fiction.wikisort.org - Movie

Search / Calendar

Balto is a 1995 animated adventure film directed by Simon Wells, produced by Amblin Entertainment and distributed by Universal Pictures.[4] The film is loosely based on a true story about the dog of the same name who helped save children infected with diphtheria in the 1925 serum run to Nome. The film stars Kevin Bacon, Bridget Fonda, Jim Cummings, Phil Collins (in a dual role) and Bob Hoskins. Though primarily an animated film, there are live-action opening and closing sequences for the film that were shot in New York City's Central Park and featured Miriam Margolyes.

Balto
Theatrical release poster by John Alvin
Directed bySimon Wells
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Cliff Ruby
  • Elana Lesser
Produced bySteve Hickner
Starring
CinematographyJan Richter-Friis
Edited by
  • Renee Edwards
  • Nick Fletcher
  • Sim Evan-Jones
Music byJames Horner
Production
companies
  • Amblin Entertainment
  • Amblimation
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
  • December 22, 1995 (1995-12-22) (United States)
  • March 29, 1996 (1996-03-29) (United Kingdom)
Running time
78 minutes
CountriesUnited States[1]
United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$31 million[2]
Box office$11 million[3]
$23 million
(inflation)

The film was the third and final animated feature produced by Steven Spielberg's UK-based Amblimation studio before it became DreamWorks Animation, which would later be acquired by Universal's parent company NBCUniversal on August 22, 2016.[5] Although the film was a major financial failure (it was overshadowed by the success of Disney and Pixar's first computer-animated film Toy Story), and received mixed reviews from critics, its subsequent sales on home video led to two direct-to-video sequels: Balto II: Wolf Quest (2002) and Balto III: Wings of Change (2005), though none of the original voice cast reprised their roles.


Plot


In New York City, an elderly woman, her granddaughter, and the latter's Siberian Husky, Blaze, are walking through Central Park, looking for a memorial. As they seat themselves for a rest, the woman tells her granddaughter a story about Nome, Alaska 70 years earlier in the winter of 1925, where sled dog champion Steele, a fierce and arrogant Malamute, cheats to ensure victory for his team and musher who returns first to the rural town of Nome. They almost run over Rosy's new musher hat, but Balto, a young wolfdog who is distrusted by dogs and humans alike, rescues her hat and meets her Siberian husky Jenna, whom he quickly develops a crush on, before being chased away by Rosy's father due to his part-wolf heritage. Following a confrontation where Steele, Star, Nikki, and Kaltag mock his heritage, Balto and his adoptive father Boris Goosinov, a comical snow goose originally from Russia, return to their home on an abandoned ship on the outskirts of Nome, where they live with two aquaphobic polar bears, Muk and Luk.

One evening, all of the children in Nome (including Rosy) are hospitalized with diphtheria, but Curtis Welch is out of antitoxin. Severe winter weather conditions prevent medicine from being brought from Juneau and Anchorage by air or sea, and the closest rail line ends in Nenana. A dog race is held to determine the best-fit dogs for a sled dog team to get the medicine by heading to rendezvous with the train in Nenana and transport the antitoxin back to Nome. Balto, who dreams of becoming a sled dog, enters and wins, but is disqualified after Steele exposes his wolf half. The team departs that night with Steele in the lead and picks up the medicine successfully, but on the way back, they end up in a blizzard, missing their second checkpoint. When this news reaches Nome, and with the children's health getting worse, Balto sets out in search of Steele and his team with Boris, Muk and Luk supporting him.

Getting desperate, Steele accidentally drags himself and his team off a cliff, stranding them at the base of an icy hill, with the musher knocked unconscious during the fall. Meanwhile, Balto, Boris, and the polar bears are stalked and attacked by a massive grizzly bear. Balto fights the bear to save the others, but is easily overpowered and almost crushed to death before Jenna, who followed their marked trail, intervenes and saves him. The bear overpowers Jenna as well before it resumes attacking Balto and chases him out onto a frozen lake, but due to its immense size and weight, the ice starts to break, causing the animal to fall through and drown. Muk and Luk overcome their aquaphobia and save Balto before he could drown as well. Warming a frozen Balto, Jenna gives him the latest news from Nome. However, she is injured after the bear fight and unable to move on. Balto instructs Boris and the polar bears to bring Jenna back to Nome, deciding to continue the search on his own.

