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2011 American animated film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rango is a 2011 American animated action comedy Western film directed by Gore Verbinski from a screenplay by John Logan. Co-produced by Verbinski with Graham King and John B. Carls, the film stars the voices of Johnny Depp, Isla Fisher, Abigail Breslin, Alfred Molina, Bill Nighy, Harry Dean Stanton, Ray Winstone and Timothy Olyphant. The film's plot centers on Rango (Depp), a pet chameleon who ends up in the town of Dirt, an outpost that is in desperate need of a new sheriff. Rango was produced by Nickelodeon Movies, Verbinski's Blind Wink Productions, and King's GK Films, and distributed by Paramount Pictures, with the animation produced by Industrial Light & Magic.[3]
Rango | |
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Directed by | Gore Verbinski |
Screenplay by | John Logan |
Story by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Roger Deakins |
Edited by | Craig Wood |
Music by | Hans Zimmer |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 107 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $135 million[1][2] |
Box office | $245.7 million[1] |
Rango premiered at Westwood on February 14, 2011, and was released in the United States on March 4, 2011. The film was both a major critical and commercial success, grossing $245.7 million against a budget of $135 million. At the 84th Academy Awards, the film won Best Animated Feature.
A theatrically-minded pet chameleon becomes stranded in the Mojave Desert of Nevada after his terrarium accidentally falls out of his owners' car. Seeking water and shelter, he learns about an Old West-like town called Dirt, where water comes in through a mysterious rite on Wednesdays, from the cause of the accident - a nine-banded armadillo hermit that is seeking a mystical being known as the "Spirit of the West". Seeing no other options, the chameleon heads out into the desert. After a near-fatal encounter with a vicious red-tailed hawk, he meets desert iguana rancher Beans, who takes him to Dirt.
Asked about his identity, the chameleon presents himself to the townsfolk as a tough drifter named "Rango" and quickly runs afoul of Gila monster outlaw Bad Bill, who challenges him to a duel after Rango accidentally sets him on fire. The hawk interrupts the duel and chases Rango, who accidentally knocks over an empty water tower and crushes the hawk to death. Believing he did so intentionally, the townsfolk praise Rango, who is appointed as the new sheriff by Dirt's elderly desert tortoise mayor. Meanwhile, the townsfolk worry that with the hawk dead, infamous western diamondback rattlesnake gunslinger Rattlesnake Jake, who fears predators such as it, will return.
With the town desperate for water during a drought, Beans demands that Rango investigates where the water has gone and in doing so, he inadvertently helps a gang of bandits led by a mole named Balthazar, to steal the water supply after mistaking them for prospectors. Rango organizes a posse that later finds the banker, Johannes Merrimack III, dead in the middle of the desert from drowning. The posse tracks the robbers to their hideout, where they fight Balthazar's bat-riding clan over the stolen water bottle before discovering it to be empty. Despite professing that they found it like that, Balthazar and his prairie dog sons, Jedidiah and Ezekiel, are taken into custody.
After being questioned by Rango about his buying of the land around Dirt, the mayor, soon revealed to be responsible for Merrimack's death, summons Rattlesnake Jake, who runs him out of town after forcing him to admit his lies. Dejected, Rango returns to where he was separated from his owners, where he passes out after he crosses to the other side of the highway. He eventually meets the Spirit of the West, an elderly Man with No Name, who advises him to go back to Dirt and set things right, telling him that "No man can walk out on his own story".
With the aid of Roadkill and mystical moving yuccas, Rango discovers an emergency shut-off valve in a water pipeline to Las Vegas, which the mayor had been manipulating to cause the water shortage so he could buy the land for himself. Rango returns to Dirt and challenges Jake to a duel, a diversion staged by his allies to allow the restoration of the town's water in order to make his resolve clear. However, the mayor forces Rango to surrender by threatening Beans' life before attempting to drown the duo inside the bank's vault.
The mayor then tries to shoot Jake with Rango's gun, believing that both he and Rango represent too much of the old traditions, only to discover that Rango has taken its only bullet, which he uses to shatter the vault's glass door, freeing himself and Beans. Impressed, Jake praises Rango for proving his heroism and earning Jake's respect before dragging the mayor off into the desert to murder him as revenge for his betrayal. The citizens of Dirt celebrate the return of their water supply and Rango, now a true hero.
The likeness of Benicio del Toro is briefly used to represent his character of Dr. Gonzo from Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas in a cameo appearance, alongside Johnny Depp as Raoul Duke.
