The Care Bears' Big Wish Movie
The Care Bears' Big Wish Movie | |
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Promotional poster
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Directed by | Larry Jacobs Ron Pitts |
Produced by | Cynthia Taylor |
Written by | Jeffrey Alan Schechter |
Starring | Hannah Endicott-Douglas Mary Catherine Wilson Trevor Soriano Jonathan Taylor Thomas Stephen Ouimette Tracey Hoyt Ron Rubin Elizabeth Hanna |
Music by | Ian Thomas |
Edited by | Jason Cohen |
Production
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Distributed by | Lions Gate Home Entertainment |
Release dates
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October 18, 2005 |
Running time
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75 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | US$3–5 million[1] |
The Care Bears' Big Wish Movie is a 2005 children's animated feature film, produced by Nelvana Limited and released by Lions Gate Home Entertainment. Directed by Larry Jacobs and Ron Pitts, and written by Jeffrey Alan Schechter, the film is a follow-up to the Care Bears' previous efforts in 2004's Journey to Joke-a-lot. It was the fifth film to feature the Bears, and the second to be computer-animated.
The Big Wish Movie centres on Wish Bear, a Care Bear who can make and grant wishes. After some of them do not work, she feels worried that the other bears have overlooked her abilities, and wishes for a few new friends who care more than she does. Those three—Messy Bear, Me Bear and Too Loud Bear—cause further trouble for Wish Bear, her wishing star Twinkers, and all of Care-a-lot.
As with Journey to Joke-a-lot, Toronto's Nelvana produced and self-financed the Big Wish Movie; additional work was handled by India's Crest Animation Productions. Production involved various personnel from the previous film, among them Ron Pitts, composer Ian Thomas and various voice actors including Hannah Endicott-Douglas, Rhea Brooke and Trevor Soriano. The Big Wish Movie was released on DVD by Lions Gate on October 18, 2005; prior to this, it premiered on U.S. and Canadian television, and was accompanied by a tie-in book from Scholastic Press. It subsequently received favourable reviews from Parenting magazine and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. This was Nelvana's final production with the Care Bears, before SD Entertainment of California assumed responsibility for future instalments in the franchise.
Contents
Plot
This movie starts when, atop the roof of an observatory at their cloud-filled home of Care-a-lot, the Care Bears hear Wish Bear's story of how she (as a Cub) found her new friend, a wishing star named Twinkers. The Care Bears are touched by this tale, but are a bit worried when she uses Twinkers' inherent power to wish them all some popcorn. Cheer Bear raises concern that this may be a frivolous use of Twinkers' power. Wish Bear, however, assures everyone that she is a trained professional.
The next day, Wish Bear uses the wishing power to help her friends. She wishes for plenty of rainbow sap for Share Bear, and for Grumpy Bear's rocket to have "zoom", but the wishes backfire when the sap overflows and the rocket spins out of control.
A monthly meeting of Care-a-lot's steering committee (with Champ Bear presiding) reveals a problem with the Caring Meter. The machine, which measures how much caring there is in Care-a-lot, has moved towards the raincloud side. Wish Bear suggests using her wishes, but is rejected since not all of them work as intended; they didn't like their wishes ("I Wish"). Disappointed, she decides to wish for other bears who like wishing as much as she does. This causes three new bears to arrive in Care-a-lot: Me Bear, Messy Bear, and Too Loud Bear.
Everyone is pleased to welcome the new neighbours at first, but things soon get out of control. The new bears unwittingly make a huge mess of everything (especially when the huge mansion they asked for causes pollution). Then, after a confrontation with them at a picnic ("Get a Lot") Wish Bear accidentally wishes Twinkers away to the new bears; they soon abuse the star's power with an amusement park focusing on Me Bear, a mud pie for Messy Bear, and a huge noisy motorcycle for Too Loud Bear. Once the new bears finally realise their problem, they try to fix it with more wishes, but to no avail—Care-a-lot becomes a blank white space (wishing that all of this was gone), the bears begin to glow in color (wishing for everything to be back how it was, but with more color), Grumpy Bear turns black and white (wishing for less color), and Messy Bear turns into Messy Cub (wishing for everything to be like it used to be). When they try to wish Twinkers back to Wish Bear, the star ultimately loses his power from exhaustion (because they had been pushing him much too hard). Wish Bear uses Grumpy Bear's rocket to bring him to the Big Wish, a grandmother star, in the sky. Big Wish restores his power, but not before Wish Bear assures her that she has learned her lesson, which is wishing is fun, but it is far more important to work hard to achieve your dreams.
Wish Bear tells them that wishes are not an effective solution any more, and everyone works together to make their home beautiful again ("It Takes You and Me"). In the end, Me Bear, Messy Bear, and Too Loud Bear, having seen the error of their ways, apologize and ask if they can still live in Care-a-lot. The rest of the bears agree, and decide to go on a road trip, and the movie ends.
