Lilo & Stitch

Lilo & Stitch

Promotional Poster for Lilo & Stitch
Directed by Dean DeBlois
Chris Sanders
Produced by Clark Spencer
Written by Dean DeBlois
Chris Sanders
Starring Daveigh Chase
Chris Sanders
Tia Carrere
David Ogden Stiers
Kevin McDonald
Ving Rhames
Jason Scott Lee
Music by Alan Silvestri
Editing by Darren Holmes
Distributed by Walt Disney Pictures
Release date(s) 2002 – June 16US (Premiere), June 21USA CAN, June 22JPN, July 19SKO, July 31RUS BLR UKR, August 20EST
Running time 85 min
Country Flag of the United States.svg United States
Language English
Budget $80,000,000
Gross revenue Domestic: $127,349,813

Worldwide: $273,144,151

Followed by Stitch! The Movie (2003)
For the television series, see Lilo & Stitch: The Series

Lilo & Stitch is a 2002 American film the 42nd animated feature in the Disney animated features canon. released by Walt Disney Pictures on June 21, 2002. The film was written and directed by Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois, and was the second of three Disney animated features produced primarily at its animation studio at Disney-MGM Studios in Orlando, Florida. The film is the 42nd animated feature in the "Official Disney animated features canon" and was rated PG for "mild sci-fi action".

Lilo & Stitch was nominated for the 2002 Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, which ultimately went to Spirited Away.

Contents

Plot

An extra-terrestrial mad scientist named Dr. Jumba Jookiba (David Ogden Stiers) is put on trial by a galactic governing body, headed by a Grand Councilwoman, for illegally creating dangerous creatures. The council is showed the creature, Experiment 626. Jumba tells the council that 626 is bullet proof, fire proof, extremely intelligent, can see in the dark and posesses super strength but his only instinct is to destroy. 626 is banished to exile on a desert asteroid. However, he escapes and zooms away in a police cruiser.

His pod crashes onto Earth. On the run, he passes himself off as a dog on Earth. (He starts off with three pairs of limbs, antennae, and things on his back that resemble feathers. He finds his way to a little girl named Lilo Pelekai (Daveigh Chase) who is living with her 21-year-old sister Nani (Tia Carrere), as their parents have recently died in a car accident. "It was raining, and they went for a drive, and..." Lilo is lonely and a bit of an outcast. Her friends don't seem to include her in their gang, and in rage she punches one of them. A social worker named Cobra Bubbles (Ving Rhames) is monitoring Nani's progress, as he is concerned that her parenting techniques do not meet the standards required to raise a child and is considering putting Lilo into foster care. Nani is fearful of this, as Lilo is the only family she has left, and vice versa. Lilo doesn't help, as she doesn't really know what may happen.

To try and help, Nani takes Lilo to an animal shelter, so she can adopt a dog, and she finds 626. He had been running from Jumba - who had arrived soon after him. She thinks it is a dog - whom she names "Stitch." She identifies with Stitch's strong antisocial tendencies, and the two form a bond immediately. Unfortunately, his violent behaviour costs Nani her job. Stitch initially attempts to escape the island but finds that it is impossible because he is afraid of the water, and cannot swim since his body is too dense. Stitch resigns himself to stay with Lilo when he spots that he is being watched by Jumba and Galactic Agent Pleakley (Kevin McDonald), who have been assigned to recapture Stitch without being detected by humans in exchange for Jumba's freedom. Pleakley is both a guide and Jumba's surpervisor, to ensure Jumba does not escape should he fail to recapture Stitch. Lilo notes Stitch's violent tendencies and attempts to teach him to relax, holding up her favorite musician Elvis Presley as a model example of behavior.

