The Magic Roundabout (film)
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The Magic Roundabout (Doogal in North America) |
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Directed by | Dave Borthwick Jean Duval Frank Passingham |
Produced by | Claude Gorsky Laurent Rodon Pascal Rodon |
Written by | Paul Bassett Raolf Sanoussi Stephane Sanoussi Butch Hartman (North America) |
Narrated by | Judi Dench |
Starring | UK: Kylie Minogue Joanna Lumley Robbie Williams Jim Broadbent Bill Nighy Ian McKellen Tom Baker Ray Winstone Lee Evans US: Kylie Minogue Whoopi Goldberg Daniel Tay William H. Macy Jimmy Fallon Ian McKellen Jon Stewart Bill Hader Chevy Chase Kevin Smith |
Distributed by | The Weinstein Company (North America) Pathé (Europe) 20th Century Fox (UK DVD) |
Release date(s) | February 11, 2005 (Europe) February 24, 2006 (North America) |
Running time | 85 minutes (Europe) 78 minutes (North America) |
Language | English, French |
Budget | $20,000,000 |
The Magic Roundabout (released in France as Pollux, le manège enchanté and in North America with an amended form, as Doogal) is a film based on the television series of the same name. The film was released on February 11, 2005 in the United Kingdom and France, and on February 24, 2006 in North America.
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[edit] Plot
The film begins with a shaggy, candy-loving dog named Dougal ("Doogal" in North American version) trying to get sweets from a candy cart. He goes so far as to place a tack in the road to pop its tire, thinking to be rewarded for watching the cart. After convincing the driver to leave, Dougal is trying to decide which candy he will request when he accidentally starts the cart up again and causes it to collide with the titular magic roundabout at the center of the village. A blue jack-in-the-box-like creature emerges from the top and flies away, snatching a decorative Foot Guard figurine from the roundabout before leaving. The roundabout freezes over, trapping repairman Mr. Rusty, Dougal's young owner Florence, and two other children named Basil and Coral within an icy cell.
The villagers are horrified by this development, therefore call upon the resident wizard, Zebedee, for help. He explains that the roundabout acted as a mystical prison for the evil ice wizard Zeebad. With it broken Zeebad is free to work his magic on the world again (it is implied he started the first ice age). The only way to return Zeebad to his prison is to place three magic diamonds in the roundabout, or watch the world slowly freeze over again. Zebedee sends Dougal, Brian the cynical snail, Ermintrude the opera-singing cow, Dylan the hippie rabbit, and the magic Train to accomplish this mission.
Zeebad animates the Foot Guard figurine, Sergeant Sam, and enlists him to find the enchanted diamonds first, for with them Zeebad can freeze the sun itself. Meanwhile, Zebedee's fellowship makes camp in the icy mountains near Zeebad's old lair. Dougal wanders off during the night and is captured by Zeebad. Ermintrude breaks him out of his prison; after a short chase, Zebedee shows up to battle his evil counterpart. Zeebad gains the upper hand and overpowers Zebedee, freezing him and collapsing the cliff on which he stands.
Mourning their dispatcher as dead, Dougal and his friends embark to recover the diamonds. This task takes them to a lava-bordered volcano, an ancient temple filled with booby-traps and evil skeleton guards (at which point Dylan reveals an exceptional knowledge of several types of martial arts), and a final showdown with Zeebad, where it is revealed that Sergeant Sam had contained the third diamond in his chest. Zeebad obtains all three diamonds during the course of the film, and attempts to freeze the Sun. Ermintrude, Dylan, and finally Dougal intervene to stop him; when they have done so, Zeebad is imprisoned in the carousel again and Zebedee is restored to his friends. The ice surrounding the carousel melts, freeing the people trapped therein; of them, Florence is comatose and must be revived by a desperate Dougal. A moose, whose color had been changed from brown to blue by Zeebad in the earlier scenes of the film, is restored to his true color by Zebedee. Dougal, who vowed to give up sugar when it seemed all was lost, forgets his former pledge completely, but now realizes the true value of his friends and the good qualities of selflessness, courage, and humility.
[edit] British reception
The Magic Roundabout gained generally favourable reviews from critics in Britain, for retaining its charm from the original television series and its superb animation.[citation needed] While some critics questioned the update for today's children and its subtle drug references[citation needed], the reviews were mostly positive. The public also supported the film, and while some were disappointed on the nostalgia factor, their praise earned this film a total gross of 5.8 million pounds at the box office, as of April 2005[citation needed].
