Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls

Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls

Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls poster
Directed by Steve Oedekerk
Produced by Gary Barber
Bob Israel
Andrew G. La Marca
James G. Robinson
Written by Jack Bernstein (characters)
Steve Oedekerk
Starring Jim Carrey
Ian McNeice
Simon Callow
Maynard Eziashi
Bob Gunton
Sophie Okonedo
Tommy Davidson
Music by Robert Folk
Cinematography Donald E. Thorin
Studio Morgan Creek Productions
O Entertainment
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date(s) November 10, 1995 (1995-11-10)
Running time 90 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $30 million
Box office $212,385,533[1]

Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995) is the sequel to Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994). Jim Carrey reprises his role as the title character Ace Ventura, a detective who specializes in retrieval of tame or captive animals. This is the only sequel to a film starring Carrey in which Carrey reprised his role. Ian McNeice, Simon Callow, and Sophie Okonedo co-star; whereas Tommy Davidson, who co-starred with Carrey on the show In Living Color, makes a cameo appearance in the film.

It was written and directed by Steve Oedekerk, who had also collaborated in the making of the earlier movie; Tom Shadyac having left after shooting began. The film has developed a large cult following since its release. It was followed by a direct-to-video sequel, Ace Ventura Jr: Pet Detective, in 2009.

Contents

Plot

After failing the rescue attempt of a raccoon in the Himalayas (a parody of the film Cliffhanger), Ace Ventura undergoes an emotional breakdown and joins a Tibetan monastery. There, he is approached by Fulton Greenwall, a British correspondent working for a provincial consulate in the fictional African country of Nibia. Because Ace's influence is disruptive to the monastery, the Grand Abbot gives Ace excuses by which to justify his departure, and sends him with Greenwall.

Thereafter, Greenwall asks Ventura to find the white bat 'Shikaka', a sacred animal of the Wachati tribe, which disappeared shortly after being offered as dowry of the Wachati Princess, who is set to wed the Wachootoo Prince to form armistice between the two people. Accompanied by his capuchin monkey, Spike, Ace travels to Africa to search for the missing bat.

After arriving in Nibia and meeting with consul Vincent Cadby, Ace begins investigating his case as well as the possible suspects; but must overcome his fear of bats in order to continue doing so. He travels to the Wachati tribal village, where he learns that if the bat is not returned in time, the Wachootoo will declare war on the Wachati tribe. Thereafter much of Ace's activity involves eliminating obvious suspects--animal traders, poachers, and a Safari Park owner among others--and enduring the growing escalations of threat between the Wachati and the Wachootoo. This proves difficult, and is made more so by other incidents including attempts to kill him, and the Wachati princess's attempts to seduce him.

Perplexed by the mystery, Ace consults the Grand Abbot via astral projection. Advised by the Abbot, Ace deduces that Vincent Cadby has taken the bat and hired Ace to divert suspicion from himself, having planned to let the tribes destroy each other so that he can then take possession of the numerous bat caves containing guano to sell as fertilizer. When Ace confronts Cadby with this knowledge he is arrested by tribal security chief Hitu; but calls an elephant to escape, and then summons herds of jungle animals to destroy Cadby's house. Cadby then tries to shoot Ace, but is thwarted by Greenwall. Cadby escapes with the bat in a car, but Ace follows him in a Monster truck. In pursuit, Ace destroys Cadby's car, leaving the bat cage lodged in a tree while Cadby escapes.

Ace, against his chiroptophobia, dramatically returns the bat to the tribes; and Cadby, watching nearby, is discovered by the Wachati Prince Ouda and pursued by both tribes, later to be raped by an amorous silverback gorilla. The Princess is married to the Prince, who earlier appeared as a champion wrestler sent to challenge Ace's presence in the tribe. Moments later, it is discovered that the young bride is no longer a virgin, apparently on Ace's account. Both tribes then pursue Ace, concluding the film.

Cast

Production notes

Jim Carrey, based on the box office success of the first Ace Ventura film, received a salary of $5 million for this sequel.[2]

The movie was set in a fictional location in Africa but was actually shot in various locations in and around Charleston, South Carolina.

Part of the film was shot in San Antonio, Texas and British Columbia, Canada.

When listing other words that start with "-sh" after hearing of the Shikaka, Ace includes "Shawshank Redemption". This may be a nod to actor Bob Gunton, as he appears in this film and The Shawshank Redemption.

Alternative versions

When aired in syndication, there is an alternative version of the 'rhino scene' (wherein Ace must escape with difficulty from within a mechanical rhinoceros in which Ace stands up after emerging from the rhino and shouts "Man was I lost!".

The UK release of the film features a number of cuts, equalling one minute and 35 seconds for the theatrical release, plus a further three seconds when re-classified for home video. These cut scenes include:

During the 'projector scene', the U.K. version features Ace casting bird-like shadows with both hands, as opposed to the single hand in the original release.

This film was shot in Super 35, so the fullscreen version is open matte, and reveals more to the top and bottom of the screen (sections that were not actually intended to be seen); it also crops the sides.

Release

Box office

Critical reception

Like its predecessor, the film received mainly mixed reviews from critics. It currently holds a 33% Rotten rating based on 24 reviews. On the other hand, it was received quite well by the public getting a 60% out of 100. The film received similar reception on Metacritic, gaining a metascore of 45 among critics, while receiving an average user rating of 7.8 out of 10 on the same website. The site also named the film one of the "Movies the Critics got Wrong".

Accolades

1996 ASCAP Award

1996 American Comedy Award

1996 Kid's Choice Awards

1996 MTV Movie Awards

1996 Razzie Awards

References

  1. ^ a b http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=aceventura2.htm
  2. ^ Cameron-Wilson, James; Speed, F. Maurice (1994), Film Review 1994-5, Great Britain: Virgin Books, p. 146, ISBN 0-86369-842-5 

External links