Having fallen in love with Balto, Jenna gives him her bandanna to wear before nuzzling him good luck. He eventually finds the team, but Steele refuses his help and ferociously attacks Balto, only to fall off a cliff. Balto takes charge of the team, but Steele, refusing to lose, sabotages Balto's marks and the team loses their way again. While attempting to save the medicine from falling down a cliff, Balto himself falls. Back in Nome, Jenna is explaining Balto's mission to the other dogs when Steele, feigning sadness and remorse, returns, lying that the entire team, including Balto and his musher, is dead, using Jenna's bandanna as fake proof and lies to Jenna that Balto made him promise to look after her. Knowing that Balto would never say such a thing, Jenna sees through Steele's trickery and insists that Balto will return with the medicine. Using a trick Balto showed her earlier, she places broken colored glass bottles on the outskirts of town and shines a lantern on them to simulate the Northern Lights, hoping that it will help guide Balto home.

When Balto regains consciousness, he is ready to give up, believing himself to have failed Rosy. When a polar wolf appears and Balto notices the medicine crate still intact nearby, he realizes, thanks to remembering Boris' advice he told him earlier, that his part-wolf heritage is a strength, not a weakness. Balto rallies his confidence, embraces his heritage and drags the medicine back up the cliff to the waiting team. Using his highly developed senses, Balto filters out the fake marks that Steele created. After escaping an avalanche and falling stalactites in an ice cave, where they lose one vial, Balto and the sled team finally make it back to Nome, alerting Jenna, who then alerts the others. Steele is exposed as a fraud and the other dogs abandon him for his betrayal in anger. Reunited with his friends, Balto earns respect from both the dogs and the humans. He visits a cured Rosy who thanks him for saving her, before he is happily reunited with Jenna who chooses him as her mate.

Back in the present, the woman, her granddaughter, and Blaze finally find Balto's memorial, and she explains that Alaska runs the Iditarod dog race over the same path which Balto and his team took. The woman, revealed to be an elderly Rosy, thanks Balto before walking off to join her granddaughter and Blaze, while the statue of Balto stands proudly in the sunlight.


Cast and characters


Kevin Bacon voices Balto
Kevin Bacon voices Balto

Production


Production and development on Balto began in May 1989 at Universal City Studios and Amblin Entertainment in Universal City, California, along with An American Tail: Fievel Goes West (1991) and We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story (1993). Voice-recording sessions took place at The Bridge Facilities in London (now folded into Miloco Studios and renamed The Bridge Writing Studio) between late 1992 and early 1993. Brendan Fraser was originally cast as Steele, because director Simon Wells had envisioned Steele as a school quarterback jock carried away by his sense of importance, and felt that Fraser fit that personality well. According to Wells, "I liked Brendan a great deal, and we did one recording session with him that was terrific." However, executive producer Steven Spielberg wanted a clearer sense of Steele's "inherent evil", so Fraser was replaced by Jim Cummings. Wells stated that Cummings "did a fantastic job, and totally made the character live, so I don't regret the choice."[7]

After the actors recorded their voices, animating and filming commenced at Amblimation in London on March 1, 1993.[8] To have a source for the dogs' character animation to be based on, the filmmakers brought in about seven Siberian Huskies and videotaped them walking around in the studio.[9] Although most of the film's animation was hand-drawn, the animators used Toonz to improve the graphics, and also created the snowstorms using an early CGI particle animation system. Additional animation was done by the Danish studio A. Film Production. James Horner composed the film's music, including the film's only song, "Reach for the Light", sung by Steve Winwood, which plays over the film's closing credits.

