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==Plot==
==Plot==
June Bailey and her mother come up with the story of Wonderland, a magical amusement park run by animal creatures that entertain and dazzle children of all ages. The gang consists of Boomer, a big blue bear that greets patrons; Greta, a boar who manages and keeps things under control; Gus and Cooper, beaver brothers; Steve, a porcupine who is in love with Greta; and the park’s mascot/leader Peanut, a monkey who hears Mrs. Bailey’s voice and is given the inspiration to create with his magic marker.
June Bailey and her mother come up with the story of Wonderland, a magical amusement park run by animal creatures that entertain and dazzle children of all ages. The gang consists of Boomer, a big blue bear that greets patrons; Greta, a boar who manages and keeps things under control; Gus and Cooper, beaver brothers; Steve, a porcupine who is in love with Greta; and the park’s mascot/leader Peanut, a monkey who hears Mrs. Bailey’s voice and is given the inspiration to create with his magic marker. Hoping to make Wonderland a reality, June and her friend Banky create a contraption that functions like a theme park ride, but it goes out of control and causes massive damage to the town. June’s parents scold her for the damage, but her mom tells her she can still use her imagination safely.


Over time, the family continues to have fun, but Mrs. Bailey starts to get sick. She is sent away for recovery, leaving June scared and depressed. She takes down her displays and refuses to play with the other kids because she thinks they only care about her giving them Wonderland. One day, June and her father visited by her Uncle Tony and Aunt Albertine, who try to cheer June up by sparking her imagination with a model ferris wheel but June snaps and throws out the blueprint of Wonderland into the fire, causing it to burn up and leaving her heartbroken.
As June gets older, her imagination grows. She and her friend Banky create a contraption that functions like a theme park ride, but it goes out of control and causes massive damage to the town. June’s parents scold her for the damage she caused, but her mom tells her she can keep her imagination going as long as it doesn’t destroy the neighborhood.


Sometime later, Mr. Bailey sends June to math camp with Banky and their other friends. After reading a note from her dad saying that he will miss her, June becomes paranoid that her father will not be able to handle himself without her, so she uses Banky to create a distraction on the bus and get them to pull over. June uses the opportunity to run back home through the woods. She then finds a burnt piece of the Wonderland blueprint flying toward it. June chases after it as it takes her deeper into the woods, and she finds herself in a different realm. She steps inside the rocket car of a roller coaster and is transported to the actual Wonderland.
Over time, the family continues to have fun, but Mrs. Bailey starts to get sick. She is sent away for recovery, leaving June scared and depressed. She starts to become cynical and refuses to play with the other kids because she thinks they only care about her giving them Wonderland. June and her father are then visited by Uncle Tony and Aunt Albertine. They try to cheer June up by sparking her imagination with talk of Wonderland, but June snaps and throws out the map of Wonderland into the fire, causing it to burn up. She then runs to her room, sobbing.


When June gets down to the park, she finds the animals all fleeing in terror from a storm cloud known as the Darkness, which formed after Clockwork Swings, the parks mechanism for operating, malfunctioned. Emerging from it are Chimpanzombies, formerly the park’s Wonder Chimp plush toys that have become troublemakers. June introduces herself and tells the animals that she and her mom are responsible for creating them. Greta seems to be suspicious of June being there, but she proves what she knows about them by naming a very specific way that Steve drinks his tea. June asks them what happened to Peanut, and they tell her that he went off on his own to reactivate Clockwork Swings, but was captured by the Chimpanzombies.
The next morning, Mr. Bailey sends June to math camp with Banky and their other friends. Barely ten minutes into the bus ride, June becomes paranoid that her father will not be able to handle himself without her, so she uses Banky to create a distraction on the bus and get them to pull over. June uses the opportunity to run back home through the woods. She then finds a burnt piece of the Wonderland map flying toward it. June chases after it as it takes her deeper into the woods, and she finds herself in a completely different place. She steps inside a rocket ride and is transported into Wonderland before her very eyes…or at least, what used to be Wonderland.


