The Care Bears Movie
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The Care Bears Movie | |
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![]() Original theatrical poster |
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Directed by | Arna Selznick |
Produced by | Michael Hirsh Patrick Loubert Clive A. Smith Supervising: Lenora Hume Associate: Paul Pressler John Bohach Harvey Levin Executive: Carole MacGillvray Robert Unkel Jack Chojnacki Lou Gioia |
Written by | Peter Sauder (screenplay) |
Starring | See below |
Music by | Patricia Cullen |
Cinematography | David Altman Jim Christianson Barbara Sachs (animation camera) |
Editing by | Jim Erickson Tom Joerin Gordon Kidd Stephen Mitchell Sheila Murray Steve Weslak Michael O'Farrell Supervising: John Broughton Rob Kirkpatrick |
Distributed by | ![]() Vestron Video (VHS/Beta, 1985); Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (DVD, 2002 & 2007) ![]() ![]() Vestron Video (VHS/Laserdisc) ![]() ![]() |
Release date(s) | ![]() ![]() March 29, 1985 (national) |
Running time | 76 min |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,000,000-$4,000,000 |
Followed by | Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation (1986) |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Care Bears Movie is an animated feature film, officially released on March 29, 1985. It was the first film to feature the popular Care Bears toy characters, and one of the first to be based directly on a toy line. The movie was produced in Canada by Nelvana Limited at the height of the first wave of the Care Bears phenomenon, and also produced a spin-off television series and two sequels. It was released in theatres by The Samuel Goldwyn Company.
The movie had a considerable amount of star power attached to it: Carole King wrote and sung the opening theme, while John Sebastian and NRBQ contributed to the song score. Mickey Rooney and Georgia Engel starred as voices, along with the Canadian talents of Billie Mae Richards, Marla Lukofsky, Luba Goy and a young Cree Summer, among others. It also marked the first ever appearance of the Care Bear Cousins in the media franchise (as stated in its opening credits), and introduced a few new Bears to the original line-up of ten.
Amid its purpose as a feature-length commercial for the eponymous characters, and varying degrees of critical success, The Care Bears Movie grossed almost $23 million at the American box-office, outdrawing even Disney's The Black Cauldron. It was Nelvana's highest-grossing film for another eight years. The profitable success of this project, along with their early work on children's television shows, saved Nelvana from closing down after the financial failure of their first film, 1983's Rock & Rule.
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[edit] Plot
The movie starts with a brief introductory segment featuring Mr. and Mrs. Cherrywood, a middle-aged couple who look after many small children at an orphanage named after themselves. After the children ask him, Mr. Cherrywood sits them down to read a bedtime story, and this introduces the audience, along with a song by Carole King, to the Care Bears and their magical home in the clouds called Care-a-lot.
While looking down on the Earth for people to cheer up, the Care Bears notice two children who "don't care", Kim and Jason. The two kind siblings have decided to stop caring for the people around them ever since their parents died, and believe they need no one else but themselves. Two Care Bears, Friend Bear and Secret Bear, travel down to the surface to meet them. They begin to attempt an intervention by introducing themselves, but Kim and Jason do not take notice at first. Then Friend Bear tells them a virtue of friendship, and their ambitions: Kim, a bibliophile, is dreaming of becoming a nurse, and Jason wants to be a jet pilot. The children, however, are not interested in the Bears' idea of caring for others.
Meanwhile, at an amusement park, Tenderheart Bear (travelling on his Rainbow Roller) finds another child who never had a friend in his life: Nicholas, the young apprentice of a world-famous magician named "The Great Fetuccini". While helping to carry a chest for Fetuccini that contains some old antiques, he manages to find an old book with a diary-style lock on it.
Back at Care-a-lot, the Care Bears, inside the Hall of Hearts, are working on their new invention: the Rainbow Rescue Beam, a heart-shaped portal which can send any Bear to Earth and back to the sky instantly. While correcting problems from the invention's first test, Grams Bear calls Grumpy, Share and Birthday Bear over to look for her grandchildren, Baby Hugs and Baby Tugs. When those two come to try making square bubbles with the invention, their mischief brings forth Friend, Secret and the siblings to Care-a-lot instead, much to the Bears' surprise. Soon after the rest of the furry characters introduce a perplexed Kim and Jason, they give the two children a tour around their cloud-filled world. Thanks to them, the children have made brand-new friends without worry. Later, Wish Bear finds them some new parents from an orphanage, who want to have them adopted; but Kim and Jason feel like staying in Care-a-lot and helping the Bears.
