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The Wild

The Wild is a 2006 American computer-animated adventure comedy film directed by animator Steve "Spaz" Williams and written by Ed Decter, John J. Strauss, Mark Gibson and Philip Halprin. It features the voices of Eddie Izzard, Kiefer Sutherland, Janeane Garofalo, Jim Belushi, Richard Kind, Greg Cipes, and William Shatner.

The Wild
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySteve "Spaz" Williams
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Mark Gibson
  • Philip Halprin
Produced by
Starring
Edited by
  • Scott Balcerek
  • Steven L. Wagner
Music byAlan Silvestri
Production
companies
Distributed byBuena Vista Pictures Distribution[3]
Release date
  • April 14, 2006 (2006-04-14)
Running time
82 minutes[4]
CountryUnited States[5]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$80 million[6]
Box office$102.3 million[7]

Produced by Walt Disney Pictures, Hoytyboy Pictures, Sir Zip Studios and Contrafilm,[2][3] it was animated by C.O.R.E. Feature Animation. It was released to theaters in North America on April 14, 2006, by Buena Vista Pictures and earned $102 million on an $80 million budget. It received largely negative reviews from critics, who criticized its animation style and similarities to DreamWorks Animation's Madagascar.

Plot

At the Central Park Zoo, Samson the lion tells his preteen son Ryan stories of his adventures in the Wilds of Africa. Ryan wants to go to the wild too to learn how to roar like his father, but Samson disapproves of the idea. When the zoo closes, all the animals are free to roam. Samson and his friends, Benny the squirrel, Bridget the giraffe whom Benny has a crush on, Larry the dim-witted anaconda, and Nigel the unlucky but popular koala compete in a turtle curling championship. Ryan and his own friends accidentally cause a stampede which heads to the game and endangers the animals. Samson and Ryan have a falling-out and Ryan runs off before Samson can apologize. He later sneaks into a green Intermodal container which is rumored to be heading to the wild. Just as he regrets his decision, Ryan suddenly gets locked inside the container, which is then loaded onto a freight truck, shipping him away.

With the help of a pigeon, Hamir, Samson, and his friends go after Ryan, hiding in a garbage disposal truck, but Benny falls overboard. After passing through Times Square and nearly being crushed in the truck, the group encounters a pack of rabid stray dogs, and Instead of standing his ground, Samson escapes through the sewer rather than fighting as his friends expect for him to do. There, they take directions to the docks from two friendly streetwise alligator brothers, Stan and Carmine. The next morning, they steal a tugboat during a hectic escape from the harbor. After reuniting with Benny, who has followed them with a flock of Canada geese, Samson manages to drive the boat with Larry's help and the geese lead them to the right direction toward Ryan's ship.

A few days later the boat runs aground in Africa, where all the animals in the area are being evacuated by the carriers, as a nearby volcano is about to erupt. They witness Ryan run into the jungle, but Samson is unable to find him. After failing to eat a crude hyrax, his friend questions if he has ever been in the wild before, to which he forlornly confirms. The rest of the group heads back to the ship, but Samson continues to search for his son. While walking, he sees plants and rocks changing colors, which he attributes as his instincts working. Nigel is abducted by a herd of wildebeests who reside in the volcano and their leader Kazar, pronounces him "The Great Him," based on an "omen" he received when he was young: about to be devoured by lions, a toy koala fell from a plane and scared the lions away, saving his life. This experience made Kazar believe that "The Great Him" will help him and his kind create a change in the food chain that will allow prey to become predators and vice versa. In order to do that, he thinks the wildebeests have to eat a lion. Bridget and Larry are also get captured and planned to be eaten as well.

Ryan hides up an old tree, but a gang of vultures attacks him under Kazar's orders. The branch breaks and traps his paw. Samson hears Ryan's cries and runs to save him, scaring off the vultures. The two reunite but are interrupted by the wildebeests. Ryan is shocked when Samson tells him to run. They retreat to a tree where Samson reveals the truth about his past: he wasn’t born in anything but a circus and was unable to roar just like Ryan. Samson's overly-strict, authoritarian father could never accept him as a son and allowed him to be sent to the zoo, where he lied about his origins to avoid humiliation. The wildebeests discover them and push the tree over the cliff, with Samson still hanging on. Ryan is captured and taken to the volcano.

