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Bolt
Release
Date November 21st, 2008
SYNOPSIS:
Super-dog
Bolt leads a life of action, danger and intrigue -- on television -- but what
happens when the cameras stop rolling? When he finds himself away from the
soundstage and the bright lights of Hollywood, this TV action star gets his
first REAL taste of adventure. The pup sets off on a courageous journey across
country to get back to his loving owner Penny. Along the way he befriends
abandoned house cat Mittens and a TV-obsessed hamster named Rhino. It's up to
them to help him discover that he doesn't need super powers to be a hero.
FUN FACTS:
Bolt is a 2008 American computer-animated adventure/action comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, and is its 48th animated feature. It is the first film directed by Chris Williams (who previously worked on Mulan and The Emperor's New Groove) and Byron Howard (who previously worked on Lilo & Stitch and Brother Bear). The film stars the voices of John Travolta, Miley Cyrus, Malcolm McDowell, Diedrich Bader, Nick Swardson, Greg Germann, Susie Essman and Mark Walton. The film's plot centers on a small white dog named Bolt who, having spent his entire life on the set of a television series, thinks that he has super powers. When he believes that his human, Penny, has been kidnapped, he sets out on a cross-country journey to "rescue" her.
As with earlier CGI Disney films, such as Chicken
Little and Meet the Robinsons, Bolt was also distributed in Disney
Digital 3-D in the theaters equipped for it. The movie was nominated for a
series of awards, one of which being the Academy Award for Best Animated
Feature which was, however, lost to WALL-E.
Plot
A girl named Penny and a dog named Bolt star on a hit
television series called Bolt in which the titular character has various
superpowers and must constantly thwart the evil plans of the nefarious Doctor
Calico. To gain a more realistic performance, the TV show's producers have
deceived Bolt his entire life, arranging the filming in such a way that Bolt
believes the television show is real and he really has superpowers. Mistakenly
believing Penny has been kidnapped by the villain, Bolt escapes from his on-set
trailer in Hollywood but falls into a box of foam peanuts and unknown to the
film company is accidentally shipped to New York City. In New York, Bolt starts
to notice that his superpowers aren't working, and rationalizes this is the effect
that styrofoam has on his body. He then meets Mittens, a female alley cat who
bullies pigeons out of their food. Bolt forces Mittens to help him get back to
Hollywood, and after Bolt knocks Mittens unconscious the two start their
journey westward on a truck. In Hollywood, Penny is deeply saddened over Bolt's
disappearance but is convinced by the studio to continue filming with a Bolt
look alike.
Surprised at his first feelings of both pain and hunger,
Bolt is shown by Mittens how to act like a cute, but needy dog, and is rewarded
by food. They meet Rhino, a fearless, TV-obsessed hamster and Bolt fan
who joins their team. Mittens tries to convince Bolt that his superpowers
aren't real, but their discussion is cut short by the arrival of Animal Control,
who captures them both and transports them to an animal shelter. After being
freed en route by Rhino, Bolt finally realizes that he is just a normal
dog, but regains his confidence after Rhino (oblivious to this revelation)
gives him a pep talk. They rescue Mittens from the shelter and escape, allowing
them to continue their journey. Along the way, Mittens teaches Bolt typical dog
activities (such as hanging his head out the window and chasing sticks), but
Mittens refuses to go farther than Las Vegas. She tells Bolt that his Hollywood
life is fake and there is no real love for him there. Her emotional rant
reveals that she was once a house cat, but was abandoned by her previous owner
and left to brave the harsh streets alone and declawed. Bolt refuses to believe
that Penny doesn't love him, and continues on alone, wishing Mittens the best.
Rhino, learning of Bolt's departure, convinces Mittens that they must help him,
and the two set off to find Bolt once again.
Bolt reaches the studio and finds Penny embracing his
lookalike. Unaware that Penny still misses him and that her affection for the
lookalike is only a part of a rehearsal for the show, he leaves, brokenhearted.
Mittens, on a gantry in the studio, sees what Bolt does not: Penny telling her
mother how much she misses Bolt. Realizing that Penny truly does love Bolt,
Mittens follows Bolt and explains. At the same time, the Bolt-lookalike panics
during the show's filming and accidentally knocks over some flaming torches,
setting the sound stage on fire with Penny trapped inside. Bolt arrives and
reunites with Penny inside the burning studio, but they cannot get out. In
desperation, and unwilling to abandon Penny, Bolt uses his "super
bark". The firefighters hear the noise through the building's air vent and
manage to rescue them before they succumb to smoke inhalation.