At the same time, Nicholas is introduced to the voice of an evil spirit, his new "friend", from within the old book he has found. She tells him that, through magic, he can earn more friends by becoming a better magician than his master, and get even with the children all over town. In order to do that, he unlocks the book and unleashes the Spirit. Soon, its face shows up, and tells Nicholas to read some words in the book. His first spell makes Fetuccini fall into a deep sleep. Seeing the situation, Tenderheart convinces Nicholas that friends should not be made this way, but the Spirit does not take heed. With Nicholas' help, it soon lays waste to the amusement park and, after one of his shows, begins a quest to remove all caring from the world. Immediately, Tenderheart returns to Care-a-lot in the midst of a "Cloud Quake" caused by the Spirit, which destroys his home and causes the Caring Meter to drop two points.
When the quake is over, he informs Kim, Jason and the other Bears of Nicholas' troubles on Earth. Handing them the key from the Spirit's book, he brings them to the Rescue Beam and begins to send them, along with Friend and Secret, back to the park. However, an aftershock from the Cloud Quake causes the portal to malfunction, sending the four of them to a strange new land instead: the Forest of Feelings. There, they are introduced to Brave Heart Lion and Playful Heart Monkey, who are astounded that their human visitors are so different from them.
Because the Rainbow Rescue Beam did not work this time, Grumpy and Good Luck Bear stay in the Hall of Hearts to fix it, amid stormy weather. During the repair, they find Baby Hugs' lollipop to get it working again. Meanwhile, at a nearby river, the rest of the Care Bears have an idea: they begin to search for Kim, Jason, Friend and Secret with the help of a cloud ship, a big smiling star atop its mast. They too end up in the Forest, where they meet the rest of the Care Bear Cousins—Cozy Heart Penguin, Lotsa Heart Elephant, Swift Heart Rabbit and Bright Heart Raccoon among others.
While Kim, Jason, the Care Bears and the Cousins are in the Forest of Feelings, the Spirit begins to attack them in the forms of a spearfish, and then an evil tree. It soon returns as an eagle, but is defeated by the Care Bear Stare. Warned of its influence, the friends all journey back to the park (on the cloud ship) to try and free Nicholas of the Spirit, and re-imprison it in the magic book. Not long after they do, the boy is collecting all the ingredients for his ultimate spell: getting rid of the Care Bears, the Cousins, and the siblings.
Soon after Nicholas comes outside with the book, the Bears and Cousins prepare to Stare and Call, with Good Luck and Grumpy later joining them via the Rescue Beam. A long battle ensues, and drains out all of their super powers, as they manage to break the Spirit's hold on Nicholas. At this point, Nicholas finally turns against the Spirit - but as he fights desperately to force the Spirit's book closed (with help from Tenderheart), the Spirit erases the key needed by Jason and Kim to lock the book up from Jason's hand. Secret Bear gives them a brand-new one out of his padlock, and Jason closes it for good, thus saving Nicholas, the park and the world. Some time after the battle is over, Fetuccini wakes from his long slumber and makes Nicholas his official partner; Tenderheart Bear inducts the Care Bear Cousins into the Care Bear Family; and Kim and Jason finally find new parents at one of Nicholas' shows.
After this, a short epilogue with the Cherrywoods is shown. Soon after the story is over, Mrs. Cherrywood reveals the name of her husband—Nicholas—and it is implied (though never explicitly stated) that she herself may be Kim. Unknown to both of them and the children at the orphanage, Tenderheart Bear was listening all along from outside a window. When it is over, he rides back to Care-a-lot on his Cloud Car. Immediately after, the Care Bear Family waves its audience good-bye, below the words "The End" written in white on a shiny red heart.