After a run-in with a group of female German dung beetles, Benny finds Samson and gives him the confidence to be himself, even if he is not from the wild. They soon find out that Samson's "instincts" were actually two chameleons named Cloak and Camo, who has been leading Samson to the volcano, so he would help them defeat Kazar's army. Samson uses the chameleons' camouflage abilities to sneak into the volcano, but when his disguise blows off due to the intense heat of the mountain, Kazar orders his army to attack. Seeing Samson in danger, Ryan climbs onto a catapulting device and launches himself at Kazar, finally letting out a roar. With Kazar distracted, Samson easily overpowers him. Ryan tells Samson that he is happy to have him as a father. The other wildebeests are touched by this and refuse to serve Kazar any further, having grown fed up with his delusions. Samson then gains the courage and roars powerfully enough to push back a charging Kazar. The group and the wildebeests flee, leaving Kazar to die in the erupting volcano. They manage to escape on the boat and travel back to the Central Park Zoo in their New York home.

Cast

Non-Speaking characters including

Release

In March 2006, for a month-long "spring break" engagement exclusive to the El Capitan Theater, theater patrons were treated to a live performance of exotic birds which were accompanied by their keepers from the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens before a screening of the film.[8]

Home media

The film was released on DVD and VHS on September 12, 2006. The DVD was accompanied with a filmmakers' commentary, five deleted scenes, bloopers, and a music video of Everlife's "Real Wild Child".[9] However, the VHS version was only an exclusive for the Disney Movie Club. On its first weekend, the film debuted at number one selling 787,779 DVD units.[10] At the end of its initial home video release, the film earned $43.2 million.[11] On November 21, 2006, the film was released on Blu-ray.[12]

Reception

Box office

During its opening weekend, the film grossed $9.6 million at the box office, ranking fourth behind Scary Movie 4, Ice Age: The Meltdown, and The Benchwarmers.[13] The Wild grossed $37.4 million in the United States and $64.9 million in other countries for a worldwide total of $102.3 million.[7]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 19% based on 112 reviews and an average rating of 4.5/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "With a rehashed plot and unimpressive animation, there's nothing wild about The Wild."[14] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 47 out of 100 based on 24 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[15] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[16]

Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader wrote that "The CGI characters seem less like artwork than humans wearing animal suits, but despite the overall ugliness and sitcom timing, this has enough action, violence, and invention to keep kids amused."[17] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three stars out of four. He praised the film's animation, but acknowledged the film's realism ventured towards the uncanny valley. He remarked that the "framing of some of the characters is too close; they hog the foreground and obscure the background. And the fur, hair and feathers on the creatures look so detailed, thanks to the wonders of CGI, that once again we're wandering toward the Uncanny Valley."[18]

Marc Savlov, reviewing for The Austin Chronicle, wrote "The animation is top-notch, and the film sports some of the most realistic and colorful fur, feathers, and hair this side of Fashion Week in Milan. However, The Wild feels as though much of its backstory, along with most of the good jokes, have been cut out along the circuitous path to your neighborhood cineplex, resulting in a finished film that will probably delight the under-10 set, while leaving everyone else marveling at how bored they are."[19] Carrie Rickey of The Philadelphia Inquirer gave the film two stars out of four writing: "Though dull, there are three reasons one might want to see the film: The computer animators' ability to realistically represent animal fur is nothing short of dazzling. So detailed are the lion's mane and squirrel's tail that younger viewers could mistake it for a petting zoo."[20]

Comparisons to Madagascar

Critics considered The Wild to be heavily derivative of the 2005 DreamWorks film, Madagascar. Claudia Puig, reviewing for USA Today, suggested that The Wild was "the most wildly derivative animated movie in ages. It borrows its theme from Finding Nemo and Cats & Dogs, copies elements of The Jungle Book, The Lion King and All Dogs Go To Heaven and has a shockingly similar plot to Madagascar."[21] Similarly, Justin Chang of Variety felt "Samson's rescue mission directly channels the father-son Sturm und Drang of both The Lion King and Finding Nemo, though absent the former's powerhouse dramatics or the latter's eye-popping visual splendor." In summary, he wrote that "Uninspired character animation and obnoxious banter aside, The Wild is ultimately done in by the persistent stench of been-there-seen-that."[3]

