The Mighty Ducks is a series of three live-action films and one animated film released in the 1990s by Walt Disney Pictures. The movies revolve around a Twin Cities ice hockey team, composed of young players that stick together throughout various challenges. Despite its negative reviews by movie critics, the trilogy's commercial success paved the way for the creation of the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, (now the Anaheim Ducks) NHL team as well as a related animated series called Mighty Ducks.
The films still remain popular today, and were spoofed in a 2006 episode of South Park.
A "Mighty Ducks" area, with related decor, is retained in Disney's All-Star Movies Resort hotel at Walt Disney World Resort.
Basil McRae, Mike Modano, Wayne Gretzky, Luc Robitaille, Chris Chelios, Cam Neely and Paul Kariya have made cameo appearances in the films.
Contents |
The Mighty Ducks (1992) | |
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Director | Stephen Herek |
Screenplay | Steven Brill (written by) |
Producer | Jon Avnet, Jordan Kerner |
Release Date | October 2, 1992 |
MPAA rating | PG |
Color/B&W | Color |
Aspect ratio | 1.85 : 1 |
Runtime | 100 minutes, |
Alternate Titles | Champions (UK), Mighty Ducks Are The Champions (UK video title), Mighty Ducks: Das Superteam (D) |
D2: The Mighty Ducks (1994) | |
Director | Sam Weisman |
Screenplay | Steven Brill (characters) (written by) |
Producer | Jon Avnet, Jordan Kerner |
Release Date | March 25, 1994 |
MPAA rating | PG |
Color/B&W | Color |
Aspect ratio | 1.85 : 1 |
Runtime | 106 minutes |
Alternate Titles | The Mighty Ducks 2 |
D3: The Mighty Ducks (1996) | |
Director | Robert Leiberman |
Screenplay | Steven Brill (characters) (screenplay), Kenneth Johnson (story), Jim Burnstein (screenplay, and) (story, and) |
Producer | Veronique Jones |
Release Date | October 4, 1996 |
MPAA rating | PG |
Color/B&W | Color |
Aspect ratio | 1.85 : 1 |
Runtime | 104 minutes |
Alternate Titles | Mighty Ducks III - Jetzt mischen sie die Highschool auf (D) |
Mighty Ducks the Movie: The First Face-Off (1997) | |
Director | Joe Barruso Doug Murphy Blair Peters Sung Bak Yub Steve Langley (uncredited) |
Screenplay | Garfield Reeves-Stevens Judith Reeves-Stevens David Wise (written by) |
Producer | Lisa Salamone Smith |
Release Date | April 8, 1997 |
MPAA rating | PG |
Color/B&W | Color |
Aspect ratio | 1.85 : 1 |
Runtime | 70 minutes |
Alternative Titles | D4: The Mighty Ducks (Europe) |
After being pulled over for drunk driving, attorney Gordon Bombay (Emilio Estevez) is sentenced to community service, coaching hockey, a sport he claims to hate. There, he meets the "District 5" peewee hockey team, perennial losers who finish at the bottom of the league standings year after year. They are shut out every game and lose by at least five goals. The players learn Bombay was once a player for the Hawks, an elite team in the same league, but left hockey because of the embarrassment that followed after a failed attempt at a penalty shot at the end of regulation, causing them to lose in overtime, costing them a peewee championship. With the help of Coach Bombay, and a desperately needed infusion of cash and equipment, the players learn the fundamentals of the sport. Soon enough, the District 5 team (now christened the "Ducks", after Bombay's employer, Mr. Ducksworth) start winning games and manage to make the playoffs, reaching the finals and adding new player Adam Banks, an ex-Hawk who is a talented player and an asset for the Ducks. Bombay faces the Hawks, the team he grew up playing for, still led by Jack Reilly (Lane Smith), the same coach Bombay played for. Fittingly, the Ducks win the title game on a penalty shot by Bombay's protége, Charlie Conway (Joshua Jackson). The movie was released in The UK as Champions. It was directed by Stephen Herek and this premiered as a television movie on ABC in 1995.
Coach: Bombay
Team Captain: Charlie Conway
Rival Team: The Hawks
Moral Conscience: Hans
Inspired by his own players, Bombay decides to try out in the minor leagues and becomes the star player for the fictional Minnehaha Waves, with an easy pathway to the NHL. After a career-ending knee injury, he is offered a chance to coach a team representing the United States in the Junior Goodwill Games. For this, he reunites his Ducks and introduces them to five new players from across the country to form Team USA. However, the lure of celebrity becomes a distraction to both Bombay and the players, and reality kicks in when they lose against Team Iceland in an embarrassing defeat. Frustrated, Bombay drives his players even harder, yet Team USA continues to suffer, until they come across a street hockey team who teaches them how to play like "the real Team USA". New player Russ Tyler (Kenan Thompson), who earlier mocked Team USA during its matches, is recruited into the roster. Bombay realizes the most important thing is to have fun and after a change in attitude, the Ducks redeem themselves by working up the playoff ladder to meet Team Iceland in the finals. Team USA proves to be a match for Iceland, but the game ends in a tie, resulting in a shootout, which resulted in Team USA winning.