[edit] Production
Production of The Care Bears Movie took place at Toronto's Nelvana studio, at the start of a time which one of its founders, Michael Hirsh, refers to as its "dark years".[3] Nelvana had just come out from the production of their first feature, 1983's Rock & Rule, which was produced using almost all of its resources (for $8 million) and failed at the box office. Soon after that film put them on the verge of closing down, Nelvana saved themselves by doing work on television shows like Inspector Gadget (from DiC Entertainment) and Mr. Microchip. During this time, they also began work on their next feature project, at around the same time they acquired the rights to the Care Bears characters. Brought in under budget, the first Care Bears Movie was made in eight months (from June 1984 to February 1985).[3] The actual cost of the film varies by source; according to James B. Stewart's DisneyWar, it was made for $2 million,[4] and Jerry Beck's Animated Movie Guide lists it at $4 million.[5]
The low-cost project started life as a short promo made for American Greetings, the owners of the Care Bears franchise. When the company was pleased with the result, Nelvana was asked about the potential of a feature film stemming from it. After agreeing with AGC, most of the work (as they feared) would eventually end up, amid limited time and money, in the hands of Taiwan's Wang Film Productions and Cuckoo's Nest Studio, along with new studios Hanho Heung-Up and Mihahn in Korea. (These production values contrasted heavily with those of Rock & Rule, where all of the work was done in Canada over a five-year period.) The finished film's only scene from the promo involved Swift Heart Rabbit speeding off to save Kim, Jason and various Care Bear characters from the Spirit, incarnated as an evil tree.[6]
The film's director, Arna Selznick, is the third of only four women ever to direct an animated feature (the others being Lotte Reiniger of The Adventures of Prince Achmed, Animal Farm's Joy Batchelor, and Brenda Chapman from The Prince of Egypt).[5] To this day, she is proud of her efforts for working with the crew of this film. "I know it was a huge marketing ploy to sell toys," she has said about its promotional strategy.[7]
[edit] Response
[edit] Reaction and criticism
During its original release, The Care Bears Movie had varying degrees of success with critics. The New York Times' Richard Grenier, in the newspaper's review of the film, commented on its recalling of "vintage Walt Disney, both in substance and in the style of hand animation".[8] Britain's Woman Magazine commented on the film, "Enthralling...the animation is enchanting, the music beguiling...the full length animated cartoon of the year." The Philadelphia Inquirer, who called it "a Romper Room of innocent fun", said in its review: "Any movie—even an animated one—that has characters with names such as Funshine Bear, Love-a-Lot Bear and Lotsa Heart Elephant is obviously going to rank quite high on the cute meter. And this one sends the needle right off the chart. You've never seen such cuteness."[9]
However, some of them were aware of its purpose as a feature-length commercial for Care Bears merchandise. As remarked the filmmaking publication Films and Filming: "The purpose of the film is presumably to sell more toys as it unashamedly pushes the message that without at least one Care Bear around life can be very lonely."[10] Several films based on Hasbro's toy products and Hallmark's Rainbow Brite, to mention a few, would follow a similar marketing tactic some time after its debut.
[edit] Box office
The film was officially released on March 29, 1985 in the United States, although it premiered in Nelvana's native Canada six days prior,[1] and was screened in Washington, D.C. on March 24 as part of a Special Olympics benefit.[2] Despite limited audience appeal,[10] it was surprisingly successful at the United States box office, where its first two weekends (both in fourth place) equalled little more than its low cost ($3.7 million and $3.2 million).[11][12] The film spent its first four weeks on 1,003 screens.[13][14] During its three months in release, it grossed $22,934,622 in the United States, and placed 40th among 1985's major films.[15][16][17]
The movie's theatrical success, along with subsequent home video sales numbering over five million copies,[18] virtually saved a floundering Nelvana from going out of business.[19] This eventually led to the Bears having their own television series, produced by DiC in the first season and by Nelvana for the rest of its run. Two sequels, Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation (1986) and The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland (1987), also followed in its wake; neither of them made as much of a critical or commercial impact as its predecessor.
[edit] Records
For more than two decades, The Care Bears Movie was the highest-grossing animated feature film to come from Canada. (C.O.R.E.'s computer-animated film, The Wild, replaced it in 2006, grossing close to $37.4 million in the United States.[20]) It was also the highest-grossing non-Disney animated film of all time upon its original release, until Don Bluth's An American Tail (1986) and The Land Before Time (1988) took over.[3]
The film is one of the highest-grossing releases of all time in its native Canada, along with the teen comedy Porky's, which officially holds the record. It was Nelvana's most successful venture at the box office until their live-action thriller, Malice, took its place with a $46.4 million gross in late 1993.[21] In addition, it is the highest-grossing release from either incarnation of its distributor, Samuel Goldwyn. (In March 2007, the revival of the company, operating through IDP Distribution, saw its biggest success so far in the historical drama Amazing Grace.)[22][23]
[edit] Awards and nominations
At the 1985 Genie Awards in its native Canada, The Care Bears Movie won the Golden Reel Award for being the country's highest-grossing film of the year, at $1.85 million.[24] The recipients of the award were Nelvana's three founders, who were also the film's producers.[25] It received two other nominations, for Best Original Song (by John Sebastian) at the Genies, and for "Best Family Animation Series or Special" at the Young Artist Awards.