Penny and her mother subsequently quit the show when
their agent attempts to exploit the incident for publicity purposes. Penny
herself adopts Mittens and Rhino, and she and her family move to a rural home
to enjoy a simpler, happy lifestyle with Bolt and her new pets. The show
continues, but with a replacement "Bolt" and "Penny" –
"Penny's" new appearance being explained in the show as being serious
injuries necessitating her undergoing facial reconstruction surgery, and adopting
a new storyline about alien abduction (one that even Rhino finds unrealistic,
and Bolt finds "ridonculous"). The epilogue scenes during the credits
show Bolt, Penny, her mother, Mittens, and Rhino enjoying their new life
together.
Cast
- John
Travolta as Bolt
- Susie
Essman as Mittens
- Mark
Walton as Rhino
- Miley
Cyrus as Penny
- Malcolm
McDowell as Dr. Calico
- Nick
Swardson as Blake
- Diedrich Bader as Veteran Cat
- Chloe Moretz as Young Penny
- Greg
Germann as The Agent
- James
Lipton as The Director
- Randy
Savage as Thug
- Kari
Wahlgren as Mindy
- Grey
Delisle as Penny's Mother
- J.P.
Manoux as Tom
- Brian
Stepanek as Martin
- John
DiMaggio as Saul
- Jenny
Lewis as Assistant Director
Production
Development
At first, the film was going to be titled American
Dog, and was written and directed by Chris Sanders. Eventually, Sanders was
removed from the project and replaced by Chris Williams and Byron Howard. The
film's previous plot told the story of a dog named Henry, a famous TV star, who
one day finds himself stranded in the Nevada desert with a testy, one-eyed cat
and an oversized, radioactive rabbit who are themselves searching for new
homes, all the while believing he is still on television. In 2006, after
becoming Chief Creative Officer at Disney, John Lasseter along with other
directors from Pixar and Disney viewed a couple of early cuts of the film and
gave Chris Sanders notes on how to improve the story. According to Lasseter,
Chris Sanders was replaced because Sanders resisted the changes that Lasseter
and the other directors had suggested. Lasseter was quoted as saying
"Chris Sanders is extremely talented, but he couldn't take it to the place
it had to be." After Sanders left and the original title was removed, the
animation team was told to complete the filming just 18 months instead of the
usual four years that is normally required to produce a computer-animated
feature. On June 8, 2007, Disney announced that the film, now under its current
name, would be released on November 21, 2008 in Disney Digital 3-D.
Animation
The look of the film was inspired by the paintings of Edward
Hopper and the cinematography of Vilmos Zsigmond. New technology in non-photorealistic
rendering (NPR) was used to give it a special visual appearance, a technique
also used in the 2010 release Tangled. To give the film's 3D backgrounds
a hand-painted look, the company artists used new patented technology designed
specifically for the film.
Bolt's characteristics are based on an amalgam of breeds,
although the designers started with the American White Shepherd. Joe Moshier,
lead character designer, said, "they [American White Shepherds] have
really long ears, a trait that I tried to caricature in order to allow the
animators to emphasize Bolt's expressiveness."
The design of Rhino in his plastic ball was based on
executive producer John Lasseter's pet chinchilla, which was brought to an
animators' retreat during the film's production.
Music
The score to Bolt was composed by John Powell. The
soundtrack featured the film's score and two original songs - "I Thought I
Lost You" by Bolt's stars Miley Cyrus and John Travolta (nominated
for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song on 2009) as well as
"Barking at the Moon" by Rilo Kiley singer Jenny Lewis. The
soundtrack was released on November 18, 2008.
Although Motorhead has a song in the film, they do not
seem to appear in either the soundtrack or the score. Motörhead's song,
"Dog-Face Boy" (from their Sacrifice album) is in a mailroom
scene where a young worker is listening to it on his headphones and
inadvertently wraps Bolt up in a box that gets shipped off to New York City.
Track list:
All music composed by John Powell, except as noted.