A few critics defended The Wild as the superior film. Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune wrote "The Wild is better, mostly because it has some truly spectacular animation and because the cast is just as likable—even, in some cases, preferable."[22] Mike Sage of the Peterborough This Week wrote "don't be mistaking this for a Madagascar rip off, when it was that sloppy DreamWorks turd that only managed to make it to theaters first because of corporate espionage".[23] Without addressing which film was the original concept, Tim Cogshell of Boxoffice Magazine simply wrote "for the adult who may very well have to experience this film, and who may have experienced Madagascar, The Wild is better. The animation is better, the jokes intended for your children are better, the jokes intended for you and not your children are much better, the songs are better, and it's more fun."[24]

Accolades

Award Category Nominee Result
Artios Award Best Animated Voice-Over Feature Casting Jen Rudin and Corbin Bronson Nominated
2006 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards Worst Animated Film Disney Nominated

Soundtrack

The musical score is composed and conducted by Alan Silvestri who also composed Lilo & Stitch.

The scores "Tales from the Wild", "You Can't Roar", and "Lost in the City" are only a few of the score tracks on the soundtrack. The soundtrack is available from Buena Vista Records. "Free Ride" by The Edgar Winter Group & "Come Sail Away" by Styx is featured in the trailers.

Video game

A video game for Game Boy Advance based on The Wild was released to coincide with the film. Players get to play as Benny the Squirrel and Samson the Lion as they go through New York, the sea, and Africa to find Ryan, while battling the wicked blue wildebeest Kazar. The video game is "E" rated (for "Everyone") by the ESRB, with a note for Mild Cartoon Violence.

Literature

  • 2006: Irene Trimble: Disney the Wild Novelisation, Parragon, ISBN 1-40546-612-X

References

  1. ^ "THE WILD (U)". David Parsons. March 17, 2006. Retrieved September 17, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d "The Wild (2006)". British Film Institute. Retrieved January 4, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Chang, Justin (April 12, 2006). "Review: The Wild". Variety. Retrieved October 9, 2013.
  4. ^ "THE WILD (U)". British Board of Film Classification. March 17, 2006. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  5. ^ "The Wild (2006) - Steve "Spaz" Williams, Steve 'Spaz' Williams, Steve "Spaz" Williams, Steve Williams | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related | AllMovie".
  6. ^ "The Wild (2006) - Financial Information". The Numbers.
  7. ^ a b "The Wild (2006)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  8. ^ "El Capitan Theatre Goes Wild for Spring Break". Los Angeles Times. April 7, 2006. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  9. ^ "A Wild DVD". Animation World Network. September 14, 2006. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  10. ^ "United States DVD Sales Chart for Week Ending September 17, 2006". The Numbers. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  11. ^ "The Wild (2006)–Video Sales". The Numbers. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  12. ^ "The Wild Blu-ray". Bluray.com.
  13. ^ Gray, Brandon (April 17, 2006). "'Scary Movie 4' Cracks Easter Record". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  14. ^ "The Wild (2006)". Rotten Tomatoes.
  15. ^ "The Wild Reviews". Metacritic.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  17. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan (April 27, 2006). . Chicago Reader. Archived from the original on April 23, 2006. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  18. ^ Ebert, Roger (April 13, 2006). "The Wild Movie Review & Film Summary (2006)". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  19. ^ Savlov, Marc (April 14, 2006). "The Wild". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
  20. ^ Rickey, Carrie. "Animated 'The Wild' an only mildly amusing critter caper". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  21. ^ Puig, Claudia (April 13, 2006). "'Wild': 'Madagascar' meets 'Lion King' meets 'Nemo'". USA Today. Retrieved October 9, 2013.
  22. ^ Wilmington, Michael. . Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on March 9, 2007. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  23. ^ "It's no Lion King but Disney offering has its moments". MyKawartha.com. 19 April 2006.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-12-16. Retrieved 2013-07-06.

