The Swan Princess: A Royal Family Tale
The Swan Princess: A Royal Family Tale | |
---|---|
Directed by | Richard Rich |
Written by | Yuri Lowenthal |
Story by | Richard Rich Brian Nissen |
Produced by | Jared F. Brown Richard Rich Seldon Young |
Starring | Elle Deets Yuri Lowenthal Joseph Medrano |
Edited by | Joe Campana |
Music by | J. Bateman Jenny Frogley |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 79 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Swan Princess: A Royal Family Tale is a 2014 American computer-animated family/fantasy film produced by Crest Animation Productions and Nest Family Entertainment, directed by Richard Rich and starring the voices of Elle Deets as Odette and Yuri Lowenthal as Derek. It is the fifth and latest film in The Swan Princess series, and follows Odette and Derek's adoption of a young girl named Alise along with their defeating the Forbidden Arts. It was released direct-to-DVD and Blu-ray on February 25, 2014 for the franchise's 20th anniversary.[1] A sixth film titled The Swan Princess: Princess Tomorrow, Pirate Today was released on September 6, 2016.[2]
Plot
Centuries ago, a sentient evil force known as the Forbidden Arts entered Earth from the underworld, intent on destroying all of its rivals for magical power. It learned of a legend that the Swan Princess will bring in an age of goodness, and that pure evil will not survive in her presence, but she can be defeated by a green-colored magical stone. The Forbidden Arts corrupted the legend, making it appear that the Swan Princess will bring despair and destruction instead. A group of unusually large & talking flying squirrels, called the scullions, found the legend and over the years formed a community dedicated to finding and destroying the Swan Princess. When Odette, the Swan Princess, was finally born to King William, the Forbidden Arts tried to use the sorcerer Rothbart to defeat her but failed.
In the present, Odette and Derek are pressured by Uberta to have a child, and are unaware that they're being tracked by the scullions, (two in particular, Cutter & Jojo, a pair of "Master Traper" brothers). The Forbidden Arts has joined forces with Mangler, the scullion leader, but is angered at their most recent failure. The Forbidden Arts leaves its cave to burn Odette alive, but is blocked by Odette's power and has to return to the crystal in its cave to recover. A nearby house catches fire instead, killing the father of a young girl, Alise. Odette and Derek bring Alise to the castle, and Odette feels a kinship with her because they both lost their fathers tragically. Although Alise refuses to speak, she slowly becomes closer to Odette and Derek, and they decide to adopt her as she has no living relatives.
The scullions attack Uberta's castle, kidnapping Alise to lure Odette and Derek away, and locking everyone else in the cellar. Odette and Derek avoid the scullions' traps but Derek is poisoned by Mangler's blow dart. A friendly scullion, whom Odette names Scully, cures Derek and explains about the fake Swan Princess legend and the Forbidden Arts, and reveals that he has been keeping the magical stone safe. The group goes to rescue Alise.
While Derek acts as a distraction, Scully sneaks into the scullion village and finds Alise in the Forbidden Arts' cave, but he is unable to rescue her. When the scullions are about to execute Derek, Odette intervenes and explains that all she wants is for her loved ones to be safe. Scully tells the scullions that the legend is a lie and the true evil is the Forbidden Arts. Mangler shoots a poison dart at Odette, which is blocked by Jojo, the younger of the two brothers from before. Odette cures him with an antidote prepared by Scully, and the tablet with the corrupted prophecy reveals the true prophecy about the Swan Princess.
At the castle, Uberta and Rogers are about to be punished by the scullions for protecting the Swan Princess, and declare their feelings for each other. Jojo and the other scullions arrive with the real prophecy tablet, proving Odette to be good, and they release Uberta and the captives. The scullion army works together with Derek, Puffin, Jean-Bob and Speed to protect the magical stone, but the Forbidden Arts manages to obtain it, gaining its power.
Odette and Scully enter the Forbidden Arts' cave to rescue Alise, and are attacked by Mangler. Scully defeats Mangler, but Odette is unable to break Alise's prison. Alise finally speaks up, telling Odette to destroy the Forbidden Arts' crystal. When Odette is unable to, Scully jumps onto the crystal, sacrificing himself to destroy the Forbidden Arts. In the ensuing explosion Alise is freed from her prison unharmed, and she calls out to Odette: "Mommy". The film ends with everyone celebrating the presentation of Princess Alise to the kingdom.
Cast
- Elle Deets as Odette
- Kathryn S. Hill as Odette (singing)
- Yuri Lowenthal as Derek (credited), Scullion #4 (uncredited)
- David Osmond as Derek (singing)
- Jennifer Miller as Queen Uberta
- Jan Broberg as Queen Uberta (singing)
- Joseph Medrano as Lord Rogers
- David Lodge as The Forbidden Arts
- Clayton James Mackay as Jean-Bob
- Gardner Jass as Puffin
- Doug Stone as Speed
- Joel Bishop as Speed (singing)
- Joseph Medrano as Scully
- Joey Lotsko as Bromley, Mangler
- Jeff Michaels as Cutter
- Kirk Thornton as Jojo
- Brian Nissen as Brodie and Ferdinand
- Catherine Lavine as Bridget, the Hag and Narrator
- Carly G. Fogelson as Alise
Songs
- "We Wanna Hear from You"
- "Get the Job Done!"
- "Always with You"
- "Right Where I Belong" (end credits) - Charice
Sequels
A sixth and seventh film were announced, and will be released in 2016 and 2017 respectively.[3]
External links
- http://acmetrailerco.com/home-entertainment/swan-princess-2/
- The Swan Princess: A Royal Family Tale at IMDb
References
- 2014 films
- American films
- English-language films
- 2014 computer-animated films
- 2014 direct-to-video films
- Films featuring anthropomorphic characters
- Films directed by Richard Rich
- Animated fantasy films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- Direct-to-video animated films
- American animated films
- American fantasy films
- Films set in the Middle Ages
- Animated comedy films
- Fantasy-comedy films
- The Swan Princess
- Sony Pictures direct-to-video films
- Stage 6 Films films
- 2010s American animated films