- “If they don't evolve, they'll be history”
- ―Tagline
The Croods (also known as Crood Awakening) is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated adventure comedy film produced by DreamWorks Animation and distributed by 20th Century Studios (later Universal Pictures). It features the voices of Nicolas Cage, Emma Stone, Ryan Reynolds, Catherine Keener, Clark Duke and Cloris Leachman. It was the first DreamWorks Animation film to be distributed by 20th Century Studios. The film is set in a fictional prehistoric Pliocene era known as The Croodaceous, a period which contains fantastical creatures, when a man's position as a "Leader of the Hunt" is threatened by the arrival of a prehistoric genius who comes up with revolutionary new inventions, like fire, as they trek through a dangerous but exotic land, in search of a new home.
The Croods generally received positive reviews and proved to be a box office success, earning more than $587 million on a budget of $135 million and launching a new franchise, with a sequel already put in development.
The Croods (then known as Crood Awakening) was supposed to be a DreamWorks-Aardman collaboration and a stop-motion movie, but the studios went separate ways after the release of Flushed Away.
Plot[]
The prehistoric films begins with a cavegirl called Eep talking about how her family is one of the few to survive nearby, mainly due to the strict rules of her overprotective father, his daughter Sandy, his son, Thunk, his wife, Ugga, and his mother-in-law, Gran with a character that mirrors Eep's curious nature. He uses this story to warn the family that exploration and poses a threat to their survival. This irritates the bored and adventurous Eep, and when the family falls asleep after dark, she ignores her father's advice and leaves the cave.
While venturing off, she meets Guy, an intelligent human caveboy. She becomes fascinated with the fire he manages to create and is eager to learn more. He tells her about his theory that the world is reaching its 'end' before giving her a noise-making horn to call him if she feels the need for help. He then abandons Eep, who is then caught by Grug. He brings her back home much later, only to find that their cave home has collapsed from an earthquake. All the family then climb over the wreckage to discover an other-worldly land, much different from their usual surroundings of rocky terrain.
While becoming aware of their new surroundings, the family is attacked by some deadly red-feathered birds. After an unsuccessful attempt at hunting, Guy, with his 'pet' sloth, Belt (Chris Sanders), and Eep, build a puppet to lure nearby animals. Afterward, the family greedily devours everything they caught. Guy and Eep, however, are more sparing. The others realize their greediness and stop eating. Grug then tells another of his morale-lowering tales, this time mirroring the events of their day, mentioning a girl Grug and Ugga had before Eep was born who did venture away from her cave and died. Guy then tells a story of his own, about a paradise he nicknames "Tomorrow."
In the morning, the family reaches a path coated in spiked rocks. They reach the land of "Tomorrow" just in time. Grug throws them over the pit so they can cross. Then he uses a decaying skeleton carried by birds to transport himself there, barely escaping the oncoming destruction. He and the whole Crood family settle down as Grug becomes less protective, letting the family be more adventurous and risk-taking, thus bringing happiness to them all.
Voice Cast[]
- Nicolas Cage as Grug Crood. He is the well-meaning, overprotective, but outdated patriarch of the Croods family.
- Ryan Reynolds as Guy. He is a boy who is not as strong as the Croods, but prefers using his brain and comes up with various ideas, like fire or shoes. He is accompanied with a sloth-like pet.
- Emma Stone as Eep Crood. She is Grug and Ugga's daughter who likes to experience new things.
- Catherine Keener as Ugga Crood. She is Grug's wife and is more open-minded than Grug, but also works hard to keep her family safe.
- Clark Duke as Thunk Crood, Grug and Ugga's son, their 9 year old middle child. He is not smart and has bad coordination, but has a good heart.
- Cloris Leachman as Gran, a ferocious, very old (45 years) mother-in-law.
Characters with No Voice:[]
- Sandy Crood, Grug and Ugga's ferocious baby child who still bites and only growls.
- Belt, a sloth-like pet that, among other things, helps keep Guy's pants up.
- Chunky, the Macawnivore
- Douglas the Crocopup
- Brabby & Nabby
- Nippers the Lyote
- Bearowl
- Turkey Fish
- Punch Monkey
- Bear-Pears
- Pirahnakeets
- Sandsnake
- oversized bugs
- pharerates
Production[]
The film was announced in 2005 under the working title Crood Awakening, originally a stop motion film being made by Aardman Animations as a part of a five-film deal with DreamWorks Animation. John Cleese and Kirk DeMicco worked together on a feature based on Roald Dahl's story The Twits, a project that never went into production. DreamWorks got a copy of their script, liked it, and invited Cleese and DeMicco to look at the company's ideas to see if they found something they would like to work with. They chose a basic story idea about two cavemen on the run, an inventor and a Luddite, and wrote the first few script drafts. With the departure of Aardman at the beginning of 2007, the rights for the film reverted to DreamWorks.
Chris Sanders, who'd directed Disney films Mulan and Lilo & Stitch, joined DreamWorks to direct the project and proceeded to re-write the script. Sanders took over How To Train Your Dragon, putting The Croods on hold until March 2012. In March 2011, The Croods was pushed back to March 1, 2013, eventually released on March 22, 2013.
Gallery[]
Trivia[]
- The Croods (under its working title Crood Awakening) was to be the fourth of five Aardman Animations movies co-produced and distributed by DreamWorks. Aardman's severing their ties with DreamWorks ended this particular project, but Aardman went on to develop their own caveman film, Early Man (2018).
- The first DreamWorks Animation film to be distributed by 20th Century Studios, until Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.
- This is the only DreamWorks Animation film to have the "A News Corporation company" byline in the 20th Century Fox logo before the movie starts.
- The third DreamWorks Animation film to have a female protagonist, after Chicken Run and Monsters vs. Aliens.
- This the only Croods film to be distributed by 20th Century Studios.
- This is the first DreamWorks Animation film to use the bone bite sound effect originally from various Hanna-Barbera cartoons.
- This is the first DreamWorks Animation film to have a home media release to be distributed by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, until Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.
- This is the third DreamWorks Animation film not to be composed by by Harry Gregson-Williams, Hans Zimmer, John Powell, Rupert Gregson-Williams, Henry Jackman, Lorne Balfe, Steve Mazzaro, or Theodore Shapiro, as the film was composed by Alan Silvestri; the first two being 2005's Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (which was composed by Julian Nott) and 2012's Rise of the Guardians (which was composed by Alexandre Desplat).
- This is the 11th computer-animated film by DreamWorks Animation to be produced at their Glendale studio, along with Shark Tale, Over the Hedge, Bee Movie, Kung Fu Panda, Monsters vs. Aliens, How to Train Your Dragon, Shrek Forever After, Kung Fu Panda 2, Puss in Boots, and Rise of the Guardians.
- Coincidentally, the previous DreamWorks Animation film, Rise of the Guardians, also had a main character named Sandy. Both characters are also the only silent characters out of the main cast of their respective films.
Marketing[]
The first full-length trailer debuted on October 3, 2012 showing before Frankenweenie.
The second trailer premiered around December 2012. in front of Monsters, Inc. 3D
Official site: TheCroodsMovie.com
External Links[]
- The Croods at Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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