In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.
Glen Campbell
- Chanticleer
- (voice)
Christopher Plummer
- The Duke
- (voice)
Sorrell Booke
- Pinky
- (voice)
Eddie Deezen
- Snipes
- (voice)
Sandy Duncan
- Peepers
- (voice)
Toby Ganger
- Edmond
- (as Toby Scott Ganger)
Ellen Greene
- Goldie
- (voice)
Phil Harris
- Patou
- (voice)
- …
Charles Nelson Reilly
- Hunch
- (voice)
- (as Charles Nelson-Reilly)
Dee Wallace
- Mother
- (voice)
Louise Chamis
- Minnie Rabbit
- (voice)
Bob Gallico
- Radio Announcer
- (voice)
- (as Bob Galaco)
Jake Steinfeld
- Farmyard Bully
- (voice)
- …
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film originally included more darker elements, a famous one being a deleted sequence from the kitchen scene. In this sequence the Duke bakes a live baby skunk in a pie and then eats it. Oddly enough, according to Gary Goldman, the reason this was cut wasn't because of the content but because Bluth's studio received a complaint from Goldcrest's marketing representative that most cases of child abuse happen in the kitchen, and involve baking instruments.
- GoofsIt's established that Chanticleer's crowing causes the sun to rise every day. But, early on in the movie, the sun rises without Chanticleer's crowing. And after he leaves shamed, it stays dark and begins to rain eternally. Later the sun rises again after Chanticleer returns to crow, with no explanation as to why the plot seemingly contradicts itself.
- Quotes
Grand Duke:If I kill my nephew, would it be murder or charity?
- Alternate versionsFor the Spanish release of the film, the cartoons were dubbed in Latin Spanish and the humans in Castilian Spanish. For a re-release in South America all the humans were re-dubbed to Latin Spanish.
- SoundtracksSun Do Shine
Sung byGlen Campbell
Written byT.J. Kuenster
Arranged and Produced byT.J. Kuenster
Executive Music Producer:Shopan Entesari
Backing Vocals:The Jordanaires
Featured review
I've been told by a lot of people that this movie is the first of the mediocre entries (except Anastasia) in the early/late 90s that caused Don Bluth's career to go downhill, but as for me, I think I actually found this along with The Pebble and the Penguin to be very decent. Why?
Well, I will admit, the story was weird and predictable and has a lot of flaws that went nowhere despite it being supposedly charming. The characters were good. Edmund was okay, but nothing special, Chanticleer and the others were very decent, but the Grand Duke of Owls' henchman and the fox guy that wants some money for using Chanticleer to sing for the audiences were not that interesting. I think that the best character throughout the whole movie is the Grand Duke of Owls himself voiced by Christoper Plummer (who previously voiced Henri the pigeon in An American Tail) since he was so intimidating and very threatening which makes him one of the best non-Disney villains ever.
The songs were forgettable. The first song in the beginning was surprisingly good, but some of them were forgettable due to their uninspired lyrics.
There were several inconsistencies like the Grand Duke's breath contains magical powers and the rooster can sing while bringing the sun with his cock-a-doodling voice. It's weird, but that's not saying much.
And that's it for Rock-A-Doodle. Is it a weird movie like The Pebble and the Penguin? Yes, but unlike A Troll in Central Park, it's not a bad movie for it's worth watching for the kids. For adults, however, they will have a hard time viewing this.
6/10
Well, I will admit, the story was weird and predictable and has a lot of flaws that went nowhere despite it being supposedly charming. The characters were good. Edmund was okay, but nothing special, Chanticleer and the others were very decent, but the Grand Duke of Owls' henchman and the fox guy that wants some money for using Chanticleer to sing for the audiences were not that interesting. I think that the best character throughout the whole movie is the Grand Duke of Owls himself voiced by Christoper Plummer (who previously voiced Henri the pigeon in An American Tail) since he was so intimidating and very threatening which makes him one of the best non-Disney villains ever.
The songs were forgettable. The first song in the beginning was surprisingly good, but some of them were forgettable due to their uninspired lyrics.
There were several inconsistencies like the Grand Duke's breath contains magical powers and the rooster can sing while bringing the sun with his cock-a-doodling voice. It's weird, but that's not saying much.
And that's it for Rock-A-Doodle. Is it a weird movie like The Pebble and the Penguin? Yes, but unlike A Troll in Central Park, it's not a bad movie for it's worth watching for the kids. For adults, however, they will have a hard time viewing this.
6/10
- gavin-thelordofthefu-48-460297
- Oct 10, 2011
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Rock-A-Doodle 3D
- Filming locations
- Ardmore Studios, Herbert Road, Bray, County Wicklow, Ireland(Edmond's farm)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $18,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,657,385
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,603,286
- Apr 5, 1992
- Gross worldwide
- $11,657,385
- Runtime1hour14minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78: 1(original & negative ratio)
- 1.85: 1
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