External links

wild, this, article, about, 2006, animated, film, wilds, wilderness, bush, other, uses, wild, disambiguation, 2006, american, computer, animated, adventure, comedy, film, directed, animator, steve, spaz, williams, written, decter, john, strauss, mark, gibson, . This article is about the 2006 animated film For the wilds see wilderness and the bush For other uses see Wild disambiguation The Wild is a 2006 American computer animated adventure comedy film directed by animator Steve Spaz Williams and written by Ed Decter John J Strauss Mark Gibson and Philip Halprin It features the voices of Eddie Izzard Kiefer Sutherland Janeane Garofalo Jim Belushi Richard Kind Greg Cipes and William Shatner The WildTheatrical release posterDirected bySteve Spaz WilliamsScreenplay byEd Decter John J Strauss Mark Gibson Philip HalprinStory byMark Gibson Philip HalprinProduced byClint Goldman Beau FlynnStarringEddie Izzard Kiefer Sutherland Janeane Garofalo Jim Belushi Richard Kind Greg Cipes William ShatnerEdited byScott Balcerek Steven L WagnerMusic byAlan SilvestriProductioncompaniesWalt Disney Pictures Nigel Productions 1 Hoytyboy Pictures 2 Sir Zip Productions 2 Contrafilm 2 C O R E Digital ProductionsDistributed byBuena Vista Pictures Distribution 3 Release dateApril 14 2006 2006 04 14 Running time82 minutes 4 CountryUnited States 5 LanguageEnglishBudget 80 million 6 Box office 102 3 million 7 Produced by Walt Disney Pictures Hoytyboy Pictures Sir Zip Studios and Contrafilm 2 3 it was animated by C O R E Feature Animation It was released to theaters in North America on April 14 2006 by Buena Vista Pictures and earned 102 million on an 80 million budget It received largely negative reviews from critics who criticized its animation style and similarities to DreamWorks Animation s Madagascar Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Release 3 1 Home media 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 4 2 1 Comparisons to Madagascar 4 3 Accolades 5 Soundtrack 6 Video game 7 Literature 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditAt the Central Park Zoo Samson the lion tells his preteen son Ryan stories of his adventures in the Wilds of Africa Ryan wants to go to the wild too to learn how to roar like his father but Samson disapproves of the idea When the zoo closes all the animals are free to roam Samson and his friends Benny the squirrel Bridget the giraffe whom Benny has a crush on Larry the dim witted anaconda and Nigel the unlucky but popular koala compete in a turtle curling championship Ryan and his own friends accidentally cause a stampede which heads to the game and endangers the animals Samson and Ryan have a falling out and Ryan runs off before Samson can apologize He later sneaks into a green Intermodal container which is rumored to be heading to the wild Just as he regrets his decision Ryan suddenly gets locked inside the container which is then loaded onto a freight truck shipping him away With the help of a pigeon Hamir Samson and his friends go after Ryan hiding in a garbage disposal truck but Benny falls overboard After passing through Times Square and nearly being crushed in the truck the group encounters a pack of rabid stray dogs and Instead of standing his ground Samson escapes through the sewer rather than fighting as his friends expect for him to do There they take directions to the docks from two friendly streetwise alligator brothers Stan and Carmine The next morning they steal a tugboat during a hectic escape from the harbor After reuniting with Benny who has followed them with a flock of Canada geese Samson manages to drive the boat with Larry s help and the geese lead them to the right direction toward Ryan s ship A few days later the boat runs aground in Africa where all the animals in the area are being evacuated by the carriers as a nearby volcano is about to erupt They witness Ryan run into the jungle but Samson is unable to find him After failing to eat a crude hyrax his friend questions if he has ever been in the wild before to which he forlornly confirms The rest of the group heads back to the ship but Samson continues to search for his son While walking he sees plants and rocks changing colors which he attributes as his instincts working Nigel is abducted by a herd of wildebeests who reside in the volcano and their leader Kazar pronounces him The Great Him based on an omen he received when he was young about to be devoured by lions a toy koala fell from a plane and scared the lions away saving his life This experience made Kazar believe that