[edit] Home video and DVD
The Care Bears Movie was first distributed by Vestron Video in the United States and Great Britain on July 10, 1985, in videocassette and Betamax formats.[26][27] Contrary to North American belief, it also appeared on Laserdisc in the United Kingdom.[28] (The Adventure in Wonderland installment from 1987 is the only Care Bears movie ever released on that format in the United States.) Thanks to Video Treasures, it was brought back on video in 1990.[29] Hallmark Home Entertainment published another VHS edition of the film on October 10, 1995. The made-for-TV children's special, Strawberry Shortcake Meets the Berrykins, based on the title American Greetings property, was included in this release.[30]
Then, on September 5, 2000, MGM Home Entertainment re-released the film on video. The DVD premiered on August 6, 2002, and also contained the trailer as a bonus feature. In honour of the Care Bears' 25th anniversary, it was re-issued on March 20, 2007 with restored picture quality, and contained the franchise's second Atkinson Film-Arts special, The Care Bears Battle the Freeze Machine, as an extra.[31]
[edit] Merchandise
[edit] Soundtrack
The soundtrack album to The Care Bears Movie was released in LP-only format by Kid Stuff Records in the United States, and on the Cherry Lane imprint of the Towerbell label in the United Kingdom.[32] It featured the film's six songs: "Care-a-lot", "Nobody Cares Like a Bear", "Home is in Your Heart", "When You Care, You're Not Afraid to Try", "Look Out! He's After You!" and "In a Care Bear Family". Five of them were performed by Carole King, John Sebastian, NRBQ and the Tower of Power. In his only role for an animated production, actor Harry Dean Stanton had a guest appearance as Brave Heart Lion for the song "Home is in Your Heart".[33][34] The songs were produced by Lou Adler and John Sebastian, with additional lyrics and music by Ken Stephenson, Walt Woodward and David Bird. The music for the opening theme, "Care-a-lot" by Carole King, was carried over into the score for the Nelvana television series.
[edit] Book version
A book based on the film, Meet the Care Bear Cousins (ISBN 0-910313-98-9), was published in North America and Great Britain by Parker Brothers a month after the film's release, and reissued in October that same year by Children's Press (ISBN 0-516-09029-1). As with the Marvel Comics adaptation of Nelvana's earlier Rock & Rule, it contained various stills taken from the real movie.
[edit] Cast members
(in order of appearance)
- Jayne Eastwood - Mrs. Kim Cherrywood
- Mickey Rooney - Mr. Nicholas Cherrywood / Narrator
- Eva Almos - Friend Bear / Swift Heart Rabbit
- Sunny Besen Thrasher - Jason
- Cree Summer - Young Kim
- Hadley Kay - Young Nicholas
- Brian George - The Great Fetuccini
- Jackie Burroughs - The Spirit
- Billie Mae Richards - Tenderheart Bear
- Patricia Black - Share Bear / Funshine Bear (as Patrice Black)
- Melleny Brown - Birthday Bear / Baby Tugs Bear / Cheer Bear
- Bob Dermer - Grumpy Bear (as Bobby Dermer)
- Pauline Rennie - Grams Bear / Cozy Heart Penguin / Treat Heart Pig
- Terri Hawkes - Baby Hugs Bear
- Gloria Figura - Bedtime Bear
- Janet-Laine Green - Wish Bear
- Georgia Engel - Love-a-Lot Bear
- Marla Lukofsky - Good Luck Bear / Playful Heart Monkey
- Dan Hennessey - Brave Heart Lion (speaking) / Loyal Heart Dog
- Harry Dean Stanton - Brave Heart Lion (singing)
- Luba Goy - Lotsa Heart Elephant / Gentle Heart Lamb
- Susan Roman - Champ Bear (uncredited)
- Jim Henshaw - Bright Heart Raccoon
- Anni Evans - Secret Bear
- Brent Titcomb - Additional voices
[edit] Footnotes and references
- ^ a b Release dates for The Care Bears Movie at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 5, 2006.
- ^ a b Miscellaneous (1985, March 17). The Washington Post. Retrieved October 5, 2006.
- ^ a b c "Three men and a bear: Nelvana at 25" by Ellen Besen and Marc Glassman, TAKE ONE, Autumn 1996. Retrieved March 10, 2006.
- ^ Stewart, James B. (2005). DisneyWar. ISBN 0-684-80993-1. Simon and Schuster. Retrieved December 19, 2006.
- ^ a b Beck, Jerry (2005). The Animated Movie Guide, p. 48. ISBN 1-55652-591-5. Chicago Reader Press. Retrieved December 19, 2006.
- ^ Anyone ever hear of the film 'Rock & Rule' from Nelvana? Message posting at animationnation.com. Retrieved March 12, 2006.
