+ Best Family Movie of the Year
A hunger-inducing poster for Phil Lord and Christopher Miller's Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs |
Flint is an inventor in a little, hopeless island town in the Pacific, which is known only for its sardines. He builds a machine, which makes it rain food, but because it comes to follow the mayor's motto of 'bigger is better', it ends up causing some serious problems.
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs is a loose adaptation of a children's book by Judi and Ron Barrett (Animals Should Definitely Not Act Like People (1988)). At its core lies the very funny and imagination-appealing idea of it raining foods, and the film cleverly spins several poignant satirical observations over our greed, over-consumption and stupidity as a species around this premise, without ever becoming preachy or depressing. It is driven along at a high pace that may leave some adults breathless and involves many impressive, outrageous effects. Besides the truly eye-popping animation and really solid material, Cloudy also benefits greatly from a stellar voice cast headed by Bill Hader (Inside Out (2015)) and Anna Farris (Observe and Report (2009)).
It is the feature debut of Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, who had previously been supervising directors on the animation TV-series Clone High (2002-03) before they got this gig. They have since made it big with their hits, 21 and 22 Jump Street (2012; 2014) and The Lego Movie (2014). They are continuing with both franchises as producers and are launching several other projects at the moment, clearly bent on becoming big-shots in the movie business.
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A Russian poster for the film |
The cover of the children's book that Phil Lord and Christopher Miller's Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs adapts shows how little the two products have in common style-wise |
Cost: 100 mil. $
Box office: 243 mil. $
= Minor flop
[Part of Sony Pictures Animation's first slate of films, Cloudy's relatively good, although not spectacular hit status was important. A large part of the film's profits undoubtedly stem from secondary products (DVD's and merchandise). It spun a sequel, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 (2013), which did even better (274.3 mil. $) on a significantly lower budget (78 mil. $), which is in the range of the studio's animation budgets (9 titles 2006-13, 55-110 mil. $ each).]
What do you think of Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs?
If you have seen the sequel, how is it?
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