The Great Him will help him and his kind create a change in the food chain that will allow prey to become predators and vice versa In order to do that he thinks the wildebeests have to eat a lion Bridget and Larry are also get captured and planned to be eaten as well Ryan hides up an old tree but a gang of vultures attacks him under Kazar s orders The branch breaks and traps his paw Samson hears Ryan s cries and runs to save him scaring off the vultures The two reunite but are interrupted by the wildebeests Ryan is shocked when Samson tells him to run They retreat to a tree where Samson reveals the truth about his past he wasn t born in anything but a circus and was unable to roar just like Ryan Samson s overly strict authoritarian father could never accept him as a son and allowed him to be sent to the zoo where he lied about his origins to avoid humiliation The wildebeests discover them and push the tree over the cliff with Samson still hanging on Ryan is captured and taken to the volcano After a run in with a group of female German dung beetles Benny finds Samson and gives him the confidence to be himself even if he is not from the wild They soon find out that Samson s instincts were actually two chameleons named Cloak and Camo who has been leading Samson to the volcano so he would help them defeat Kazar s army Samson uses the chameleons camouflage abilities to sneak into the volcano but when his disguise blows off due to the intense heat of the mountain Kazar orders his army to attack Seeing Samson in danger Ryan climbs onto a catapulting device and launches himself at Kazar finally letting out a roar With Kazar distracted Samson easily overpowers him Ryan tells Samson that he is happy to have him as a father The other wildebeests are touched by this and refuse to serve Kazar any further having grown fed up with his delusions Samson then gains the courage and roars powerfully enough to push back a charging Kazar The group and the wildebeests flee leaving Kazar to die in the erupting volcano They manage to escape on the boat and travel back to the Central Park Zoo in their New York home Cast EditKiefer Sutherland as Samson a male lion leader of the Central Park Zoo and the main protagonist of this film Dominic Scott Kay as the voice of younger Samson Jim Belushi as Benny a heroic Eastern gray squirrel who is Samson s best friend He is the only one who knows about Samson s past Eddie Izzard as Nigel an eccentric British accented koala and co leader of the zoo He has an intense loathing for the zoo s koala plushes portraying him as cuddly Janeane Garofalo as Bridget an insecure reticulated giraffe Benny has a crush on her but she does not reciprocate until the end Richard Kind as Larry a dull witted but friendly green anaconda Greg Cipes as Ryan an 11 year old male lion cub and Samson s son William Shatner as Kazar a megalomaniacal male blue black wildebeest hybrid and the main antagonist of the film He is the tyrannical leader of a herd of wildebeests and seeks to change the food chain by eating an animal so that Prey become Predators and vice versa Colin Hay as Fergus an American flamingo Miles Marsico as Duke a male teenage red kangaroo joey Jack DeSena as Eze a male teenage hippopotamus calf Don Cherry as Penguin MC a Southern rockhopper penguin Christian Argueta and David Cowgill as Hamir a pigeon Lenny Venito as Stan a male American alligator Joseph Siravo as Carmine a male American alligator Patrick Warburton as Blag Kazar s right hand man Colin Cunningham as Colin a male hyrax Jonathan Kimmel and Eddie Gossling as Scab and Scraw a pair of male Ruppell s vultures who serve as minions of Kazar Kevin Michael Richardson as Jason Samson s father and Ryan s grandfather Chris Edgerly as Cloak a male common chameleon Bob Joles as Camo a male Jackson s chameleon and the circus ringleader Greg Berg as a third unnamed vulture Bob Bergen as Donald a pond slider turtle a cheering black rhinoceros fan and several wildebeests Jason Connroy as a flamingo Debi Derryberry as Dung Beetle 3 Monkey Girl Terri Douglas as the Koala Toy a pullstring koala plush which Nigel feuds with Jeannie Elias as the monkeys Eddie Frierson as a penguin Jess Harnell as the garbage man and a sailor Jason Harris Katz as Victor a Magellanic penguin Josh Keaton as a Rhino Carolyn Lawrence as Ladybird Monkey Girl Danny Mann as the geese Mona Marshall as Woman Lionesses and Dung Beetle 4 Paul Pape as Man 1 Fred Tatasciore as Victor Man 2 Kari Wahlgren as Baby Hippo Baby John Du Prez as several wildebeests Eric Idle as a wildebeest