's, and Phife Dawg) as the voices of babies in a nursery at the hospital. This movie also reveals Lucy Carmichael (Susie's mother) to be an obstetrician.
It was released on Thanksgiving weekend in 1998, and reached #1 at the box office (the first and only Nickelodeon Movies production to do so until Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events) ahead of Enemy of the State, and became the first non-Disney animated movie to gross $100 million in the United States and Canada, and the only such movie not made by DreamWorks until 20th Century Fox's Ice Age achieved the feat. The film was followed by Rugrats in Paris: the Movie.
Slap T. Pooch from Nickelodeon's animation showcase Oh Yeah! Cartoons has appeared in Nickelodeon Movies' opening logo sequence to this film.
Contents |
[edit] Deleted Song
This song is not heard on the dvd or video, on November 23, 2006 this deleted song was on nickelodeon:
"Wrong, Wrong, Wrong"
Deleted because of rudeness for PG or deleted because the movie was going to be too long.
[edit] Guest Stars
- David Spade as Ranger Frank
- Whoopi Goldberg as Ranger Margaret
- Busta Rhymes as The Reptar Wagon's voice
- Tim Curry as Rex Pester
- Roger Clinton as Air Crewman
- Margaret Cho as Lt. Klavin
- Fred Schneider as one of the newborn babies
- Beck as one of the newborn babies
[edit] Trivia
- Tagline: An adventure for anyone that ever wore diapers.
- After the closing credits one can see a clip where Grandpa falls asleep on the Reptar Wagon and rolls away. This was moved to before the closing credits when it was aired on CBS (in order to speed up the closing credits themselves).
- Two extra scenes not seen in the theatrical release were included in the airings on CBS. One was a dream sequences Tommy's parents have, while the second was a brief army march style song from the babies.
- The film's soundtrack was also a success. The single "Take Me There", performed by BLACKstreet & Mya featuring Murda Mase and Blinky Blink reached number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1998. The original version interpolated portions of the Rugrats theme without crediting the original composers. As a result of a threat of legal action, the song has since only been performed or broadcast in its remixed version (the "Jacksons Remix"), which retains the same vocal track, but is instead backed by an interpolation of The Jackson 5's 1969 hit "I Want You Back".
- Another piece of trivia concerning the soundtrack is that David Bowie recorded a song for the movie, "Sky Life", that went unused. The soundtrack's producer, Karyn Rachtman, was herself disappointed that it was not used.
- Rex Pester, a nosy newsreporter reads off a list of the Rugrats name, but reads them wrong. He mistakes the Rugrats as Tammy (Tommy), Dale (Dil), Bill and Jill (Phil and Lil), Chunky (Chuckie) and Amelia (Angelica).
- This is the first Paramount/Nick Movies animated motion picture.
- The Rugrats Movie grossed over $100 million in its theatrical run, making it the most successful animated movie in America that is based on a TV show
- The song sang when the monkeys appear is a cover of Witch Doctor song performed by DEVO
- First appearnce of Dill Pickles.
- The version seen on CBS is also the version seen on Nickelodeon (and recently Nicktoons Network)
- This is the First Animated Nickelodeon Movies movie to get a rated G Movie by the MPAA.
| Rugrats, All Grown Up! and Tales from the Crib |
|---|
| Episodes: Rugrats · All Grown Up! · Angelica and Susie's Pre-School Daze Movies: The Rugrats Movie · Rugrats in Paris: The Movie · Rugrats Go Wild! Characters: Tommy · Chuckie · Angelica · Phil and Lil · Dil · Kimi · Susie · Harold · Reptar |
- This film has a short parody of "Indiana Jones" towards the beginning of the movie. It features a rolling boulder, the theme song, and Tommy calls himself Okey Dokey Jones.


