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'''''A Bug's Life''''' (officially trademarked as '''''a bug's life''''') is a 1998 [[Computer animated]] [[film]] produced by [[Pixar|Pixar Animation Studios]] and released by [[Buena Vista Distribution]] in the [[United States]] on November 25, 1998, in [[Australia]] on December, 1998 and in the [[United Kingdom]] on February 5, 1999. ''A Bug's Life'' was the second [[Walt Disney Pictures|Disney]] / [[Pixar]] feature film. It tells the tale of an oddball individualist [[ant]] who hires what he thinks are "warrior bugs" (actually circus performers) to fight off greedy [[grasshopper]]s. The film was directed by [[John Lasseter]] and is also the last film appearance of [[Madeline Kahn]].
'''''A Bug's Life''''' (officially trademarked as '''''a bug's life''''') is a 1998 [[Computer animated]] [[film]] produced by [[Pixar|Pixar Animation Studios]] and released by [[Buena Vista Distribution]] in the [[United States]] on November 25, 1998, in [[Australia]] on December, 1998 and in the [[United Kingdom]] on February 5, 1999. ''A Bug's Life'' was the second [[Walt Disney Pictures|Disney]] / [[Pixar]] feature film. It tells the tale of an oddball individualist [[ant]] who hires what he thinks are warrior bugs who turn out to be circus performers to fight off greedy [[grasshopper]]s. The film was directed by [[John Lasseter]] and is also the last film appearance of [[Madeline Kahn]].


The story of ''A Bug's Life'' is a parody of [[Aesop|Aesop's]] fable of ''[[The Ant and the Grasshopper]]''. It is similar to the comedy ''[[Three Amigos|¡Three Amigos!]]'', which is about out-of-work actors defending a town while thinking they're merely giving a performance. It also gives an obvious nod to [[Akira Kurosawa|Akira Kurosawa's]] ''[[Seven Samurai]]'' (as well as its [[cinema of the United States|Hollywood]] remake, ''[[The Magnificent Seven]]''), which is about [[Japan]]ese villagers hiring a group of swordsmen to fight off rampaging bandits.
The story of ''A Bug's Life'' is a parody of [[Aesop|Aesop's]] fable of ''[[The Ant and the Grasshopper]]''. It is similar to the comedy ''[[Three Amigos|¡Three Amigos!]]'', which is about out-of-work actors defending a town while thinking they're merely giving a performance. It also gives an obvious nod to [[Akira Kurosawa|Akira Kurosawa's]] ''[[Seven Samurai]]'' (as well as its [[cinema of the United States|Hollywood]] remake, ''[[The Magnificent Seven]]''), which is about [[Japan]]ese villagers hiring a group of swordsmen to fight off rampaging bandits.
Line 102: Line 102:


==References to other Pixar films==
==References to other Pixar films==
A Bug's Life features numerous references to other [[Pixar]] films including the Pizza Planet "Gyoza" Toyota Hilux from [[Toy Story]], A113 an easter egg inserted in many [[Pixar]] films as a tribute to CalArts the Alma Mater of Pixar/Disney executive John Lasseter and director Brad Bird, among others, a Pizza Planet Mega Gulp cup from the movie [[Toy Story]] on top of the bug bar in the city.
{{main|List of Pixar film references}}


==Music==
==Music==

Revision as of 17:22, 12 January 2009

A Bug's Life
Directed byJohn Lasseter
Andrew Stanton (co-director)
Written byStory:
Joe Ranft
Additional Story:
Gefwee Boedoe
Jason Katz
Jorgen Klubien
Robert Lence
David Reynolds Screenplay:
Andrew Stanton
Don McEnery
Bob Shaw
Produced byDarla K. Anderson
John Lasseter
StarringDave Foley
Kevin Spacey
Julia Louis-Dreyfus
Denis Leary
Phyllis Diller
Joe Ranft
David Hyde Pierce
Brad Garrett
Richard Kind
Bonnie Hunt
Jonathan Harris
Hayden Panettiere
Madeline Kahn
Roddy McDowall
Michael McShane
John Ratzenberger
Ashley Tisdale
CinematographySharon Calahan
Edited byLee Unkrich
Music byRandy Newman
Distributed byWalt Disney Pictures
Release dates
November 25, 1998 (U.S.)
December 26, 1998 (AUS)
February 5, 1999 (UK)
Running time
96 min.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$45 million
Box officeWorldwide:
$363,398,565

A Bug's Life (officially trademarked as a bug's life) is a 1998 Computer animated film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Buena Vista Distribution in the United States on November 25, 1998, in Australia on December, 1998 and in the United Kingdom on February 5, 1999. A Bug's Life was the second Disney / Pixar feature film. It tells the tale of an oddball individualist ant who hires what he thinks are warrior bugs who turn out to be circus performers to fight off greedy grasshoppers. The film was directed by John Lasseter and is also the last film appearance of Madeline Kahn.