[edit] American reception
As of March 16, 2006, the film grossed a total of 7.2 million dollars in the United States box office, which is considered exceptionally low by CGI animated film standards (the average domestic gross for a computer animated film is $134,571,721). In the North American version of the film, where audiences are unfamiliar with the series, the majority of original British voices have been replaced by celebrities more familiar to the American public, and a new storyline made to accommodate pop culture references (see section) and flatulence jokes, neither of which were present in the original release. Critics panned the movie; it got a 7% from Rotten Tomatoes [1] and was named one of the worst animated films ever.[citation needed] It also received an F rating from Entertainment Weekly magazine. Some individuals have gone so far as to have claimed the existence of a subliminal message during the viewing of the movie. After his friends scolded him for his foolishness, Doogal talks to himself at the crest of a snowy hill. "Look at me, all alone" is the quote that Doogal is supposed to have expounded. However, after further examination, many people[who?] have noted that it seems as if Doogal is saying "Fuck at me, all alone".[citation needed] This idea has readily been dismissed because it lacks any grammatical sense, but regardless a few people still believe that there was an intended message behind the quote. Whether people believe the validity of this "subliminal message", it is clear that both sides found no affection for this movie.[original research?] After being advertised for a short time, it stopped running, but is widely carried in United States retail outlets such as Safeway as a children's DVD in retail stores and video rentals. The original British version of the film is available in the US under the title Sprung! The Magic Roundabout.
[edit] Main characters and talents
[edit] Animals
- Dougal/Doogal: sugar-loving Skye Terrier.
- Dylan: guitar-playing hippie rabbit
- Brian: bashful snail in love with Ermintrude
- Ermintrude: opera-singing cow
- The Moose: cautious interloper encountered up north, who periodically breaks wind in U.S. version. Turned blue by Zeebad; later helps Brian and Ermintrude find Dougal. Restored to natural color by Zebedee. He only speaks in the US dub.
[edit] Humans
- Florence: girl/orphan who, when in danger, has faith in Dougal.
- Basil and Coral: Florence's friends
- Mr. Rusty the repairman: appears similar to the Mad Hatter of Alice in Wonderland.
[edit] Magical toy-beings
- Zebedee: a good magician, uses warmth and love magic. Is essentially a jack-in-the-box, like Zeebad.
- Zeebad Carpenter: evil ice sorcerer, uses cold magic. Like Zebedee, channels magic through his moustache.
- Soldier Sam: Zeebad's slave, who holds one of the magic diamonds.
- The Train: Not to be confused with Thomas the Tank Engine (although the latter is mentioned); always comes in the nick of time, though is slow, according to Ermintrude.
[edit] Voice teams
British character | British actor | French character | French actor | North American character | North American actor |
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Florence | Kylie Minogue | Margote | Vanessa Paradis | Florence | Kylie Minogue |
Ermintrude | Joanna Lumley | Azalée | Valérie Lemercier | Ermintrude | Whoopi Goldberg |
Dougal | Robbie Williams | Pollux | Henri Salvador | Doogal | Daniel Tay |
Brian | Jim Broadbent | Ambroise | Dany Boon | Brian | William H. Macy |
Dylan | Bill Nighy | Cyral | Eddy Mitchell | Dylan | Jimmy Fallon |
Zebedee | Sir Ian McKellen | Zébulon | Elie Semoun | Zebedee | Sir Ian McKellen |
Zeebad | Tom Baker | Zabadie | Michel Galabru | Zeebad | Jon Stewart |
Soldier Sam | Ray Winstone | Sam | Gérard Jugnot | Soldier Sam | Bill Hader |
Train | Lee Evans | The Train | Chevy Chase | ||
Moose | Kevin Smith | ||||
The Narrator | Dame Judi Dench |
[edit] Music
- Magic by Pilot is used, its 3rd use in a movie soundtrack after Disney's Herbie Fully Loaded and Happy Gilmore
- Mr. Blue Sky, by the Electric Light Orchestra from their album Out Of The Blue is a classic 70s tune that is key to the ending of the movie. Buyers should know it is not included on the US soundtrack.
- "Sugar, Sugar" by The Archies, number one single of 1969 is used only during the closing credits and album.
- Main Titles - Mark Thomas
- The Magic Roundabout - Kylie Minogue – VOCAL
- Meet Doogal - James Venable
- Magic – Pilot - VOCAL
- You Really Got Me - Bill Nighy & Catherine Bott - VOCAL
- Doogal the Mechanic - James Venable
- Zeebad Escapes - Mark Thomas
- Sam Marches - John M. Davis
- The Magic Roundabout - Andrea Remanda and Goldust – VOCAL
- Meet Zeebad - James Venable
- Setting Up Camp - Mark Thomas
- Spinning - Andrea Remanda and Goldust - VOCAL
- Duel Of The Springs 2 - Mark Thomas
- Simply Wonderful - Andrea Remanda and Goldust - VOCAL
- The What-a-Snails Waltz - Mark Thomas
- Zeebad Threatens - James Venable
- Train's Back - Mark Thomas
- Lost In The Cold - Mark Thomas
- See The City - Mark Thomas
- The Frozen City - Mark Thomas
- Frozen Florence - John M. Davis
- The End Of Zeebad - Mark Thomas
- Florence Awakes - Mark Thomas
- Sugar, Sugar - The Archies - VOCAL
- I Love To Boogie - T.Rex - VOCAL
- Lean Mean Machine - Andrea Remanda and Goldust - VOCAL
- Believe Yourself - Andrea Remanda and Goldust - VOCAL (Used during the scene with Dylan fighting the skeleton guards in the UK version)
- Bust This Joint - Andrea Remanda and Goldust - VOCAL