Cobra Bubbles tells Nani that unless she finds employment and improves their living conditions, he will have to take Lilo into foster care. She has three days to change his mind. Nani, with the help of her boyfriend David, tries several times to find employment, but is unable to secure a position, as Lilo's attempts to tame Stitch by having him behave as Elvis Presley generally lead to disaster during Nani's job interviews. After one such tiring day, David offers Nani and Lilo a day of surfing at the beach. While the three of them are trying to help Stitch learn how to surf, Jumba and Pleakley capture Stitch from underwater, leading Stitch to grab onto Lilo, dragging her under. David manages to rescue both Lilo and Stitch, but Nani believes that Stitch was attacking Lilo. Unfortunately, Cobra Bubbles saw the entire event, and tells Nani (not without sympathy) that it's time to separate Lilo from her and that he'll return the next morning. Stitch realizes that it was his fault and returns to Lilo's house alone. After seeing Lilo and Nani express affection as sisters, and discuss the importance of their culture and being together as a family, he experiences an identity crisis and decides to leave, hiding in the woods feeling completely lost.

The following morning, Jumba and Pleakley are fired for not capturing Stitch. The Grand Councilwoman assigns Captain Gantu to capture Stitch. This leads Jumba, no longer bound by Galactic Code, to aggressively chase Stitch in one last effort. He finds Stitch in the woods and finds out that Stitch is waiting for "family" to arrive. Jumba says that Stitch, being an experimental creation, doesn't have one and that he can never belong. Stitch runs from Jumba and a chase ensues. Meanwhile, Lilo discovers that Stitch left, while David arrives with a job offer for Nani. Nani tells Lilo to stay at home and not to answer the door. Stitch comes back to Lilo's home, followed by Jumba, and the two begin to fight while Lilo calls Cobra Bubbles for help. The house is ultimately demolished, with Nani and Agent Bubbles arriving just after. Seeing Nani and Cobra arguing, Lilo runs off into the woods and encounters Stitch. He reveals his true alien form, and Lilo is furious that he had deceived her. Before Lilo can say any more, Gantu captures both of them. Stitch manages to escape the pod they are both placed in but is then confronted by Nani. At this point, Stitch finally speaks to her in pidgin English and shows that he is an alien and does understand the meaning of ohana, meaning "family" and "that nobody gets left behind or forgotten". Jumba is able to capture Stitch during this moment of understanding, but Nani pleads with him to help save Lilo from Gantu, and he reluctantly agrees.

Employing Jumba's spaceship, they and Gantu give chase around the Hawaiian mountains. Stitch manages to land on Gantu's ship and attempts to free Lilo, but Gantu reconfigures the angle of the afterburners to blast Stitch off the ship. After a moment of unconsciousness, Stitch wakes up just in time to save a frog from being run over by a gasoline truck. Hijacking the same truck, Stitch drives it straight into an active volcano, taunting Gantu and releasing the fuel into the lava. The explosion launches Stitch like a rocket straight into Gantu's cockpit. Gantu tries to smash Stitch but ends up getting thrown off the ship. Stitch rescues Lilo moments before the ship explodes. When everyone lands in the ocean, David is coincidentally surfing nearby and helps transport everyone to shore.

Just as they arrive to the shore, it is suddenly revealed that the Grand Councilwoman herself has come to arrest Stitch. Stitch, using his new name and broken English, asks to say good-bye to Lilo and Nani, telling the Grand Councilwoman: "This my family. I found it all on my own. It's little, and broken, but still good." Lilo presents the certificate of adoption from the dog pound which, as a legally binding document, makes her responsible for Stitch. The Grand Councilwoman sees that Stitch has reformed into a civilized creature under Lilo's care, and so Stitch's sentence of life in exile is altered: he's now considered a ward of Lilo and Nani's. Cobra Bubbles is revealed to be a former CIA agent who previously met the Grand Councilwoman at Roswell, and he promises to keep an eye on the family. The movie ends with both Jumba and Pleakley assigned to Earth (they help rebuild the demolished home with some of their alien technology), and with Stitch being fully accepted into Lilo's family.

Setting

Lilo & Stitch is the sixth Disney animated feature to take place in the present day, following Oliver & Company. The movie was originally intended to take place in rural Kansas[1] so that Stitch could interact with other characters while still being isolated from wreaking greater havoc. A decision to change the film's setting to the Hawaiian island of Kauaʻi was an important choice in defining the plot more clearly. No other feature-length animated movie had ever taken place on any of the Hawaiian islands before.[1] In Sanders' words:

"Animation has been set so much in ancient, medieval Europe—so many fairy tales find their roots there, that to place it in Hawaiʻi was kind of a big leap. But that choice went to color the entire movie, and rewrite the story for us."