The story of A Bug's Life is a parody of Aesop's fable of The Ant and the Grasshopper. It is similar to the comedy ¡Three Amigos!, which is about out-of-work actors defending a town while thinking they're merely giving a performance. It also gives an obvious nod to Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (as well as its Hollywood remake, The Magnificent Seven), which is about Japanese villagers hiring a group of swordsmen to fight off rampaging bandits.

Reviews for A Bug's Life were overwhelmingly positive at the time of the film's release, and it has remained popular since.

This film was rated G by the MPAA.

Plot

A colony of ants on a small island are working to gather enough food to satisfy the extortion demands of a gang of tough grasshoppers who visit every growing season. One ant, Flik, is an inventor whose creations usually do more harm than good. While trying out a mechanical harvester, he accidentally knocks the pile of food into a stream just before the grasshoppers arrive. Their leader, Hopper, gives the ants the rest of the season to make good on what they owe, but orders a double ration of food after Flik stands up to him in defense of a young ant named Dot.

Flik is called before the colony’s royal council and reprimanded severely for his actions. Princess Atta, Dot's older sister and the eventual successor of the current queen, is unsure about how to deal with him. When Flik suggests that he might try to recruit some “warrior bugs” to fight the grasshoppers, the council sees this idea as a chance to get him out of the way and enthusiastically approves.

Reaching the insect “city,” built from discarded boxes and cans, Flik encounters a troupe of inept circus bugs whose latest performance has just ended in disaster. He mistakes them for the warriors he needs; at the same time; they believe him to be a talent scout who wants to book their act on the island. They return to the colony, much to Atta’s surprise, and are immediately greeted as heroes who can put an end to the threat posed by Hopper’s gang.

Atta soon becomes suspicious after almost overhearing a conversation in which both Flik and the troupe realize their mistakes. However, after they band together to save Dot from a hungry bird, she begins to think that the troupe may be able to stop the grasshoppers after all. She also starts to fall in love with Flik.

At the gang’s hideout, Hopper’s brother Molt suggests that they not go back, since they have more than enough food stored up and the weather will soon turn bad. Hopper reminds him and the whole gang that if they do not keep the ants living in fear, the ants might use their superior numbers (“a hundred to one,” he estimates) to run the grasshoppers out of the colony for good. The gang sets out for the island to collect their due.

Discovering that Hopper is afraid of birds, Flik proposes that the colony build a model bird to scare him away. The ants put their food-gathering work on hold to carry out this project; as they finish, though, P. T. Flea (the circus ringmaster) arrives looking for his missing performers, thus accidentally exposing the truth. Furious at Flik’s deception, Atta banishes him from the colony, while the other ants hide the bird and rush to collect whatever food they can for Hopper. They are unable to meet the double quota he set, and when the gang arrives, he takes over the anthill and forces the ants to bring him all the food on the island.

Dot overhears the gang’s plans to kill the queen once they have all the food, and she rushes to catch up with Flik, who has left the colony with the troupe. She persuades them to return and put the bird plan into action, with help from her and some of the other young ants. The model scares the gang badly, and they are on the verge of retreating when P. T. blunders onto the scene and inadvertently incinerates it.

Enraged, Hopper sends his crazed associate Thumper to beat Flik savagely, but Flik is still able to stand up and rally the other ants, saying that the grasshoppers depend on the extorted food for their own survival. The entire colony swarms against the gang, driving away all but Hopper, now obsessed with killing Flik. In his rage, he grabs Flik and flies off, evading the troupe until Atta intervenes and rescues Flik. They lure him towards the bird's nest, where they get separated. Hopper finds Flik and they fight until the bird emerges. Hopper, believing this bird to be another model, taunts Flik until it picks him up and feeds him to its chicks.

With the grasshopper menace gone, the ants welcome Flik back into the colony and adopt his harvester to speed up grain collection. Passing her princess crown to Dot, Atta is crowned the new queen and chooses Flik as her mate. Before the troupe can leave, they must wait for one member, Heimlich the caterpillar, to emerge from the chrysalis in which he has encased himself. He pops out with a tiny pair of butterfly wings, far too small to lift him off the ground, and the troupe (with Molt, acting as a road crew assistant) departs with the colony’s thanks.

Cast

Dave Foley as Flik, an inventive ant who is desperate to make a difference to his colony's way of life, but tends to make things worse in the process. His inventions include a telescope created by wrapping a blade of grass around a dewdrop; an automatic harvester; several items of traveller's gear; and the bird-shaped aircraft used to terrify the grasshoppers. He is suggested to have a soft spot for Princess Atta.