Miss Coco Peru as Mama HippoNon Speaking characters including The Gazelles a herd of Thomson s gazelles that Ryan accidentally causes to stampede The Dogs a Poodle a Rottweiler and a Boxer a pack of rabid stray dogs who were chasing after Samson and the gang The Elephant an African bush elephant who gets scared of Ryan by escaping out of the box Release EditIn March 2006 for a month long spring break engagement exclusive to the El Capitan Theater theater patrons were treated to a live performance of exotic birds which were accompanied by their keepers from the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens before a screening of the film 8 Home media Edit The film was released on DVD and VHS on September 12 2006 The DVD was accompanied with a filmmakers commentary five deleted scenes bloopers and a music video of Everlife s Real Wild Child 9 However the VHS version was only an exclusive for the Disney Movie Club On its first weekend the film debuted at number one selling 787 779 DVD units 10 At the end of its initial home video release the film earned 43 2 million 11 On November 21 2006 the film was released on Blu ray 12 Reception EditBox office Edit During its opening weekend the film grossed 9 6 million at the box office ranking fourth behind Scary Movie 4 Ice Age The Meltdown and The Benchwarmers 13 The Wild grossed 37 4 million in the United States and 64 9 million in other countries for a worldwide total of 102 3 million 7 Critical response Edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 19 based on 112 reviews and an average rating of 4 5 10 The site s critical consensus reads With a rehashed plot and unimpressive animation there s nothing wild about The Wild 14 On Metacritic the film has a score of 47 out of 100 based on 24 critics indicating mixed or average reviews 15 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B on an A to F scale 16 Jonathan Rosenbaum of the Chicago Reader wrote that The CGI characters seem less like artwork than humans wearing animal suits but despite the overall ugliness and sitcom timing this has enough action violence and invention to keep kids amused 17 Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film three stars out of four He praised the film s animation but acknowledged the film s realism ventured towards the uncanny valley He remarked that the framing of some of the characters is too close they hog the foreground and obscure the background And the fur hair and feathers on the creatures look so detailed thanks to the wonders of CGI that once again we re wandering toward the Uncanny Valley 18 Marc Savlov reviewing for The Austin Chronicle wrote The animation is top notch and the film sports some of the most realistic and colorful fur feathers and hair this side of Fashion Week in Milan However The Wild feels as though much of its backstory along with most of the good jokes have been cut out along the circuitous path to your neighborhood cineplex resulting in a finished film that will probably delight the under 10 set while leaving everyone else marveling at how bored they are 19 Carrie Rickey of The Philadelphia Inquirer gave the film two stars out of four writing Though dull there are three reasons one might want to see the film The computer animators ability to realistically represent animal fur is nothing short of dazzling So detailed are the lion s mane and squirrel s tail that younger viewers could mistake it for a petting zoo 20 Comparisons to Madagascar Edit Critics considered The Wild to be heavily derivative of the 2005 DreamWorks film Madagascar Claudia Puig reviewing for USA Today suggested that The Wild was the most wildly derivative animated movie in ages It borrows its theme from Finding Nemo and Cats amp Dogs copies elements of The Jungle Book The Lion King and All Dogs Go To Heaven and has a shockingly similar plot to Madagascar 21 Similarly Justin Chang of Variety felt Samson s rescue mission directly channels the father son Sturm und Drang of both The Lion King and Finding Nemo though absent the former s powerhouse dramatics or the latter s eye popping visual splendor In summary he wrote that Uninspired character animation and obnoxious banter aside The Wild is ultimately done in by the persistent stench of been there seen that 3 A few critics defended The Wild as the superior film Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune wrote The Wild is better mostly because it has some truly spectacular animation and because the cast is just as likable even in some cases preferable 22 Mike Sage of the Peterborough