Princess Protection Program

Princess Protection Program

A girls with a fishing rod sitting beside another girl in a yellow ballgown and tiara.

Promotional poster
Written by Story by
Annie DeYoung
David Morgasen
Teleplay by
Annie DeYoung
Directed by Allison Liddi-Brown
Starring Demi Lovato
Selena Gomez
Nicholas Braun
Jamie Chung
Samantha Droke
Tom Verica
Theme music composer John Van Tongeren
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Producer(s) Danielle Weinstock
Editor(s) Mark Conte
Cinematography David A. Makin
Running time 88 minutes
Distributor Disney-ABC Domestic Television
Release
Original network Disney Channel
Original release June 26, 2009

Princess Protection Program is a 2009 Disney Channel Original Movie, directed by Allison Liddi-Brown and starring Demi Lovato and Selena Gomez. The script was written by Annie DeYoung from a story by Annie DeYoung and David Morgasen.[1] The film premiered on June 26, 2009 in the United States and was released on DVD on June 30, 2009. The film won the 2009 Teen Choice Awards for Choice Summer Movie.

Plot

Princess Rosalinda Maria Montoya Fiore (Demi Lovato) is about to be crowned queen of the small nation of Costa Luna. General Kane (Johnny Ray Rodriguez), the dictator of neighboring country Costa Estrella, invades her palace with his agents during her coronation rehearsal, and attempts to capture the royal family and take over the country. Joe Mason (Tom Verica), an agent of the Princess Protection Program, a secret organization funded by royal families that looks after endangered princesses, whisks her away to safety via helicopter. Kane’s agents, however, succeed in capturing her mother, Queen Sophia.

The Princess Protection Program hides Rosalinda in Mason’s home in Louisiana, where she is to masquerade as a typical American teenager named Rosie Gonzalez. She meets Mason's daughter, Carter Mason (Selena Gomez), an insecure tomboy who works at the family bait shop and dreams of going to the homecoming dance with her crush, Donny (Robert Adamson). Though Carter initially treats Rosie with barely masked hostility, she warms up to her after Rosie explains her situation, and the two become best friends. Carter teaches Rosie to act like a typical American teenager, and Rosie shows Carter how to disarm those that scorn them (especially resident mean girls Chelsea and Brooke) by behaving as a true princess. Rosie soon becomes popular at their high school.

In an attempt to trick Rosalinda into exposing her location, General Kane announces false plans to marry her mother. Brooke discovers that Rosie is in fact Princess Rosalinda from a magazine she reads for Spanish class. She and Chelsea confront Rosalinda and threaten to expose her, but they agree to keep quiet if Rosalinda drops out of the vote for Homecoming Queen. Brooke and Chelsea also ruin their dresses for the dance. Rosalinda reads of the pending nuptials in the Brooke magazine and tells Carter that she has decided to return home. Knowing Costa Luna is still too dangerous, Carter secretly devises a plan to pose as Rosalinda and then use herself as bait to lure Kane into capture. Carter calls Mr. Elegante, Rosalinda's royal dress maker, for help with her plan. He tells Kane that Rosalinda will be attending the homecoming dance and will be wearing a blue dress that he actually sends to Carter. In the meantime, Rosalinda agrees to stay for the dance in order to help make the event special for a group of friends, the group of girls wear masks, which helps Carter disguise herself as Rosalinda.

According to plan, Kane and his agents mistake Carter for Rosie and lead her to Kane's helicopter the night of the dance. However, after winning the Homecoming Queen title and dedicating it to Carter, Rosalie discovers and ruins the plan by exposing herself to Kane, insisting that it is not Carter's fight. Fortunately, agents of the Princess Protection Program, including Mason, have been waiting inside the helicopter and rescue both girls. The P.P.P. agents quickly apprehend Kane and his henchmen and turn them over to the international authorities.

Rosie is crowned Queen of Costa Luna with Carter, Mason, Ed, Sophia and Mr. Elegante in attendance.

Cast

Production

Filming took place in Puerto Rico in 2008. School scenes as well as prom scenes were filmed at Colegio San Ignacio de Loyola (San Juan) and Colegio San José (San Juan, Puerto Rico) in San Juan and lake scenes were filmed at the Loíza Lake in Trujillo Alto. The Serrallés Castle in Ponce was used for interior and exterior castle scenes while the interior courtyard of Casa de España in the Old San Juan was used for both coronation scenes.[2]

Promotion

Disney Channel promoted the film's premiere weekend by offering never-before-seen episodes of their original series' Wizards of Waverly Place and Sonny with a Chance as an online reward if viewers can correctly count the number of times the words "princess," "princesses" and "princesa" are spoken during the film and enter the correct number (86) into a section on their website.[3]

Home media

The film was released on DVD on June 30, 2009, in the United States[4] and was later available worldwide.

Music

The film introduced two songs: a duet recorded by Lovato and Gomez called "One and the Same" and a song recorded by Mitchel Musso called "The Girl Can't Help It". Both songs were included on the compilation album Disney Channel Playlist, which was released on June 9, 2009. The film also includes the song "Two Worlds Collide" by Lovato, which was featured from her debut album Don't Forget.

One and the Same

"One and the Same"
Song by Demi Lovato and Selena Gomez
Recorded 2009
Genre Pop rock
Length 3:05
Label Walt Disney
Writer Colleen Fitzpatrick, Michael Kotch, Dave Derby
Producer Mitch Allan

"One and the Same" is a song performed by American pop recording artists Demi Lovato and Selena Gomez for the Disney Channel movie Princess Protection Program. The song was written by Vitamin C, Michael Kotch and Dave Derby and was produced by Mitch Allan. The song's music video was included on the DVD of the film. The song was also featured on the compilation album, Disney Channel Playlist, which was released on June 9, 2009.[5]

Chart performance

The song peaked at number 82 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. It has sold 329,000 digital copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.[6]

Charts
Chart (2009) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[7] 82

Reception

Laura Fries of Variety magazine describes the film as being "light as a summer breeze on the Louisiana bayou". Although the film does not stray far from the Disney formula, Fries also praised the film writer Annie DeYoung for providing young girls a nice message about self-esteem. Fries said the film should be a hit with the channel's target audience.[8]

Ratings

The film garnered 8.5 million viewers on its premiere, making Disney Channel the most-watched network in the time slot, with nearly double the viewers of CBS at that time.[9]

Awards

Year Ceremony Award Result
2009 Teen Choice Awards[10] Choice Summer TV Movie Won
Choice Summer TV Star - Female: Selena Gomez Won
Choice Summer TV Star - Female: Demi Lovato Nominated
2010 Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directorial Achievement in a Children's Program – Allison Liddi-Brown Won
Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Movie, Miniseries, or Special – Leading Young Actress: Selena Gomez Nominated
Best Performance in a TV Movie, Miniseries, or Special – Leading Young Actress: Demi Lovato Nominated

References

External links

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