Hayden Panettiere as Dot, the younger princess ant of the royal family. She idolises Flik and resents being small. She starts the movie unable to fly, but ultimately finds herself able to fly when her survival depends on it. Dot acts as Flik's moral support, and he as hers. Dot fears the demented grasshopper Thumper, exposure to whom Hopper uses as a punishment. Dot is terrified of Thumper but with the help of the rhinoceros beetle Dim she scares the grasshopper away.

Denis Leary as Francis, an aggressive ladybug and a clown in P.T. Flea's circus troupe. Francis is frustrated by constantly being mistaken for a female; an obvious pun on the name of his species. In such frustrations, he is shown to be belligerent and aggressive to the point of frightening others. Because it is he who played the most obvious part in Princess Dot's rescue, he becomes 'den-mother' to the scout-like organization of young ants called the "Blueberry Troop". As counselor to this organization, Francis becomes very fond of his charges. Francis seems to have a strong friendship with Slim and Heimlich. While transporting over long distances, Francis carries Slim.

Joe Ranft as Heimlich, a green caterpillar with a German accent and a clown in P.T. Flea's circus troupe. He is gluttonous and frivolous throughout, and contemptuous of anyone he considers less intelligent than himself. At one point, he remarks that he dreams of being a beautiful butterfly. At the end of the film, he sprouts a pair of tiny wings, but remains flightless due to his obesity. Whilst a caterpillar, Heimlich is carried by the rhinoceros beetle, Dim, for transport. He uses a few German words now and then, particulary when he is very scared.

David Hyde Pierce as Slim, a walking stick insect and a clown in P.T. Flea's circus troupe. It appears that he is unhappy with his position at the circus troupe, as his boss constantly casts him as a prop instead of a character, with such castings such as "the broom, the pole, the stick, [and] the splinter". He is shown to be best friends with Heimlich and Francis, and often treats other bugs with respect in contrast to Francis' aggressive nature. It is also implied that he could share a friendship with Rosie as they seem to stand next to each other a lot and often look to each other for help. Since Slim does not have wings and cannot fly, Francis usually carries him from location to location.

Jonathan Harris as Manny, a praying mantis with an English accent; the magician of P.T. Flea's circus troupe. Manny is Gypsy's husband. His magic act involves the 'Chinese Cabinet of Metamorphosis', which is really the packaging of a Chinese Takeaway. His magic act is not appreciated well by the flies in the usual audience; but the grasshoppers, when he is set to distract them, take it seriously. Manny is aggressive towards Flik at the beginning of their acquaintance, but grows to like him. During the rescue of the Queen, Manny performs his magic act to conceal the Queen and is almost strangled by Hopper when he refuses to give up the Queen's location. His personality is very melodramatic and dignified.

Madeline Kahn as Gypsy, a gypsy moth who has beautiful patterns on either side of her wings. She is Manny's wife as well as his 'lovely assistant' during his magic act. She gives the signal for Flik's fake bird plan to commence when the plan to rescue the Queen is in session. During this, Manny performs his magic act, wherein Gypsy takes the place of the Queen as if to be a transformation in his Chinese Cabinet.

Bonnie Hunt as Rosie, a black widow spider who is maternal toward the rhinoceros beetle, Dim, and the younger ants of the colony. She has apparently had twelve husbands. She will sometimes be involved in whatever Slim, Francis, and Heimlich are doing. She seems to share a friendship with Slim, to whom she is seen in proximity.

Michael McShane as Tuck and Roll, twin pill bugs who speak a language other than English. According to the Official Pixar website they are Hungarian[1] yet the language they speak is entirely fictional and the dance they do is a typical Russian Folk dance . Tuck and Roll occasionally argue, but are usually the best of friends. They act as cannonballs in P.T. Flea's circus troupe. They like the sound of the phrase "You fired!" (of whose meaning they have no idea), and continuously repeat it throughout the film.

Brad Garrett as Dim, a rhinoceros beetle who has a childlike, impressionable, but clear-sighted character. He is usually mothered by the black widow spider, Rosie. He is the largest insect of the circus troupe, and also the transport to Heimlich, Tuck, Roll, and Rosie. It is he who provokes the performers to revive Flik's belief in himself, when this has waned.

Kevin Spacey as Hopper, the main antagonist of A Bug's Life. Hopper is a feared grasshopper who is blind in one eye due to a scratch caused by a recent encounter with a blue jay. He leads a large gang of grasshoppers, who hold a Mafia-like control over the ants. Hopper is cunning, bad-tempered, and tyrannical. Whereas most of the grasshoppers consider the ants harmless, Hopper is aware that the ants outnumber them, and therefore plots to kill the queen ant to frighten them into submission. His catchphrase "Let's ride!" is uttered when the grasshoppers are about to take flight en masse.