June leads the animals to Clockwork Springs to help fix it, but is unaware of what she is supposed to do. The Chimpanzombies then attack once again in a giant robot known as the Skyflinger that wreaks more havoc across the park. In the chaos, June gets separated from the animals and finds herself in a floating chamber known as Zero-G Land. There, she finds Peanut hiding in a room he created to escape the darkness, because he felt lost without hearing the voice in his head and chose to stay alone. This leads June to realize that the Darkness was created by herself as a result of her cynicism from her mom’s sickness. The Chimpanzombies then show up and attack once again, taking Peanut as their prisoner, but June manages to escape with Peanut’s marker.
When June gets down to the park, she finds the animals all fleeing in terror from a dark storm cloud. Emerging from it are Chimpanzombies, formerly the park’s Wonder Chimps now becoming terrible troublemakers. The animals run and evade the Chimpanzombies. June introduces herself and tells the animals that she and her mom are responsible for creating them. Greta seems to be suspicious of June being there, but she proves what she knows about them due to naming a very specific way that Steve drinks his tea. June asks them what happened to Peanut, and they tell her that he went off on his own to reactivate Clockwork Springs to bring the park back to life, but he was captured by the Chimpanzombies.


June runs back to the animals to tell them that she found Peanut and his marker, but also confesses that she is responsible for the Darkness. Feeling upset over this revelation, they abandon June and leave her alone and helpless. After noticing the piece of the blueprint and realizing that she has been able to create the ideas for the park herself, June gathers the courage inside her to reactivate her imagination and reboots the Skyflinger to catch up with the animals. They come up with a plan to defeat the Chimpanzombies by placing Boomer on top of a roller coaster. His car gets pushed over by a bird, and the others grab on to him with licorice, thereby reaching Clockwork Swings.
June leads the animals to Clockwork Springs to help fix it, but she doesn’t seem to know what she is supposed to do. The Chimpanzombies then attack once again in a giant robot that wreaks more havoc across the park. In the chaos, June gets separated from the animals and finds herself in Zero Gravity Land. There, she finds Peanut hiding in a room he created to escape the darkness. He feels lost without hearing the voice in his head and he chooses to stay alone so that he can’t get hurt. This leads June to realize that the darkness was created by herself as a result of her cynicism from her mom’s sickness. The Chimpanzombies then show up and attack once again and take Peanut as their prisoner, but June manages to escape with Peanut’s marker.


The gang finds the Chimpanzombies taking Peanut to get sucked up into the darkness. The animals fight back while June rushes to save Peanut by jumping into the void. She convinces him that she will provide the voice for his imagination and that he cannot let the Darkness take him over. June gives Peanut an idea for making a slide to get them out of there, and June then notices Clockwork Springs is her name written in cursive, just like on the piece of her map. With Peanut’s help, they get Clockwork Springs back up and running by using her name to move the hears, getting rid of the Darkness, bringing Wonderland back to life, and making the Chimpanzombies turn back into Wonder Chimps. People then start to visit the park again, allowing the animals to resume their jobs. They look up to the sky and see the cloud is still there, which June interprets as meaning that while the Darkness may never really go away, it is there as a reminder to continue to be imaginative. June says farewell to her animal friends before returning to the real world.
June runs back to the animals to tell them that she found Peanut and his marker, but also confesses that she is responsible for the darkness. The animals are all upset, but Greta is especially displeased. They abandon June and leave her alone and helpless. After taking a moment, June gathers the courage inside her to reactivate her imagination and get a robot up and running to join the animals to help them. As they come up with a plan to stop the Chimpanzombies, they put Boomer on top of a roller coaster. His car gets pushed over by a bird, leading him to roll down the roller coaster without safety. The other animals manage to get him to come to a stop.


June runs out of the woods and goes back home to her father, and proceeds to rebuild her displays of Wonderland. She and Banky then get together to create real Wonderland that is safer than before. As this occurs, Mrs. Bailey arrives home, free from sickness, and to June's overjoyment. The Baileys unveil the real Wonderland in their backyard, which is big enough to have all the neighborhood kids show up. June starts to tell the kids a story about Wonderland, and she takes a doll of Peanut and whispers a suggestion for a ferris wheel into his ear, allowing him to take his magic marker to make the idea come to life.
The gang finds the Chimpanzombies taking Peanut to get sucked up into the darkness. The animals fight back while June rushes to save Peanut. She jumps up into the void and reaches Peanut. She convinces him that she will provide the voice for his imagination and that he cannot let the darkness take him over. June gives Peanut an idea for making a slide to get them out of there. As they slide down, June then notices Clockwork Springs is her name written in cursive, just like on the piece of her map. With Peanut’s help, they get Clockwork Springs back up and running, which gets rid of the darkness, brings Wonderland back to life, and makes the Chimpanzombies turn back into regular Wonder Chimps. Children then start coming back with their families and are in awe of the animals. The animals welcome Peanut back as their leader, but he says that Greta did a good job leading them. They look up to the sky and see the cloud is still there, which June interprets as meaning that while the darkness may never really go away, it is there to remind us to look on the bright side. June says farewell to her animal friends before returning to the real world.