The filming was described as "emotion capture" as the actors shot their scenes in live action for the animators to use as reference.[11][12] During production, the cast dressed in their character's costumes and performed on real sets in order to "give them the feel of the Wild West". As Johnny Depp could only schedule twenty days to film his scenes, much of the supporting cast had to film with him when it was convenient.[13] Verbinski said his attempt with Rango was to do a "small" film after the first three large-scale Pirates of the Caribbean movies, but that he underestimated how painstaking, time-consuming and expensive animated filmmaking is.[3][13] Paramount stepped in at the last possible minute as Verbinski's slim financing was about to run out.[14]
Unlike many studio animation projects produced since Avatar, Rango was rendered in 2D, not 3D, as the budget would not allow for it and Verbinski did not want to do "half-assed 3D".[14]
The film contains a number of references to movie Westerns and other films, including The Shakiest Gun in the West, A Fistful of Dollars, Chinatown, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Once Upon a Time in the West, Cat Ballou, Raising Arizona, and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas;[15] as well as references to earlier ILM work including the dogfight in the Death Star trench in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.[16] Verbinski has also cited El Topo as an influence on the film.[17]
In a discussion about the nature of contemporary animated features, Verbinski said in December 2011:
There are shackles with the budgets and the profit margins. You want to compete with what they're doing at Pixar and DreamWorks. There's a price tag with that just in terms of achieving that quality level. What happened to the Ralph Bakshis of the world? We're all sitting here talking about family entertainment. Does animation have to be family entertainment? I think at that cost, yes. There's the bull's-eye you have to hit, but when you miss it by a little bit and you do something interesting, the bull's-eye is going to move. Audiences want something new; they just can't articulate what.[18]
Rango's teaser trailer was released on June 9, 2010,[19] alongside the film's official site RangoMovie.com.[20] It depicted an open desert highway and Mr. Timms, Rango's orange, wind-up plastic fish floating slowly across the road.[21] On June 28, 2010, the first poster was released showing the main character Rango.[4] A two-minute film trailer was released June 29, 2010.[22][23] Another trailer was released December 14, 2010.[24] A 30-second spot was made specifically to run during Super Bowl XLV on February 6, 2011.[25]
The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD on July 15, 2011.[26][27] The release had been produced as a two-disc Blu-ray, DVD, and "Digital Copy" combo pack with both the theatrical and an extended version of the film, cast and crew commentary, deleted scenes, and featurettes.[28][29][30]
The extended version adds a final scene in which the flooded town is now a beach resort renamed Mud and Rango rides out to deal with news that Bad Bill is causing trouble elsewhere and gave his final speech before he falls off his roadrunner steed.
A 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray SteelBook was released on June 4, 2024.
Rango earned $123,477,607 in North America and $122,246,996 in other countries for a total $245,724,603.[1] It is the 24th-highest-grossing film of 2011 worldwide.[31]
In North America, Rango debuted in 3,917 theaters, grossing $9,608,091 on its first day and $38,079,323 during its opening weekend, ranking number one at the box office.[1] Even though the film dropped into second place behind Battle: Los Angeles the following week, it would go on to outgross the weaker opening of Disney's animated flop, Mars Needs Moms.[32] On March 26, 2011, it became the first film of 2011 to cross the $100 million mark in North America.[33]
In markets outside North America, during its first weekend, it earned $16,770,243 in 33 countries.[34] It topped the international box office two times in March 2011.[35][36] Although the film did not double its budget, it was declared a success by Paramount which subsequently announced the formation of its own animation department.[37]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 88% of 224 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Rango is a smart, giddily creative burst of beautifully animated entertainment, and Johnny Depp gives a colorful vocal performance as a household pet in an unfamiliar world."[38] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 75 out of 100, based on 35 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[39] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale.[40][41][42]
Richard Corliss of Time applauded the "savvy humor" and called the voice actors "flat-out flawless".[43] He later named it one of the 10 best movies of 2011, saying, "In a strong year for animation ... Rango was the coolest, funniest and dagnab-orneriest of the bunch."[44] Bob Mondello of National Public Radio observed that "Rango's not just a kiddie-flick (though it has enough silly slapstick to qualify as a pretty good one). It's a real movie lover's movie, conceived as a Blazing Saddles-like comic commentary on genre that's as back-lot savvy as it is light in the saddle."[5] Frank Lovece of Film Journal International, noting the nervous but improvising hero's resemblance to the Don Knotts character in The Shakiest Gun in the West, echoed this, saying that "with healthy doses of Carlos Castaneda, Sergio Leone, Chuck Jones and Chinatown ... this [is] the kid-movie equivalent of a Quentin Tarantino picture. There's no gory violence or swearing, of course, but there sure is a film buff's parade of great movie moments."[45] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four out of four stars calling the film "some kind of a miracle: An animated comedy for smart moviegoers, wonderfully made, great to look at, wickedly satirical ... The movie respects the tradition of painstakingly drawn animated classics, and does interesting things with space and perspective with its wild action sequences."[46]