Cast
Name | Character | Source |
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Hannah Endicott-Douglas | Wish Bear | [2] |
Stephen Ouimette | Too Loud Bear | |
Tracey Hoyt | Me Bear | |
Ron Rubin | Messy Bear | |
Eric Gilbertson | Bedtime Bear | |
Jonathan Taylor Thomas | Champ Bear | |
Tina Turner | Cheer Bear | |
Lalainia Lindbjerg | Friend Bear | |
Trevor Soriano | Funshine Bear | |
Crawford Wilson | Good Luck Bear | |
Mary Catherine Wilson | Grumpy Bear | |
Athena Karkanis | Harmony Bear | |
Katie Griffin | Laugh-a-Lot Bear | |
Shannon Chan-Kent | Love-a-lot Bear | |
Ruby Smith-Merovitz | Share Bear | |
Jared Tolbert | Tenderheart Bear | |
Elizabeth Hanna | Big Wish | |
Richard Binsley | Twinkers |
Production
As with 2004's Journey to Joke-a-lot, The Care Bears' Big Wish Movie was self-financed by the Nelvana studios in Toronto, Ontario.[1] The second computer-animated production with the Care Bears,[3] it is also the franchise's fifth feature instalment. Director Larry Jacobs had previously worked on another Nelvana venture, a public television series entitled Cyberchase.[1] Mike Fallows, the director of Joke-a-lot,[4] served as the supervising director.[2] The film featured various voices from Joke-a-lot, among them Stephanie Beard, Julie Lemieux, Stevie Vallance, Robert Tinkler, Andrew Sabiston and Scott McCord.[2][4] Animation was handled by Nelvana in Canada, and Crest Animation Productions in India.[2] Big Wish marked the last time Nelvana embarked on a Care Bears project; from 2006 onward, the California-based SD Entertainment was responsible for future animated fare with these characters, starting with Oopsy Does It! in 2007.[5]
Release
The Care Bears' Big Wish Movie first aired on Canadian television on October 3, 2005;[6] in the United States, it premiered on cable television's Disney Channel on October 17.[nb 1] The day after the U.S. premiere,[3] it became one of Lions Gate Home Entertainment's five direct-to-DVD "marquee" offerings for young viewers;[8][nb 2] restaurant chain Burger King served as the promotional partner.[3] Twice during 2005, Hannah Endicott-Douglas (the voice of Wish Bear) promoted the film in the Toronto Star under the alias Suga Baybee;[9][10] in October, she proclaimed that it "is going to be a classic".[10] The film charted on Video Business' Top Kids Rentals list for January 23, 2006, where it ranked 20th.[11] On August 11, 2007, it placed seventh on Billboard's Top Kid DVD Sales chart.[12] Jeffrey Alan Schechter, the film's writer, was nominated for a Writers Guild of Canada Award.[13] The film is known under two French-language titles: À vos souhaits les Calinours ! (in Canada's Quebec province)[14] and De Nouveaux Arrivants chez les Bisounours (in France).[15]
Days before the release of the Big Wish Movie,[16] Scholastic Press published a Care Bears storybook based on the film; it was written by Sonia Sander and illustrated by Jay Johnson.[17] One scene in the book involves Wish Bear and the three new Bears grocery shopping; this does not appear in the film.[2][18] Later in the book, when Messy Bear wishes for everything to be like it used to be, it causes the Bears to travel back to the age of the dinosaurs; in the film, Twinkers just turns Messy Bear into Messy Cub.[2][18]
Bruce Kluger of Parenting magazine referred to the Big Wish Movie as "Cute stuff, if a tad sticky-sweet: Heart-shaped toothbrushes, toasters, and waffles abound."[19] Cristina Rouvalis of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette gave it three stars out of four, and said that "Young Care Bear fanatics will wish for more."[20] In April 2010's Journal of Aging Studies, Sylvia Henneberg commented that Big Wish, the grandmother star, served as "a poor substitute for a truly three-dimensional maternal figure".[21]
Music
The music for the Big Wish Movie was composed by Ian Thomas (also from Journey to Joke-a-lot), and conducted and orchestrated by Peter Cardinali.[2] At his studio, Thomas worked with the Hamilton Children's Choir[22] on the film's opening theme.[2] In February 2005, Hannah Endicott-Douglas said that "I Wish", a track she performed, "is my favourite cartoon song yet. It's so cute; I can't wait for the world to hear it."[9]
Song | Writer | Performer(s) | Producer(s) | Notes |
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"The Power of Wishing" | Anthony Vanderburgh; Don Breithaupt | Daniel Galessierre | — | |
"I Wish" | Creighton Doane; Daniel Gerrard Leblanc | Hannah Endicott-Douglas | Creighton Doane; Daniel Gerrard Leblanc | Song animation by Ron Pitts |
"Get a Lot" | Noah Shilkin and Amos Carlen; The Brumby Brothers | Cast | Noah Shilkin and Amos Carlen; The Brumby Brothers | |
"It Takes You and Me" | Creighton Doane; Daniel Gerrard Leblanc | Michael Borkosky | Creighton Doane; Daniel Gerrard Leblanc | |
"Be A Nice Good Day" | Eric Martin | Zeke Cooper; Adam Stewart |
See also
- List of Canadian films of 2005
- List of Nelvana franchises
- List of computer-animated films
- List of animated feature-length films
Notes
- ↑ Listed as "FILM 226388" on The New York Times' television schedule at the time.[7]
- ↑ During late 2005, Lions Gate's other "marquee" titles were Barbie and the Magic of Pegasus, Inspector Gadget's Biggest Caper Ever, Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends and Pinocchio 3000.[8]
References
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External links
- Good articles
- English-language films
- 2000s musical films
- 2005 films
- Canadian films
- Canadian animated films
- Care Bears
- Children's fantasy films
- Computer-animated films
- Direct-to-video animated films
- Films about wish fulfillment
- Films based on toys
- Films featuring anthropomorphic characters
- Lions Gate Entertainment films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- Lions Gate Entertainment animated films
- Works based on Hasbro toys
- Canadian musical films
- 2000s American animated films
- American films