Richard Kind as Molt, Hopper's brother and self-proclaimed Vice President of the grasshopper gang. He is named 'Molt' for his exoskeleton's abnormal tendency to peel off. He is a loudmouth and provides a great deal of comic relief. Hopper detests his brothers' antics and is shown remarking that he promised their mother on her deathbed that he would not kill Molt, and would do so if he had not promised. At the end, Molt joins P.T. Flea's circus troupe, under the new name of Tiny.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Princess Atta, the older princess ant of the royal family and heir to the throne. She is nervous about her new responsibilities and fears what the rest of the colony might think about her. During the film, it is shown that she has a small crush on Flik, although initially she does not show much appreciation for him. Her appreciation changes for the better after the ants build the bird. The Queen eventually gives up her crown at the end of the film to Atta, whereupon Atta gives up her own crown to her younger sister Dot.

Phyllis Diller as The Queen of the ant colony. She is an ancient ant, who is due to give up her crown to her eldest daughter Atta. She admonishes her younger daughter, Dot, for trying to fly before her time. She has a pet aphid called Aphy, whom she adores. She is also shown to have an intimate, possibly romantic relationship with another elder ant, Mr. Soil.

Roddy McDowall as Mister Soil, a member of the Ant Island council. This role was Roddy McDowall's last before his death in 1998.

Edie McClurg as Doctor Flora, the nurse of Ant Island.

John Ratzenberger as P.T. Flea, the ringmaster of the circus troupe, who is unwilling to give refunds after his show has lasted two minutes. His finalé consists of an act called 'Flaming Death', in which he was almost incinerated. This caused him to fire his entire troupe, until a foot-long line of flies arrived outside the circus tent, wanting to see the 'Flaming Death' act again. He loves money. His name is based on the initials of circus owner Phineas Taylor Barnum.

Crew

References to other Pixar films

A Bug's Life features numerous references to other Pixar films including the Pizza Planet "Gyoza" Toyota Hilux from Toy Story, A113 an easter egg inserted in many Pixar films as a tribute to CalArts the Alma Mater of Pixar/Disney executive John Lasseter and director Brad Bird, among others, a Pizza Planet Mega Gulp cup from the movie Toy Story on top of the bug bar in the city.

Music

Reception

This movie received a 91% "fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[2]

Box office

A Bug's Life made approximately $162.7 million in its U.S. theatrical run, easily covering its estimated production costs of $45 million. The film made $200,600,000 in foreign countries. The film made a worldwide gross of $363.3 million surpassing the competition from DreamWorks's Antz.

Video release

The DVD of the film is the first wholly-digital transfer of a feature film to a digital playback medium. No analog processes came between the creation of the computer images and their representation on the DVD.

As well, the pan and scan or 'full screen' version of the video (on the DVD as well as VHS releases) has been reframed and restaged; rather than sacrifice image in some parts of the film, the frame has been extended or objects moved to fit the narrower aspect ratio. Pixar continued this process on its later video releases. Also, the different characters (Flik, Dot, Francis, etc.) were on one (by themselves) cover of the video cover, considered a collectible in many cases.

To show off its new DVD capabilities, a copy of the film was included with the Apple iMac DV, which made its debut in 1999. A laserdisc version was also released in Japan by Pioneer, one of the last.

The widescreen version of the film preserves its original aspect ratio of 2.35:1. A Bug's Life is the first fully computer animated feature to be filmed in this ratio.

A set of "fluffs" and "outtakes" was included, in which various animated characters "blew" their dialog, or broke up laughing inappropriately. In one, Flik yells the line "To infinity, and beyond!", quoting Buzz Lightyear from an earlier Pixar film, Toy Story. Later, Woody leans into view with an upside down clapperboard to mark the end of a botched take.

Another DVD of the movie was released as a 2-disc Collector's Edition. This DVD is fully remastered and has substantial bonus features about the movie.

In 2009, another DVD version will be released. This version will include a DisneyFile Digital Copy.

Trailers

One Pixar tradition is to create one trailer for each of their films that contains no footage from the actual unreleased film. The trailers for this film:

  • Flik and all the insects from the circus troupe gather onto a leaf right before Heimlich bites the end of it off, causing them to fall.

Attached short film

Theatrical and video releases of this film include Geri's Game, a Pixar short made in 1997, a year before this film was released.

See also

References

Template:Box Office Leaders USA

Preceded by Box office number-one films of 1999 (UK)
February 7, 1999 – March 7, 1999
Succeeded by