June runs out of the woods and goes back home to her father, now with more spirit and vigor than before. She and Banky then get together to create more things to make a real Wonderland. There is then another knock at the door, and Mr. Bailey tells June she should get the door. He opens it, and Mrs. Bailey comes inside, now feeling all better. June jumps into her mother’s arms.

The Baileys then unveil the real Wonderland in their backyard, which is big enough to have all the neighborhood kids show up. June starts to tell the kids a story about Wonderland, and she takes a doll of Peanut and whispers an idea into his ear. In Wonderland, Peanut hears the idea, and he takes his magic marker to make the idea come to life.


==Voice cast==
==Voice cast==

Revision as of 22:13, 17 March 2019

Wonder Park
File:WonderParkPoster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDylan Brown (uncredited)[1]
Screenplay by
  • Josh Appelbaum
  • André Nemec
Story by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJuan García Gonzalez
Edited byEdie Ichioka
Music bySteven Price
Production
companies
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • March 15, 2019 (2019-03-15) (United States)
Running time
85 minutes[6]
Countries
  • United States
  • Spain
LanguageEnglish
Budget$80–100 million[7][8]
Box office$20.3 million[9]

Wonder Park is a 2019 computer animated adventure film produced by Paramount Animation and Nickelodeon Movies, with Ilion Animation Studios handling animation. The film stars the voice talents of newcomer Brianna Denski, Matthew Broderick, Jennifer Garner, Ken Hudson Campbell, Kenan Thompson, Ken Jeong, Mila Kunis, John Oliver, Kath Soucie, Norbert Leo Butz, and Kevin Chamberlin. The film was directed by Dylan Brown, who Paramount Pictures did not officially credit due to "multiple complaints of 'inappropriate and unwanted behavior'".[1]

The film was released in 2D and 3D in the United States on March 15, 2019, by Paramount Pictures. It received mixed reviews from critics and has grossed $20 million worldwide. A television series based on the film will debut that same year on Nickelodeon, making it the third animated film from Nickelodeon Movies (after Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and Barnyard) to spawn an animated series on the network, as well as the first to not be produced by Steve Oedekerk.

Plot

June Bailey and her mother come up with the story of Wonderland, a magical amusement park run by animal creatures that entertain and dazzle children of all ages. The gang consists of Boomer, a big blue bear that greets patrons; Greta, a boar who manages and keeps things under control; Gus and Cooper, beaver brothers; Steve, a porcupine who is in love with Greta; and the park’s mascot/leader Peanut, a monkey who hears Mrs. Bailey’s voice and is given the inspiration to create with his magic marker. Hoping to make Wonderland a reality, June and her friend Banky create a contraption that functions like a theme park ride, but it goes out of control and causes massive damage to the town. June’s parents scold her for the damage, but her mom tells her she can still use her imagination safely.

Over time, the family continues to have fun, but Mrs. Bailey starts to get sick. She is sent away for recovery, leaving June scared and depressed. She takes down her displays and refuses to play with the other kids because she thinks they only care about her giving them Wonderland. One day, June and her father visited by her Uncle Tony and Aunt Albertine, who try to cheer June up by sparking her imagination with a model ferris wheel but June snaps and throws out the blueprint of Wonderland into the fire, causing it to burn up and leaving her heartbroken.

Sometime later, Mr. Bailey sends June to math camp with Banky and their other friends. After reading a note from her dad saying that he will miss her, June becomes paranoid that her father will not be able to handle himself without her, so she uses Banky to create a distraction on the bus and get them to pull over. June uses the opportunity to run back home through the woods. She then finds a burnt piece of the Wonderland blueprint flying toward it. June chases after it as it takes her deeper into the woods, and she finds herself in a different realm. She steps inside the rocket car of a roller coaster and is transported to the actual Wonderland.

When June gets down to the park, she finds the animals all fleeing in terror from a storm cloud known as the Darkness, which formed after Clockwork Swings, the parks mechanism for operating, malfunctioned. Emerging from it are Chimpanzombies, formerly the park’s Wonder Chimp plush toys that have become troublemakers. June introduces herself and tells the animals that she and her mom are responsible for creating them. Greta seems to be suspicious of June being there, but she proves what she knows about them by naming a very specific way that Steve drinks his tea. June asks them what happened to Peanut, and they tell her that he went off on his own to reactivate Clockwork Swings, but was captured by the Chimpanzombies.