The film's live-action prologue and epilogue segments were filmed in Central Park in Fall 1994. The role as elderly Rosy's granddaughter's husky, Blaze, was played by two light red blue-eyed Siberian Huskies.


Historical differences


The film has many historical inaccuracies:


Release


The film was theatrically released in the United States on December 22, 1995 and then international theatres on January 13, 1996 when it first premiered in Brazil.[20] Its release was vastly overshadowed by that of Pixar Animation Studios' first film, Toy Story, which had premiered a month earlier.[21]


Box office


The film ranked 15th on its opening weekend and earned $1.5 million from a total of 1,427 theaters.[22] The film also ranked 7th among G-rated movies in 1995. Its total domestic gross was $11,348,324.[21] Despite being a disappointment at the box-office, it was much more successful in terms of video sales. These strong video sales led to the release of two direct-to-video sequels: Balto II: Wolf Quest and Balto III: Wings of Change being created, though neither sequel received as strong a reception as the original film.


Critical reception


On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 56% based on 25 reviews, with an average rating of 5.90/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Balto is a well-meaning adventure with spirited animation, but mushy sentimentality and bland characterization keeps it at paw's length from more sophisticated family fare."[23] Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film a positive review, describing the film as "a kids' movie, simply told, with lots of excitement and characters you can care about" and praised every thrilling scene.[24]


Home media


Balto was released on VHS and Laserdisc on April 2, 1996, by MCA/Universal Home Video in North America and CIC Video internationally. The VHS version was made available once more on August 11, 1998, under the Universal Family Features label.

The film was released on DVD on February 19, 2002, which includes a game, "Where is the Dog Sled Team?". This version was reprinted along with other Universal films such as An American Tail, An American Tail: Fievel Goes West and The Land Before Time. It was initially released in widescreen on Blu-ray for the first time exclusively at Walmart retailers on April 4, 2017 before its wide release on July 4, 2017.


Music


Balto
Soundtrack album by
Various artists
ReleasedDecember 4, 1995
Recorded1994 - 1995
StudioAbbey Road Studios
GenrePop, modern classical[25]
Length54:30
LabelMCA
ProducerJames Horner
Singles from Balto
  1. "Reach for the Light"
    Released: December 4, 1995
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
LetsSingIt[26]

Balto: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack of the film, composed by James Horner.[25] The soundtrack was released on December 4, 1995 by MCA. It includes the film's only song, "Reach for the Light" performed by Steve Winwood.[citation needed]


Awards


The film received five Annie Award nominations, including Best Animated Feature, but lost to Toy Story.[citation needed]


Sequels


Two fictional direct-to-video sequels of the film followed, made by Universal Cartoon Studios with their animation done overseas by the Taiwanese studio Wang Film Productions, as Amblimation had gone out of business. Due to the sequels being completely fictional and having a completely different crew, Kevin Bacon, Bob Hoskins, Bridget Fonda, and Phil Collins did not reprise their roles in either of them. Instead, Bacon was replaced by Maurice LaMarche as the voice of Balto, Hoskins was replaced by Charles Fleischer as the voice of Boris, Fonda was replaced by Jodi Benson as the voice of Jenna, and Collins was replaced by Kevin Schon as the voices of Muk and Luk. In addition, numerous supporting characters from the original (such as Steele, Nikki, Kaltag and Star) either did not return in the sequels or became background characters in them. The first sequel, Balto II: Wolf Quest, was released in 2002 and follows the adventures of one of Balto and Jenna's pups, Aleu, who sets off to discover her wolf heritage.[27] The second, Balto III: Wings of Change, was released in 2005. The storyline follows the same litter of pups from Balto II, but focuses on another pup, Kodi, who is a member of a U.S. Mail dog sled delivery team, and is in danger of getting put out of his job by Duke, a pilot of a mail delivery bush plane,[28] as characters from the first sequel could not be brought back owing to Mary Kay Bergman’s suicide in 1999, causing Balto II to be delayed for two years.[citation needed] Unlike the original film, neither of the sequels took any historical references from the true story of Balto and contain no live action sequences.