- ^ Summary of The Care Bears Movie at TV.com. Retrieved April 7, 2005.
- ^ Review of The Care Bears Movie by Richard Grenier, The New York Times, March 23, 1985. Retrieved January 6, 2006. (Registration required to read page.)
- ^ Review of The Care Bears Movie (1985, April 1). The Philadelphia Inquirer, p. D03. Retrieved October 5, 2006.
- ^ a b "Canadian, eh? Take One's unofficial list of 20 box-office hits" by Wyndham Wyse, TAKE ONE, Spring 2000. Retrieved May 23, 2006.
- ^ Weekend Box Office Results, March 29-31, 1985. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Weekend Box Office Results, April 5-7, 1985. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Weekend Box Office Results, April 12-14, 1985. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Weekend Box Office Results, April 19-21, 1985. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Box office data for The Care Bears Movie at Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 29, 2006.
- ^ Yearly Box Office: 1985. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved June 10, 2006.
- ^ A complete box-office analysis can be found at this entry from the-numbers.com.
- ^ Lawson, Terry. "Great viewing you can bet on" (2007, March 20). Retrieved March 20, 2007, from Detroit Free Press site.
- ^ Wise, Wyndham (editor), 2001. Take One's Essential Guide to Canadian Film. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Retrieved March 20, 2006.
- ^ Box office data for The Wild at Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 28, 2006.
- ^ Box office data for Malice at Box Office Mojo. Retrieved July 13, 2006.
- ^ Studio Market Share: Samuel Goldwyn Company. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Studio Market Share: IDP (Samuel Goldwyn Films). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 16, 2006.
- ^ "YOU SHOULD KNOW SOMETHING-ANYTHING-ABOUT THIS MOVIE. YOU PAID FOR IT" by Peter Urquhart, Canadian Journal of Film Studies, Fall 2003. Retrieved March 12, 2006.
- ^ The Envelope: Past Winners Database: 1986 7th Genie Awards. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ Animated: Music by John Sebastian. tctv.ne.jp. Retrieved March 20, 2006.
- ^ 1985 promotional poster for the film's VHS release. Vestron Video. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
- ^ The Care Bears Movie at the LaserDisc Database. Retrieved May 18, 2006.
- ^ The Care Bears Movie (in MARION). js-catalog.cpl.org. Retrieved March 20, 2006.
- ^ Littleman.com: The Care Bears Movie. Retrieved March 16, 2006.
- ^ MGM, now owned by Sony, currently holds the rights to the Samuel Goldwyn Company's catalog prior to its recent re-establishment.
- ^ British promo poster for the Care Bears Movie soundtrack. Towerbell Records. Retrieved January 5, 2007.
- ^ Filmography of Harry Dean Stanton by genre at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 20, 2006.
- ^ Soundtrack page for The Care Bears Movie at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved April 28, 2006.
[edit] See also
- Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation
- The Care Bears television series
- Rainbow Brite and the Star Stealer
- My Little Pony: The Movie
- Transformers: The Movie
[edit] External links
- Official site at MGM
- The Care Bears Movie at the Internet Movie Database
- The Care Bears Movie at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Care Bears Movie at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- The Care Bears Movie at All Movie Guide
- The Care Bears Movie at the Keyframe - the Animation Resource
- The Care Bear Zone's picture gallery
- Authentic cel from the movie at Toy Archive
- A page with conceptual sketches from the film by one of its crew, Kevin Davies (along with some more from Nelvana's Ewoks and Droids)
- The film's soundtrack page at SoundtrackCollector
- The film's script at Take Care Bear's Place
Animated feature films from Nelvana Limited |
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1980s: Rock & Rule (1983) - The Care Bears Movie (1985) - Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation (1986) - The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland (1987) - Babar: The Movie (1989)
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1990s: The Legend of the North Wind (1992) - The Return of the North Wind (1994) - Pippi Longstocking (1997) - Babar: King of the Elephants (1999) - Cardcaptor Sakura: The Movie (1999)
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2000s: Redwall: The Movie (2000) - Franklin and the Green Knight (2000) - Franklin's Magic Christmas (2001) - The Little Bear Movie (2001) - Rolie Polie Olie: The Great Defender of Fun (2001) - Back to School with Franklin (2003) - Rescue Heroes: The Movie (2003) - Rolie Polie Olie: The Baby Bot Chase (2003) - Care Bears: Journey to Joke-a-lot (2004) - Beyblade: The Movie - Fierce Battle (2005) - The Care Bears' Big Wish Movie (2005) - Heidi (2005) - Franklin and the Turtle Lake Treasure (2006) |