June leads the animals to Clockwork Springs to help fix it, but is unaware of what she is supposed to do. The Chimpanzombies then attack once again in a giant robot known as the Skyflinger that wreaks more havoc across the park. In the chaos, June gets separated from the animals and finds herself in a floating chamber known as Zero-G Land. There, she finds Peanut hiding in a room he created to escape the darkness, because he felt lost without hearing the voice in his head and chose to stay alone. This leads June to realize that the Darkness was created by herself as a result of her cynicism from her mom’s sickness. The Chimpanzombies then show up and attack once again, taking Peanut as their prisoner, but June manages to escape with Peanut’s marker.

June runs back to the animals to tell them that she found Peanut and his marker, but also confesses that she is responsible for the Darkness. Feeling upset over this revelation, they abandon June and leave her alone and helpless. After noticing the piece of the blueprint and realizing that she has been able to create the ideas for the park herself, June gathers the courage inside her to reactivate her imagination and reboots the Skyflinger to catch up with the animals. They come up with a plan to defeat the Chimpanzombies by placing Boomer on top of a roller coaster. His car gets pushed over by a bird, and the others grab on to him with licorice, thereby reaching Clockwork Swings.

The gang finds the Chimpanzombies taking Peanut to get sucked up into the darkness. The animals fight back while June rushes to save Peanut by jumping into the void. She convinces him that she will provide the voice for his imagination and that he cannot let the Darkness take him over. June gives Peanut an idea for making a slide to get them out of there, and June then notices Clockwork Springs is her name written in cursive, just like on the piece of her map. With Peanut’s help, they get Clockwork Springs back up and running by using her name to move the hears, getting rid of the Darkness, bringing Wonderland back to life, and making the Chimpanzombies turn back into Wonder Chimps. People then start to visit the park again, allowing the animals to resume their jobs. They look up to the sky and see the cloud is still there, which June interprets as meaning that while the Darkness may never really go away, it is there as a reminder to continue to be imaginative. June says farewell to her animal friends before returning to the real world.

June runs out of the woods and goes back home to her father, and proceeds to rebuild her displays of Wonderland. She and Banky then get together to create real Wonderland that is safer than before. As this occurs, Mrs. Bailey arrives home, free from sickness, and to June's overjoyment. The Baileys unveil the real Wonderland in their backyard, which is big enough to have all the neighborhood kids show up. June starts to tell the kids a story about Wonderland, and she takes a doll of Peanut and whispers a suggestion for a ferris wheel into his ear, allowing him to take his magic marker to make the idea come to life.

Voice cast

Production

Production on Wonder Park commenced in September 2014.[12] In June 2015, it was revealed that Spain's Ilion Animation Studios would produce the fully animated 3D film.[13] In November 2015, Paramount Animation officially announced the project originally titled Amusement Park, with former Pixar animator Dylan Brown helming.[14] The voices in the film would be provided by Matthew Broderick, Jennifer Garner, Ken Hudson Campbell (originally Jeffrey Tambor),[15] Kenan Thompson, Ken Jeong, Mila Kunis, and John Oliver.[14] For the role of June Baily, more than 1,500 people auditioned before 11-year-old Brianna Denski of Plymouth, Connecticut, got the role.

In January 2018, it was reported that director Dylan Brown was fired from the production by Paramount Pictures following an investigation into complaints of "inappropriate and unwanted conduct" by multiple women.[16] Since production was nearly complete at the time, the studio did not hire a replacement, and no one received an official director's credit on the film.[17][1]

Music

The music for Wonder Park is scored by composer Steven Price. The album was released on March 8, 2019.[18]

Grace VanderWaal recorded the song "Hideway" for the film.[19]

Release

Wonder Park was released on March 15, 2019, by Paramount Pictures in 3D.[20] In January 2017, the film was moved up from its original release date of March 22, 2019 to July 13, 2018.[20] A few months later, it was pushed back to August 10, 2018,[21] and by August 2017, it was pushed back for a final time to March 15, 2019.[20] In April 2018, the title of the film was changed from Amusement Park to Wonder Park.[22]

Reception

Box office

As of March 17, 2019, Wonder Park has grossed $16 million in the United States and Canada, and $4.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $20.3 million.[9]

In the United States and Canada, Wonder Park was released alongside Captive State and Five Feet Apart, and was projected to gross $8–14 million from 3,838 theaters in its opening weekend.[8][7] It made $5.4 million on its first day, including $700,000 from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $16 million, which although beating projections, Deadline Hollywood said was "[not] enough to consider this...production a success".[17]