Coach: Bombay
Team Captain: Charlie Conway
Rival Team: Team Iceland
Moral Conscience: Jan
The movie shifts focus from Bombay to protége Charlie Conway (Joshua Jackson). Charlie and his teammates are awarded scholarships to Eden Hall Academy (a fictitious name from crossing Southwestern suburb Eden Prairie, Cretin-Derham Hall, and Saint Thomas Academy), a prestigious Minnesota high school Bombay attended. Their arrival is met with hostility from the varsity team (mainly consisting of players who are members of rich families, whose younger siblings were not accepted to the academy to make room for the Ducks), as well as Bombay's hand-picked successor, Ted Orion (Jeffrey Nordling), whose emphasis on defensive two-way hockey irks Charlie. Not wanting to be on a team led by Orion, who he believes to be a washed-up former professional player, Charlie leaves the team, but rejoins as he learns the truth about Orion from Bombay. Charlie and Orion quickly bond in time for the JV-Varsity Showdown, and thanks in large part to the work of Charlie, the Ducks win on a shorthanded goal in the dying seconds of the game from unlikely goal scorer Greg Goldberg (who is converted from goalie to defenseman).
Coach: Orion
Team Captain: Charlie Conway
Rival Team: The varsity Warriors
Moral Conscience: Hans & Bombay
All three films cast an opposing hockey team representing the various obstacles to the team:
All three films also had the Ducks start off with a different name, but reverts to the Ducks:
Many of the goals the Ducks score are artistic or gimmicky in nature; this is also known as "Duck Danglefest". One of their gimmicks is the Flying V, where all five players skate down the ice in much the same manner as a flock of ducks, the puck being passed around between the squad (interestingly, the team manages to score 2 goals with this maneuver: one in D1 and another in D2; following this, opposing teams defend successfully against it).
In the end to each movie, the Ducks prevail over their opponents by a single goal.
Each movie showcases a cameo appearance by National Hockey League players:
The following is the roster of all players for the Ducks[1], along with jersey numbers, playing positions and appearances in the three films. Seven of the players appear in all three films (Germaine, Averman, Moreau, Goldberg, Reed, Conway, and Banks). Their coaches are Gordon Bombay (Estevez, D1 and D2) and Ted Orion (Nordling, D3).
No. | Player | Hometown | Position | D1 | D2 | D3 | Portrayed By |
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00 | Guy Germaine serves as a model player for the Ducks on the ice and is second only to Banks in terms of skill. In D1, he is part of the "Oreo Line" with the Hall Brothers. He and Connie Moreau are in a relationship as seen by a victory kiss at the end of D1 and a near kiss in the beginning of D2. | St. Paul, MN | F | Garette Ratliff Henson | |||
1 | Terry Hall only appears in the first movie and is Jesse's younger brother. | Minneapolis, MN | F | Jussie Smollett | |||
2 | Tommy Duncan only appears in the first movie and is Tammy's younger brother. | Minneapolis, MN | D | Danny Tamberelli | |||
4 | Dave/Lester Averman serves as a goofball and deadpan snarker of the team. He can contribute on the ice but has trouble dealing with opposing enforcers. Averman is the second most injured person in the series, tied with Guy. | Brooklyn Park, MN | F | Matt Doherty | |||
5 | Tammy Duncan only appears in the first movie and serves as the team's figure skater. | Minneapolis, MN | F | Jane Plank | |||
6 | Julie "The Cat" Gaffney has the quick glove and is the team's second goalkeeper. Although she is the better of the two team goalies, Julie does not become the starter until D3. Her reputation as "The Cat" is cemented when she stops Iceland's Gunner Stahl's shot to give the Ducks the championship in the Junior Goodwill Games. She is one of the reasons the Ducks won their final games with her miracle saves. | Bangor, ME | G | Colombe Jacobsen | |||
7 | Dwayne Robertson is a ranch hand and the best puckhandler. Dwayne provides much of the team's comic relief with his southern demeanor and tendency to show off. | Austin, TX | F | Ty O'Neal | |||
9 | Jesse Hall is a forward who does not attend Eden Hall with the rest of the Ducks in D3. His loudmouth, outspoken attitude sometimes gets him into trouble, but at the same time enables the Ducks to form their friendship with new recruits Adam Banks in D1 and Russ Tyler in D2. | Minneapolis, MN | F | Brandon Quintin Adams | |||
11 | Dave Karp only appears in the first movie. Comedic and light-hearted, Karp loves to play pranks. | Minneapolis, MN | D | Aaron Schwartz | |||
16 | Ken Wu is a former Olympic figure skater who bedazzles opponents with his acrobatic, stylistic techniques and sets up scoring opportunities. After taking what he has learned from Russ Tyler's LA Street Hockey Team and standing up against an Iceland team member twice his size, Ken became dubbed by Fulton and Portman as "Little Bash Brother". | San Francisco, CA | F | Justin Wong | |||
