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Free Willy

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Free Willy
Directed bySimon Wincer
Written byKeith A. Walker
Corey Blechman
Produced bynathan vogstad
StarringKeiko
Jason James Richter
August Schellenberg
Michael Madsen
Michael Ironside
Michael Bacall
CinematographyRobbie Greenberg
Edited byO. Nicholas Brown
Music byBasil Poledouris
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
July 16, 1993
Running time
112 min
LanguageEnglish
Box office$153,698,625

Free Willy is a 1993 Warner Bros. film about a boy who befriends an Orca whale.

Plot

The film begins with a pod of Orcas swimming near the coastline of the Pacific Northwest. Unfortunately, this family of orca is tracked down by a large group of whalers, and a single orca (Keiko) gets caught in their net. Unable to save him, his family leaves him behind, and he is taken away to a local amusement park.

Sometime later Jesse (Jason James Richter), a street-wise boy who has been on the run since he was abandoned by his mother six years before, gets caught by The Portland Police Department vandalizing the marina along with a gang of other abandoned kids. However, his social worker helps him avoid legal consequences, provided he cleans up his mess at the marina. While there, Jesse befriends the whale with a collapsed dorsal fin, named Willy by the park owners, and teaches him behaviours, something the trainer, Rae (Lori Petty), had failed to do. Over time, Jesse and Willy become the best of friends, and Jesse earns a long-term job at the marina while learning to live with his new and supportive foster parents.

The owner of the amusement park sees the talent Jesse and Willy have together, and makes large plans to host "The Willy Show" in hopes of boosting sales and making money for himself. On the day of the first performance, everyone is set to begin, but Willy comes down with stage fright due to the children banging constantly on his underwater observation area. Willy scares them off by smashing against the tank, unintentionally damaging it. Jesse is devastated, but later returns to the tank and determines ultimately that Willy is homesick for his family.

While at the tank, Jesse notices one of the owner's assistants sneaking into the underwater observation area who damages the tank enough that the water will gradually leak out in an effort to kill Willy. It is surmised that the owner is interested in collecting the insurance money, since he has a $1,000,000 life insurance plan on Willy.

Thus, Jesse and his friends, including a Native American shaman named Randolph (August Schellenberg), begin plans to release the whale. The use equipment at the park to load Willy onto a trailer, and Jesse and Randolph 'borrow' his foster parents truck to tote Willy to the Ocean. Willy's owner is also notified that the whale is missing, and thus he and his henchmen begin a search to find Willy as well. They try to stick to back roads to keep from being spotted with a gigantic whale, and eventually get stuck on a back road.

Jesse must admit that he needs help, and calls his Foster Parents using a CB-Radio located in the truck they took. His foster parents show up, and are able to free the truck, and continue on to the marina they are headed to, to release Willy. The owner knows where they are likely headed, and when they show up, he and his henchmen are blocking the gate into the marina. Jesse's foster Dad charges them full speed in the truck, where they eventually move right before ploughing through the gate to the marina. He quickly turns the truck around and backs up Willy into the water, flooding his truck in the process.

Willy is finally released into the water, but the owner and his goons have a contingency plan. The whaling company, shows up in the water, releasing nets into the water to trap Willy in the marina. Jesse has one last chance. He leads Willy to an area where if Willy would just jump, he would be free. Willy makes the jump to the amazement of all his friends, and is then free to return to his family.

Cast

Commentary

  • The aquatic star of this film was an orca named Keiko. The huge national and international success of this movie inspired a letter writing campaign to get Keiko released from his captivity as an attraction in the amusement park Reino Aventura in Mexico City, this movement was called "Free Keiko". Keiko was released into a bigger pool in Oregon when it was discovered that the combination of the chlorination and the excessively warm temperature of the water was causing skin lesions. Though Keiko was eventually released, he continually sought out human contact, and eventually died of pneumonia near Norway on December 12, 2003.
  • The famous scene where Willy jumps over Jesse to freedom was parodied in the Simpsons episode The Boy Who Knew Too Much. Homer watches a version of the film where Willy doesn't make it over the rock and lands on Jesse. Dismayed, Homer says, "Oh, I don't like this new director's cut!"

Special Effects

Contrary to popular belief, Keiko only participated in a very small part of the film due to preparations for his release into the wild, and was often replaced in various parts of the movie with some of the latest animatronic technology, and limited CGI technology that was available to the production team at the time. Most close-up shots involving limited movement by Willy, as well as the sequences involving Willy swimming in the open water, make use of an animatronic stand-in. The most extensive uses of CGI in the film is the climax of the movie, where Willy jumps over Jesse and into the wild. This is quite obviously a composite-shot and outside of a whale's abilities to replicate in reality, no matter how well-trained.

Sequels and Spin-offs

Music

Trivia

The title of this movie caused considerable amusement in Britain because "willy" is a word often used in families as a synonym in place of penis, and also used in adult company because it is less medical than penis and mildly less offensive than cock. Thus the exhortation Free Willy sounded more like "no charge for cock", or perhaps a cock freed of any garment. It was rumoured at the time that the UK distributors wanted the name of the movie changed but the studio bosses refused the request. [1][2]

References