After praising "the brilliance of its visuals", Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal wrote, "The narrative isn't really dramatic, ... [but] more like a succession of picturesque notions that might have flowed from DreamWorks or Pixar while their story departments were out to lunch."[47]
In one of the more negative reviews, Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune acknowledged its "considerable care and craft" but called it "completely soulless" and that watching it "with a big suburban preview audience was instructive. Not much laughter. Moans and sobs of pre-teen fright whenever Rattlesnake Jake slithered into view, threatening murder."[48]
The Sacramento, California-based anti-smoking organization Breathe California regards the film a "public health hazard"; it said there were at least 60 instances of smoking in the film.[49] Because of this, some anti-smoking organizations, including Breathe California, petitioned for the film to receive an R rating instead of the original PG rating received by the Motion Picture Association of America. However, no change was made to the smoking scenes and the film maintained its PG rating.[50]
Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
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Academy Awards | Best Animated Film | Gore Verbinski | Won |
Alliance of Women Film Journalists | Best Animated Film | Won | |
Best Animated Female | Isla Fisher | Won | |
American Cinema Editors | Best Edited Animated Feature Film | Craig Wood | Won |
Annie Awards | Best Animated Feature | Won | |
Animated Effects in an Animated Production | Chase Cooper | Nominated | |
Willi Geiger | Nominated | ||
Character Design in a Feature Production | Mark "Crash" McCreery | Won | |
Directing in a Feature Production | Gore Verbinski | Nominated | |
Storyboarding in a Feature Production | Delia Gosman | Nominated | |
Josh Hayes | Nominated | ||
Writing in a Feature Production | John Logan, Gore Verbinski and James Ward Byrkit | Won | |
Editing in a Feature Production | Craig Wood | Won | |
BAFTA | Best Animated Film | Gore Verbinski | Won |
Boston Society of Film Critics Awards | Best Animated Film | Won | |
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards | Best Animated Feature | Won | |
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards | Animated Feature | Gore Verbinski | Won |
Golden Globes Awards | Best Animated Feature Film | Nominated | |
Hollywood Film Festival | Best Animated | Won | |
IGN Best of 2011 | Best Animated Movie | Won | |
International Film Music Critics Association | Best Original Score for an Animated Feature | Hans Zimmer | Nominated |
Kids Choice Awards | Favorite Voice from an Animated Movie | Johnny Depp | Nominated |
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards | Best Animated Film | Won | |
Motion Picture Sound Editors | Best Sound Editing in an Animation Feature Film | Nominated | |
National Board of Review Awards | Best Animated Feature | Won | |
Online Film Critics Society Awards | Best Animated Feature | Won | |
People's Choice Awards[51] | Favorite Movie Animated Voice | Johnny Depp | Won |
Producers Guild of America Awards | Best Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures | John B. Carls, Gore Verbinski | Nominated |
San Francisco Film Critics Circle Awards | Best Animated Feature | Won | |
Satellite Awards | Motion Picture, Animated or Mixed Media | Nominated | |
Saturn Awards | Best Animated Film | Nominated | |
Teen Choice Awards[52] | Choice Movie Animated Voice | Johnny Depp | Won |
Toronto Film Critics Association Awards | Best Animated Feature | Nominated | |
Visual Effects Society[53] | Outstanding Visual Effects in an Animated Feature Motion Picture | Tim Alexander, Hal Hickel, Jacqui Lopez, Katie Lynch | Won |
Outstanding Animated Character in an Animated Feature Motion Picture | Frank Gravatt, Kevin Martel, Brian Paik, Steve Walton | Won | |
Outstanding Created Environment in an Animated Feature Motion Picture | John Bell, Polly Ing, Martin Murphy, Russell Paul | Won | |
Outstanding Virtual Cinematography in an Animated Feature Motion Picture | Colin Benoit, Philippe Rebours, Nelson Sepulveda, Nick Walker | Won |
Electronic Arts released a video game of the same name based on the film. It is rated E10+ and was released for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Nintendo DS, and Wii.[54]
Funtactix launched Rango: The World, a browser-based virtual world set in the Rango universe, on March 4, 2011, the day of the film's release.[55][56]
The score was composed by Verbinski's frequent collaborator, Hans Zimmer and features contributions from songwriter and actor Rick Garcia, Latin rock band Los Lobos, and hardcore punk/industrial band Lard.[57][58]
Non-original music includes "Finale", composed by Danny Elfman for the 2007 film The Kingdom, as well as excerpts of Richard Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyries", Johann Strauss II's "The Blue Danube", and Hank Williams cover of "Cool Water".
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