The magical inhabitants of a rainforest fight to save their home, which is threatened by logging and a polluting force of destruction called Hexxus.The magical inhabitants of a rainforest fight to save their home, which is threatened by logging and a polluting force of destruction called Hexxus.The magical inhabitants of a rainforest fight to save their home, which is threatened by logging and a polluting force of destruction called Hexxus.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 1 nomination
Samantha Mathis
- Crysta
- (voice)
Christian Slater
- Pips
- (voice)
Robin Williams
- Batty Koda
- (voice)
Jonathan Ward
- Zak
- (voice)
Grace Zabriskie
- Magi Lune
- (voice)
Geoffrey Blake
- Ralph
- (voice)
Robert Pastorelli
- Tony
- (voice)
Cheech Marin
- Stump
- (voice)
Tommy Chong
- Root
- (voice)
Townsend Coleman
- Knotty
- (voice)
Brian Cummings
- Ock
- (voice)
Kathleen Freeman
- Elder #1
- (voice)
Janet Gilmore
- Fairy #1
- (voice)
Naomi Lewis
- Elder #2
- (voice)
Danny Mann
- Ash
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe "FernGully" forest depicted in this movie was based on Australia's rainforests. The cartoonists who worked on this movie spent time in the real rainforests to help inspire their drawings.
- GoofsA running gag is that Batty, being a bat (and thus short-sighted) keeps running into things. Yet Batty is a fruit bat: these are day animals with quite good sight, particularly useful to spot berries and fruit to feed on.
- Quotes
Elder: Now, Crysta, aren't you a little old to believe in human tales?
Batty Koda: Human tails? Humans don't have tails. They have big, big bottoms that they wear with bad shorts. They walk around going, "Hi, Helen".
- Crazy creditsSpecial thanks to the United States Postal Service for their efforts to raise environmental awareness.
- SoundtracksLife Is a Magic Thing
Performed by Johnny Clegg
Music and Lyrics by Thomas Dolby
Produced by Hilton Rosenthal
Johnny Clegg appears courtesy of EMI Records Limited
Featured review
This movie is mediocre in most aspects, from animation to plot to soundtrack. But in hindsight, it was the first explicitly pro-environment animation movie in the US (except, perhaps, Secret of Nimh), and its plot of endangered habitat which must be rescued is echoed in any number of successor movies, especially in the last decade. But FernGully's message seems half-hearted, beginning with its vaguely remote setting (apparently Australia, as confirmed by the weird attempt at accents), and its fantasy landscape. My kids thought nothing of the cliched romance between the shrunken lumberjack Zak and the fairy Crysta, whose naivete is perhaps meant to echo the audience's. They reacted most strongly to the two most memorable characters in the film: the frightening evil demon Hexxus, a kind of "smoke monster" (but also sludge monster), who is a literal ghost-in-the-machine driving on the engines of destruction; and the incredibly annoying bat Batty Koda, who demonstrates that Robin Williams' manic genius was much better suited to the genie in Aladdin. Interestingly, Batty Koda was more-or-less copies wholesale in the 1997 film Anastasia as Bartok, who somehow is much less annoying!
- BabelAlexandria
- Nov 8, 2021
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- FernGully, las aventuras de Zak y Crysta
- Filming locations
- Australia(FAI Films)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $24,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $24,650,296
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,549,338
- Apr 12, 1992
- Gross worldwide
- $32,710,894
- Runtime1 hour 16 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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