This Week wrote don t be mistaking this for a Madagascar rip off when it was that sloppy DreamWorks turd that only managed to make it to theaters first because of corporate espionage 23 Without addressing which film was the original concept Tim Cogshell of Boxoffice Magazine simply wrote for the adult who may very well have to experience this film and who may have experienced Madagascar The Wild is better The animation is better the jokes intended for your children are better the jokes intended for you and not your children are much better the songs are better and it s more fun 24 Accolades Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section is in a table format that may be better presented using prose You can help by converting this section to prose Editing help is available May 2020 Award Category Nominee ResultArtios Award Best Animated Voice Over Feature Casting Jen Rudin and Corbin Bronson Nominated2006 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards Worst Animated Film Disney NominatedSoundtrack EditThe musical score is composed and conducted by Alan Silvestri who also composed Lilo amp Stitch Real Wild Child is performed by Everlife a music video of the song is included on the DVD release of 2006 It was also included in the trailer of Wild Child Good Enough is performed by Lifehouse Clocks is performed by Coldplay Really Nice Day is performed by Eric Idle and John Du Prez Big Time Boppin Go Man Go is performed by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy Lovin You is performed by Minnie Riperton The scores Tales from the Wild You Can t Roar and Lost in the City are only a few of the score tracks on the soundtrack The soundtrack is available from Buena Vista Records Free Ride by The Edgar Winter Group amp Come Sail Away by Styx is featured in the trailers Video game EditA video game for Game Boy Advance based on The Wild was released to coincide with the film Players get to play as Benny the Squirrel and Samson the Lion as they go through New York the sea and Africa to find Ryan while battling the wicked blue wildebeest Kazar The video game is E rated for Everyone by the ESRB with a note for Mild Cartoon Violence Literature Edit2006 Irene Trimble Disney the Wild Novelisation Parragon ISBN 1 40546 612 XReferences Edit THE WILD U David Parsons March 17 2006 Retrieved September 17 2021 a b c d The Wild 2006 British Film Institute Retrieved January 4 2017 a b c Chang Justin April 12 2006 Review The Wild Variety Retrieved October 9 2013 THE WILD U British Board of Film Classification March 17 2006 Retrieved September 17 2014 The Wild 2006 Steve Spaz Williams Steve Spaz Williams Steve Spaz Williams Steve Williams Synopsis Characteristics Moods Themes and Related AllMovie The Wild 2006 Financial Information The Numbers a b The Wild 2006 Box Office Mojo Retrieved December 5 2019 El Capitan Theatre Goes Wild for Spring Break Los Angeles Times April 7 2006 Retrieved July 25 2019 A Wild DVD Animation World Network September 14 2006 Retrieved July 25 2019 United States DVD Sales Chart for Week Ending September 17 2006 The Numbers Retrieved July 25 2019 The Wild 2006 Video Sales The Numbers Retrieved July 25 2019 The Wild Blu ray Bluray com Gray Brandon April 17 2006 Scary Movie 4 Cracks Easter Record Box Office Mojo Retrieved July 25 2019 The Wild 2006 Rotten Tomatoes The Wild Reviews Metacritic Cinemascore Archived from the original on 2018 12 20 Rosenbaum Jonathan April 27 2006 The Wild Chicago Reader Archived from the original on April 23 2006 Retrieved July 25 2019 Ebert Roger April 13 2006 The Wild Movie Review amp Film Summary 2006 Chicago Sun Times Retrieved December 5 2019 Savlov Marc April 14 2006 The Wild The Austin Chronicle Retrieved July 24 2019 Rickey Carrie Animated The Wild an only mildly amusing critter caper The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved July 25 2019 Puig Claudia April 13 2006 Wild Madagascar meets Lion King meets Nemo USA Today Retrieved October 9 2013 Wilmington Michael Movie review The Wild Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on March 9 2007 Retrieved July 25 2019 It s no Lion King but Disney offering has its moments MyKawartha com 19 April 2006 The Wild Archived from the original on 2013 12 16 Retrieved 2013 07 06 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to The Wild film Official website The Wild at IMDb The Wild at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Wild amp oldid 1131223300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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