Critical response

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 30% based on 53 reviews, with an average rating of 4.77/10. The website's critical consensus reads "Colorful and energetic but lacking a compelling story, Wonder Park is little more than a competently made diversion for very young viewers."[23] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 46 out of 100, based on 17 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[24] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[17]

Other media

Television series

Prior to Wonder Park's release, Paramount Animation announced that a TV series based on the film will debut sometime in 2019 on Nickelodeon after the film's theatrical release, making it the third animated film from Nickelodeon Movies to have a TV series spun-off from the film after Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and Barnyard, also making it the first animated film from Paramount Animation to have a TV series spun-off from the film.[25] The series will be animated in CGI (similar to the feature) and produced by Casey Leonard, the director of the original Nickelodeon film Lucky.[26]

Mobile game

Prior to the film's release, a licensed mobile game titled Wonder Park Magic Rides by Pixowl, was made available.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c Miller, Dylan (March 15, 2019). "Paramount's new animated movie Wonder Park doesn't have a credited director, and here's why". The AV Club. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  2. ^ "Film releases". Variety Insight. Variety Media. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  3. ^ Pedersen, Erik (July 9, 2018). "'Wonder Park' Comes Alive With Teaser Trailer & First Photo". Deadline. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  4. ^ Uriondo, Miguel Ángel. "'Amusement Park', la mayor película de animación de la historia de España". sabemos digital.com. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  5. ^ Peña, Ángel. "'Ilion goes to Hollywood': la edad de oro de la animación española". expansion.com. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
  6. ^ "Wonder Park (2019)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Rubin, Rebecca (March 13, 2019). "Box Office: 'Captain Marvel' Heads for Heroic Second Weekend". Variety. Retrieved March 13, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Faughnder, Ryan (March 14, 2019). "'Captain Marvel' is likely to crush 'Wonder Park' at the box office". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 14, 2019.
  9. ^ a b "Wonder Park (2019)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  10. ^ "Wonder Park: hear Tom Baker, Caspar Lee and Joe Sugg in new trailer". Nov 15, 2018. Retrieved Feb 20, 2019.
  11. ^ a b "Nova stars Fitzy and Wippa join Mila Kunis, Jennifer Garner in Wonder Park". www.news.com.au. Retrieved Feb 20, 2019.
  12. ^ Lang, John Hopewell,Jamie; Hopewell, John; Lang, Jamie (Jun 13, 2018). "Paramount Animation's 'Wonder Park' Rocks Annecy". Retrieved Feb 20, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Hopewell, John (June 15, 2015). "Annecy: Paramount Animation, Spain's Ilion Ally on 3D Tentpole (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on February 1, 2017. Retrieved January 27, 2017. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ a b McNary, Dave (November 10, 2015). "Paramount Sets 'SpongeBob 3' for 2019, Delays 'Monster Trucks' to 2017". Variety. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  15. ^ Collinson, Gary (25 June 2018). "Paramount drops Jeffrey Tambor from animated movie Wonder Park". Flickering Myth. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  16. ^ "Paramount Fires 'Amusement Park' Director Over "Inappropriate" Conduct Claim (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  17. ^ a b c D'Alessandro, Anthony (March 17, 2019). "'Captain Marvel' Rises To Second Best 2nd Weekend In March With $69M+ – Sunday AM Update". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved March 17, 2019.
  18. ^ http://filmmusicreporter.com/2019/03/08/wonder-park-soundtrack-details
  19. ^ Moreau, Jordan. "Ken Jeong Shares the Advice He Gave to His Young Wonder Park Co-Stars", Variety, March 11, 2019
  20. ^ a b c D'Alessandro, Anthony (August 7, 2017). "Paramount Will Now Construct 'Amusement Park' On March 2019". Deadline. Retrieved August 7, 2017.
  21. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (March 28, 2017). "Paramount Teases Nickelodeon-Based Feature Toon Lineup Including 'The Loud House' – CinemaCon". Deadline. Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  22. ^ Busch, Anita (April 12, 2018). "The Boss Baby's Ramsey Naito, Others Join Paramount Animation Executive Ranks". Deadline. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
  23. ^ "Wonder Park (2019)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved March 16, 2019.
  24. ^ "Wonder Park reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  25. ^ Donnelly, Matt (March 28, 2017). "Paramount's 'Amusement Park' Movie to Become Nickelodeon TV Show After Theatrical Release". The Wrap. Archived from the original on April 1, 2017. Retrieved April 1, 2017. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  26. ^ Zahed, Ramin (March 6, 2019). "Casey Leonard Makes Magic for Nickelodeon Movie 'Lucky'". Animation Magazine. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
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