18 | Connie Moreau is the recurring, independent female team player of the Ducks and is extremely proud of it. She and teammates Guy Germaine have a relationship. In the first movie, Averman refers to her as "the velvet hammer." | Minneapolis, MN | F | Marguerite Moreau | |||
21 | Dean Portman is the team's heavy enforcer that gives the Ducks a physical presence on the ice. He is close friends with fellow enforcer Fulton Reed and one half of the "Bash Brothers." He does not attend Eden Hall, but does return for the JV-Varsity showdown in the last 15 minutes of the third movie. | Chicago, IL | D | Aaron Lohr | |||
22 | Luis Mendoza is the team's fastest skater, having been clocked 1.9 seconds from blue line to blue line. Unfortunately, Luis has trouble stopping, which causes humorous collisions in the games. He's only shown being able to stop once in D2. | Miami, FL | F | Mike Vitar | |||
24 | Peter Mark only appears in the first movie. A player with an attitude and induces conflict, he leads a walkout on Coach Bombay. | Minneapolis, MN | D | J.D. Daniels | |||
33 | Greg Goldberg is originally from Philadelphia, but lives in Minnesota. Although the weaker and less skilled goalie than Julie Gaffney, Goldberg has the better stick as opposed to Gaffney's glove and is known for his flatulence. In D3, he switches positions from goalie to defenseman. Goldberg also scores winning goal in D3, with an assist from Conway. | Philadelphia, PA | G/D | Shaun Weiss | |||
44 | Fulton Reed is initially at outsider but is recruited by the Ducks when Bombay notices his powerful, but inaccurate (1 out of 5 are successful) slapshot (it is so devastating it can leave an imprint of the puck in a goalie's palm). Close friends with Dean Portman and fiercely loyal to Charlie Conway, Reed is shy and reserved, but shows his loyalty by standing up for the Ducks when the Hawks bully them. Like Charlie, he has trouble adapting to Coach Orion at the outset of D3. Reed is the other half of the "Bash Brothers" and the only player on the team to have his or her first name on the back of the jersey. | Stillwater, MN | D | Elden Henson | |||
56 | Russ Tyler is local boy from Los Angeles who teaches the team how to play "for real" following a major upset against Team Iceland in D2. He is recruited into the roster following Adam Banks' wrist injury. Russ fashions his trademark "knucklepuck", a slapshot that curves in a sine curve rather than a direct, straight shot, and is very loquacious. | Los Angeles, CA | D | Kenan Thompson | |||
96 - Captain | Charlie Conway is the leader, heart and soul of the team. Although not the fastest, skilled nor strongest player, Charlie is extremely loyal to the Ducks and to his coach, possessing the greatest leadership qualities among his teammates. After Adam Banks got injured during the Junior Goodwill Games, he recruited Russ Tyler for the Ducks. Once Adam was able to return right before the last game he chose to be the bench coach so no one had to give up their spot. He views Gordon Bombay as a surrogate father and grieves when his mentor leaves the team. He eventually learns how to lead the Ducks as Team Captain under new coach Ted Orion in D3 and records the game winning assist against the varsity team in D3. Joshua Jackson as Charlie Conway is one of Jackson's more famous roles. | Minneapolis, MN | F | Joshua Jackson | |||
99 | Adam Banks is the most talented and skilled player on the team. Originally a Hawk, Adam is forced to join the Ducks when it is discovered he lives in District 5. Upon his entry, the Ducks envy his wealth and question his heart, nicknaming him "Cake Eater"; only Charlie accepts him into the fold. Adam slowly gains the respect and loyalty of his new teammates. In D3, Adam's skill allows him to join the varsity team at Eden Hall Academy, much to his displeasure. Fortunately, Adam returns to his teammates' side at the JV-Varsity Showdown. Through out the trilogy, Adam has been the one to sustain the most injuries out of the entire team. | Edina, MN | F | Vincent Larusso |
Film | Release date | US Box office revenue | Budget | Reference |
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The Mighty Ducks | October 2, 1992 | $50,752,337 | $10,000,000 | [2] |
D2: The Mighty Ducks | March 25, 1994 | $45,604,206 | -- | [3] |
D3: The Mighty Ducks | October 4, 1996 | $22,936,273 | -- | [4] |
Total | $119,292,816 | $10,000,000 | ||
List indicator(s)
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Title | Rotten Tomatoes | Rotten Tomatoes Top Critics | Yahoo! Movies Users |
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The Mighty Ducks | 12% (26 reviews)[5] | 0% (5 reviews)[6] | B- (7997 ratings)[7] |
D2: The Mighty Ducks | 15% (13 reviews)[8] | N/A (1 review)[9] | B (2012 ratings)[10] |
D3: The Mighty Ducks | 20% (15 reviews)[11] | N/A (4 reviews)[12] | C+ (5654 ratings)[13] |
Trilogy average | 16% | N/A | N/A |
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