No.
|
Title
|
Artist
|
Length
|
|
1.
|
"I Thought
I Lost You"
|
Miley Cyrus, John
Travolta
|
3:36
|
|
2.
|
"Barking at
the Moon"
|
Jenny Lewis
|
3:17
|
|
3.
|
"Meet
Bolt"
|
1:49
|
||
4.
|
"Bolt
Transforms"
|
1:00
|
||
5.
|
"Scooter
Chase"
|
2:29
|
||
6.
|
"New
York"
|
1:44
|
||
7.
|
"Meet
Mittens"
|
1:25
|
||
8.
|
"The RV
Park"
|
2:14
|
||
9.
|
"A Fast
Train"
|
2:38
|
||
10.
|
"Where Were
You on St. Rhino's Day?"
|
1:58
|
||
11.
|
"Sing-Along
Rhino"
|
0:42
|
||
12.
|
"Saving
Mittens"
|
1:02
|
||
13.
|
"House on
Wheels"
|
3:07
|
||
14.
|
"Las
Vegas"
|
2:01
|
||
15.
|
"A Friend
in Need"
|
1:13
|
||
16.
|
"Rescuing
Penny"
|
3:09
|
||
17.
|
"A Real
Life Superbark"
|
0:46
|
||
18.
|
"Unbelievable
TV"
|
1:20
|
||
19.
|
"Home at
Last/Barking at the Moon (Reprise)"
|
Jenny Lewis
|
1:29
|
|
Total length:
|
36:59
|
Reception
Critical reaction
Rotten Tomatoes reported that 88% of critics gave
positive reviews based on 178 reviews. Another review aggregator, Metacritic,
gave the film a 67/100 approval rating based on 29 reviews following under the
category "generally favorable reviews".
Perry Seibert of TV Guide gave the film 3 stars out of 4
and wrote the film "amuses both those who make up the film's target
audience and the parents along for the ride. This winning mix of exciting
action, heart-tugging sentiment, and gentle character comedy makes Bolt
yet another solid addition to Disney's history of family-friendly fare."
Tasha Robinson of the A.V. Club gave the film a B+ stating that "Bolt
is the studio's first film since Lilo & Stitch that feels like it's
trying to recapture the old Disney instead of aggressively shedding it in favor
of something slick and new. And yet it comes with a healthy cutting-edge Pixar
flavor as well." Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles Times wrote that
"[Bolt] also has an intriguing plot that is kind of the family
animation version of the Jim Carrey-starring The Truman Show."
Box office
On its opening weekend, the film opened number 3 with
$26,223,128 behind Twilight and Quantum of Solace. On its second
weekend, it rose to #2 behind Four Christmases with a 1.4% increase. In the United
States and Canada, the film grossed $114,053,579 by its closing date on
February 22, 2009. An additional $195,926,415 million was made internationally
as of January 2, 2011, for a worldwide total of $309,979,994.
Award nominations
Bolt was nominated for the following awards:
- 2008 Academy
Award for Best Animated Feature - lost to WALL-E
- 2008 Annie
Award for Best Animated Feature - lost to Kung Fu Panda
- 2008 Broadcast
Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Feature - lost to WALL-E
- 2008 Chicago
Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Film - lost to WALL-E
- 2008 Golden
Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film - lost to WALL-E
- 2008 Online
Film Critics Society Award for Best Animated Film - lost to WALL-E
- 2008 Produce
Guild of America's Best Animated Motion Picture - lost to WALL-E
- 2008 Satellite
Award for Best Animated or Mixed Media Feature - lost to WALL-E
- 2009 Kids'
Choice Awards for Favorite Animated Movie - lost to Madagascar: Escape
2 Africa
Home media
Bolt was released on Region A Blu-ray Disc in the United
States on March 22, 2009. The BD set included standard DVD and digital copy
versions of the film. Single-disc DVD and Special Edition DVD with Digital Copy
versions followed in Region 1 on March 24. This marked the first time a major
home-video release debuted on Blu-ray Disc before DVD. Bolt was released
on both Blu-ray and DVD in the United Kingdom on June 15, 2009.
A short film called Super Rhino is included in the
DVD and Blu-ray versions of the film. The DVD has sold 4,581,755 copies,
generating $81.01 million in sales as of December 31, 2009. The 3D Blu-ray
version of the film was released in November 2010, in France and UK. A month
later it was released worldwide, exclusively to select Sony TVs. In US, it was
released on November 8, 2011.
Video games
Disney Interactive Studios produced a video game based on
the film, released in November 2008 for Nintendo DS, Wii, PlayStation 2, PlayStation
3, Xbox 360 and PC. The game focuses on Bolt's fake TV life, not the actual
storyline. A separate game was released for mobile phones, and a third
game, RhinoBall, was released as an application on Apple's App Store.
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