While the animation team visited Kauaʻi to research the locale, their tour guide explained the meaning of ʻohana as it applies to extended families. This concept of ʻohana became an important part of the movie. DeBlois recalls:

"No matter where we went, our tour guide seemed to know somebody. He was really the one who explained to us the Hawaiian concept of ʻohana, a sense of family that extends far beyond your immediate relatives. That idea so influenced the story that it became the foundation theme, the thing that causes Stitch to evolve despite what he was created to do, which is destroy."

The island of Kauaʻi had previously been featured in such films as Raiders of the Lost Ark and the Jurassic Park trilogy. The Disney animators faced the daunting task of meshing the film's plot, which showed the impoverished and dysfunctional life that many Hawaiians and other Westerners lived during the recent economic downturn, with the island's serene beauty. To give a brighter image to the film, the studio used watercolors to paint the backgrounds.

Jason Scott Lee, who has Hawaiian ethnicity, co-wrote the dialogue for his character.

Reception

The film opening in #1 with $35,260,212 in its first weekend, tying up to with the film Minority Report. In its second week, fell for #2, but Minority was in #3. The film profited $145,794,338 in the United States and Canada, and $127,349,813 internationally, finishing with $273,144,151 in the world.
Lilo & Stitch received extremely positive reviews from critics and movie-goers alike, the only film of the Walt Disney Feature Animation of the decade so far to reach both ticket office and critical success. The high sale of DVDs also gave beginning to a lucrative surmounting with four films and a television series spanning two seasons. The film has received 139 critical reviews on the site Rotten Tomatoes, 119 positive and 20 negative, giving it an excellent total rating of 86%.

Soundtrack

Main Article: Lilo & Stitch (soundtrack)

Track listing

# Title Singing by
1 "Hawaiian Rollercoaster Ride" Mark Keali'i Ho'omalu, The Kamehameha Schools Children's Chorus
2 "Stuck on You" Elvis Presley
3 "Burning Love" Wynonna
4 "Suspicious Minds" Elvis Presley
5 "Heartbreak Hotel" Elvis Presley
6 "Devil in Disguise" Elvis Presley
7 "He Mele No Lilo" Mark Keali'i Ho'omalu
8 "Hound Dog" Elvis Presley
9 "Can't Help Falling in Love" A*Teens
10 "Stitch to the Rescue" Score
11 "You Can Never Belong" Score
12 "I'm Lost" Score

Sequels

The film has had a total of three related movies come after it.

Parodies, references and trivia

Teaser Trailers

Teaser trailers for this film parody trailers for other Disney films (two of these were animated by Sanders) from recent years. These are called "Inter-Stitch-als" and are featured on Disney's official site. The original actors were brought back to reprise their roles and were shocked when asked to act negatively towards Stitch.

Spin-offs

In 2003, Disney expanded the Lilo & Stitch franchise to include a TV series titled Lilo & Stitch: The Series. It ran for 65 episodes between September 20, 2003 and July 29, 2006. The series carried on where the movie left off and charted Lilo's efforts to capture and re-home Jumba's remaining experiments.

In March 2008, Disney announced that it is to produce a reimagined version of Lilo & Stitch, titled Stitch! and aimed at the Japanese market. The show is to feature a Japanese girl named Hanako in place of Lilo, and will be set on a fictional island in Okinawa prefecture instead of Hawaii. To date, few details have been released. The final appearance of Hanako has yet to be decided upon though press reports have quoted officials as saying that she will be "very Japanese". The series is set to air in October 2008 and to be produced by the Japanese animation house Madhouse LTD. [2][3][4]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Pat Davis (April/May 2002). "Disney Goes Hawaiian". Hana Hou! Vol. 5, No. 2.
  2. Disney seals Japan anime and "Lilo and Stich" deal, International business times, 2008-03-06
  3. Disney says to produce Anime 'made in Japan' (2008-03-08)
  4. Disney plans Japan animation effort, International Herald Tribune, 2008-03-06

External links