Mr. Popper's Penguins is a live-action family comedy film distributed by 20th Century Fox starring Jim Carrey, very loosely based on the children's book of the same name. The film was originally slated for a release on August 12, 2011, but was moved up to June 17, 2011.
Plot
Thomas "Tom" Popper Jr. (Jim Carrey) is a divorced realtor whose father traveled to many far places around the world during his childhood. When his father dies, a crate containing a gentoo penguin
(Captain) shows up at his doorstep. Eventually,due to a
miscommunication, more penguins arrive (Bitey, Stinky, Lovey, Nimrod,
and Loudy), bringing the total to six. Popper initially intends to
donate the penguins to a local zoo, but changes his mind when his
children, Janie Popper (Madeline Carroll) and Billy Popper (Maxwell Perry Cotton), fall in love with the birds.
At the same time, Popper is given the task of buying Tavern on the Green,
an old restaurant where he used to eat with his father as a child, with
the intent of tearing it down and building a new development in its
place. However, its elderly owner, Selma Van Gundy (Angela Lansbury),
will only sell it to someone who she deems a person of true value.
Having the penguins around helps Popper to become closer to his children
and he begins dating their mother, Amanda Popper (Carla Gugino),
again. The penguins eventually lay three eggs. Two of the eggs hatch
and one doesn’t. Popper becomes obsessed with saving the last egg,
losing his job in the process.
Upon realizing that the egg can’t be saved, Popper feels he is not
capable of raising the penguins and donates them to the zoo. He then
refocuses his attention on purchasing the Tavern on the Green. His
children and ex-wife, however, are disappointed in his decision, seeing
it as wrong. Popper then finds a lost letter from his father which had
been delivered with the first penguin, Captain.
In it, his father tells him to hold his children close and love them,
just as this penguin would love him. He becomes guilt-ridden over his
decision to give away the penguins and is determined to go to the zoo to
take them back. Along with his ex-wife and children, Popper rescues the
penguins which were going to be separated and traded to other zoos.
Upon seeing how Popper had reunited his family and rescued the penguins,
Van Gundy agrees to sell him the restaurant. But rather than tear it
down as once planned, Popper renovates the restaurant and reopens it.
Nat Jones (Clark Gregg), the penguin expert of the New York Zoo
on the other hand, is publicly humiliated and escorted by the police
out of the Tavern in the film's climactic scene. While he is legally in
the right, Van Gundy is able to protect Mr. Popper from arrest due to
her friendship with New York's Mayor. At the end of the film, Popper and
his family travel to Antarctica
with the penguins, allowing them to live with their own kind. Popper's
first penguin, Captain, is revealed to have laid another egg. Popper
tells his children that they'll have to come back and visit when the
baby, who he named Bald Eagle (after the code name he used for his father), is born.
Cast
- Jim Carrey as Thomas "Tom" Popper Jr., a realtor who becomes the caretaker of a family of penguins and the protagonist
- Carla Gugino as Amanda Popper, Tom's ex-wife and the mother of his children
- Madeline Carroll as Janie Popper, Tom's daughter
- Maxwell Perry Cotton as Billy Popper, Tom's son
- Angela Lansbury as Selma Van Gundy, the elderly owner of the Tavern on the Green
- Philip Baker Hall as Mr. Franklin
- Dominic Chianese as Mr. Reader
- Clark Gregg as Nat Jones, a penguin expert and the film's main antagonist
- Ophelia Lovibond as Pippi
- Jeffrey Tambor as Mr. Gremmins
- David Krumholtz as Kent
- James Tupper as Rick
- Patrick O'Sullivan as Thomas "Tom" Popper Sr. (uncredited)[citation needed], Tom's late father
The Penguins
- Captain – the head of the penguins (hence the name), she differs from the others by the heart-shape black feathers on her front
- Nimrod – gets his name for being the clumsiest of the group.
- Stinky – prone to acute flatulance, Stinky can be derived for his white tail feathers.
- Lovey – notable for hugging others, his distinguishing characteristic is the black pockmark on the left of his chest (similar to Happy Feet character Norma Jean).
- Loudy – the noisiest of the penguins, Loudy is distinguished by her loud braying and more jagged white patterns around the eyes.
- Bitey – a bit of a nipper, Bitey has a white stripe down the middle of her head.
Production
Originally, Ben Stiller was going to play Mr. Popper, and Noah Baumbach was originally going to direct, but they dropped out. Owen Wilson, Jack Black, and Jim Carrey were all considered to replace Stiller, with the role eventually going to Carrey.[4] Mark Waters was chosen to direct. Filming began in October 2010 and finished in January 2011.[citation needed]
On September 21, 2010, it was confirmed that Carla Gugino had joined the cast.[5]
Rhythm and Hues Studios did the penguin animations for certain shots.[citation needed].
The musical score was ambitious, with music playing nearly throughout. It was written by Rolfe Kent, and orchestrated by Tony Blondal. It was recorded at the scoring stage at 20th Century Fox in Century City, Ca. with a 78 piece orchestra.
Box office and critical reception
The film earned $6.4 million on opening day and $18.4 million over the three-day weekend, ranking in third place behind Green Lantern and Super 8.
The opening was at the high end of 20th Century Fox's expectations, who
were predicting a mid to high teens opening. In its second weekend, the
film faced competition from Cars 2
and dropped 45% to $10.1 million and ranked in fifth place. Over the
four-day Independence Day holiday weekend, it ranked in eighth place
after dropping 34% to $6.7 million. The film has earned $68,224,452
domestically and $119,137,302 in foreign countries grossing a total of
$187,361,754 worldwide. First Stop News gave the film a rating of 6.8/10, calling the film "charming" but "predictable".[6]
The film has received mixed reviews from critics, with a Rotten Tomatoes
rating of 48%, based on 136 reviews, as of February 2012. The consensus
reads "blandly inoffensive and thoroughly predictable." It was released
in Blu-ray and DVD on December 6, 2011 along with The Help, The Debt, Cowboys & Aliens and The Hangover Part II.
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