Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw is a 1988 American animated musical comedy-adventure film based on the Tonka toy line and the Hanna-Barbera television series of the same name, which aired around the same time.[3] It was directed by Pierre DeCelles, and stars the voices of Brennan Howard, B.J. Ward and Tony Longo. This was the only animated feature film produced by Carolco Pictures as well as the first animated film distributed by TriStar Pictures.
Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Pierre DeCelles |
Written by | |
Based on | Pound Puppies by Tonka |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Edited by | John Blizek |
Music by |
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Production companies |
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Distributed by | Tri-Star Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 78 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $6 million[1] |
Box office | $586,938[2] |
The Legend of Big Paw was the last theatrically released animated feature from the late 1980s to promote a major toy line, a common trend in the American cartoon industry during that time. The film received negative reviews from critics and film fans alike during its original release in 1988, and was dismissed as a box office disaster.
On the way to the museum with his niece and nephew, Whopper tells them the origin of Puppy Power, the ability of humankind to understand the Pound Puppies and Purries.
In the Dark Ages (specifically 958 AD), a boy named Arthur and his dog Digalot came across a stone which contained both the mythical sword Excalibur and the magical Bone of Scone. While Arthur pulled the sword from the stone, Digalot pulled the Bone of Scone from the same stone, and soon afterward Arthur discovered that the dog could talk. Sir McNasty, who had witnessed the withdrawals and Arthur's coronation as King of England, planned to conquer the world by retrieving the Bone. However, it was kept hidden by the giant guardian, Big Paw.
In 1958, the Bone of Scone is in a museum in an unnamed American city. Pound owners Tammy and Jeff hold a press conference and announce that the pound will be holding an adoption bazaar. A McNasty descendant arrives, wishing to adopt the puppies. One pup discovers McNasty's true intentions: with his Mean Machine, McNasty will transform them and the rest of the Pound into vicious guard dogs, steal the Bone of Scone, and use its power and his army of dogs to conquer the world.
Collette and Whopper escape from their cage inside McNasty's lab, and briefly reunite with the rest of the Puppies. However, Lumpy and Bones snatch them back. The Puppies give chase, but nearly all of them end up in a rat-infested cave, hanging on a rope, before the Purries pull them up to safety. The Puppies and Purries continue looking for their friends. When they get caught in a patch of mire, they are saved by the legendary Big Paw, who agrees to find the Bone with them.
Later, McNasty's henchmen transform the Puppies into guard dogs, save for Cooler. Big Paw brings him and the Purries back to town to stop the evil trio, as the trio's truck heads to the Pound. Big Paw and Cooler chase McNasty and his henchmen back to the museum and their Mean Machine, which not only turns them into good men, but the Puppies back to normal. Big Paw and Nose Marie finally get back the Bone of Scone.
Whopper and his Puplings find themselves in the museum. The Bone of Scone has returned for another visit, and Whopper introduces Big Paw as a surprise for the young ones, who did not believe before that he was real. As long as he is here to protect the Bone, Whopper says, Puppy Power will never be lost again.
The music for The Legend of Big Paw was directed by Steve Tyrell, with the original score composed by Richard Kosinski, Sam Winans, Bill Reichenbach Jr., Ashley Hall and Bob Mann. The film's six songs, which are influenced by popular songs and standards from the 1950s and after,[4]: 209 were composed by Ashley Hall and Steve Tyrell, written by Stephanie Tyrell, and recorded at the Tyrell-Mann and Tempo Recording Studios in Los Angeles.
Original songs performed in the film include:
No. | Title | Performer(s) | Length |
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1. | "At the Pound" | Ashley Hall | |
2. | "Now That You're Here" | Cathy Cavadini | |
3. | "The King of Everything" | George Rose | |
4. | "All in Your Mind" | Ashley Hall | |
5. | "I'm a Puppy Too" | Mark Vieha | |
6. | "Puppy Power's Back" | Cast |
Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw was produced by Carolco Pictures and Atlantic/Kushner-Locke along with The Maltese Companies, financed by Tonka, the original owners of the Pound Puppies franchise, and distributed by TriStar Pictures.[5] The film's director, Pierre DeCelles, was also an art director and directing storyboard artist during production.
According to DeCelles, the film took 5½ months to complete, starting in the fall of 1987.[6] The first 2½ months were spent on preparing its layouts and storyboards, and the remaining time on the animation, backgrounds and shooting. The overseas work was done by Wang Film Productions and Cuckoo’s Nest Studio, two Taiwanese companies known for their contributions to children's animated television series.
The film's animation and character design were different from what was featured in the Hanna-Barbera series, and did not contribute to the latter's continuity. A new set of characters were introduced for the film: Pound Puppies Collette, Beamer, and Reflex, and the Pound Purries Hairball and Charlamange, along with two teenagers, Tammy and Jeff, that replaced the 11-year-old Holly.
During its short theatrical run, The Legend of Big Paw played mainly in matinees[7] and only grossed US$586,938.[8] The film was Carolco's sole family feature, and distributor TriStar's only animated feature until 2001's The Trumpet of the Swan. It was among the last in a line of 1980s animated productions for the big screen which featured established toy properties as their main characters. Previous examples included films based on the Care Bears, My Little Pony and Transformers.[4]: xv–xx
Family Home Entertainment, a division of International Video Entertainment, the distributor of Carolco's films, released Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw on the VHS format on September 14, 1989.[citation needed] Its successor, Lionsgate, released a region 1 DVD on October 24, 2006.[9] Like the Hanna-Barbera TV series before it, the film also enjoyed airplay on the Disney Channel during the early to mid-1990s.[10]
Critical response to The Legend of Big Paw was negative during its theatrical run. The Hollywood trade magazine, Variety, called it "uninvolving and endlessly derivative".[4]: 209 The Sacramento Bee deemed it "miserably drawn" in comparison to what Disney was offering at the time,[11] and the San Francisco Chronicle gave it an "empty chair" rating.[12] A reviewer in the Detroit Free Press found it "dull and unoriginal", but praised the songs that were written for it.[13]
Martha Baker of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch also denounced it and began her review thus:
If you're in your 40th year and not your fourth, Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw requires the extra dosage of insulin reserved for such treks into celluloid and commercial [sweetness]. But even 4-year-olds have trouble swallowing this cartoon whole.[5]
Writing for The Animated Movie Guide by animation expert Jerry Beck, Stuart Fisher gave the film one star out of four, and saw the film's artistic quality as "a mixed bag". "[While] the backgrounds are somewhat imaginative and colorful, the character animation is flat and lifeless. Rapid cuts to new angles of the same shot seem to try to cover up limitations of the animation technique," he continued.[4]: 209 Moreover, Fisher and The Philadelphia Inquirer took note of its purpose as a toy commercial,[14] a trend that was prevalent in the animation industry during the late 1980s.
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