References


  1. "Balto (1995)".
  2. "Balto (1995)". The Wrap. Archived from the original on March 23, 2017. Retrieved March 23, 2017.
  3. Balto at Box Office Mojo.
  4. Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 166. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  5. James, Meg (28 April 2016). "Comcast's NBCUniversal buys DreamWorks Animation in $3.8-billion deal". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2019-01-16.
  6. Phil Collins (2016). Not Dead Yet. London, England: Century Books. p. 269. ISBN 978-1-780-89513-0.
  7. "Exclusive interview with Balto director Simon Wells". animationsource.org. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  8. The Hollywood Reporter. Wilkerson Daily Corporation. 1995. Retrieved May 15, 2020.
  9. "BBC Two's 'The Making of Balto'". Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  10. Aversano, Earl. "Balto - Balto's True Story". Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  11. "The True Story of Balto - Facts". Animation Source. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  12. "Balto - Balto'S True Story". Baltostruestory.net. Retrieved 2017-03-23.
  13. Clifford, Stephanie (12 February 2012). "Spirit of a Racer in a Dog's Blood". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  14. Aversano, Earl. "Togo - Balto's True Story". Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  15. Ingram, Simon (19 May 2020). "When a deadly disease gripped an Alaskan town, a dog saved the day – but history hailed another". National Geographic. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  16. Thomas, Bob (2015). Leonhard Seppala: the Siberian dog and the golden age of sleddog racing 1908-1941. Pictorial Histories Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-57510-170-5. OCLC 931927411.
  17. Seppala, Leonhard (2010). Seppala : Alaskan dog driver. Ricker, Elizabeth M. [Whitefish, Mont.]: [Kessinger Publishing]. p. 295. ISBN 978-1-4374-9088-6. OCLC 876188456.
  18. Reamer, David (1 March 2020). "Togo was the true hero dog of the serum run; it's about time he got his due". Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  19. "The Sled Dog Relay That Inspired The Iditarod". History.com. 2014-03-10. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
  20. "Balto (1995)". Internet Movie Database. 22 December 1995. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  21. "1995 Yearly Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  22. "Balto - Box Office Data, DVD Sales, Movie News, Cast Information - The Numbers". Nash Information Services, LLC. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  23. "Balto - Rotten Tomatoes". Flixster. Retrieved 2018-06-30.
  24. Ebert, Roger. "Balto Movie Review & Film Summary (1995)". Ebert Digital LLC. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  25. "James Horner - Balto (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (CD, Album)". Discogs. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  26. "Balto Soundtrack Album". LetsSingIt. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  27. "Balto: Wolf Quest (Video 2002)". Internet Movie Database. 19 February 2002. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  28. "Balto III: Wings of Change (Video 2004)". Internet Movie Database. 30 September 2004. Retrieved 2014-04-06.



На других языках


- [en] Balto (film)

[es] Balto (película)

Balto es una película estadounidense de animación y aventura infantil de 1995, dirigida por Simon Wells. Está basada en la historia de Balto, un perro de trineo, de raza husky siberiano, que durante una epidemia de difteria en Alaska en el año 1925, lideró el último tramo[1][2]de la caravana de mushing que recorrió 1.085 kilómetros en cinco días y medio, llevando vacunas desde la ciudad de Nenana hasta la ciudad de Nome. La proeza salvó la vida de muchos niños.

[ru] Балто (мультфильм)

«Ба́лто» (англ. Balto) — американский полнометражный анимационный фильм режиссёра Саймона Уэллса, созданный студией Amblimation и выпущенный кинокомпанией Universal Studios в 1995 году. Исполнительными продюсерами мультфильма выступили Стивен Спилберг, Кэтлин Кеннеди и Бонн Рэдфорд. Фильм основан на реальных событиях и повествует об истории Балто, храброй ездовой собаки, которая в 1925 году доставила сыворотку против дифтерии, чтобы спасти детей городка Нома на Аляске[4].



Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.

Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.

2019-2024
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии