Hotel Transylvania
June 4, 2016 | Author: Dragan ItakoTo | Category: N/A
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Hotel Transylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Hotel Transylvania
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Genndy Tartakovsky[1]
Produced by
Michelle Murdocca
Screenplay by
Peter Baynham Robert Smigel[2]
Story by
Todd Durham Daniel Hageman Kevin Hageman
Starring
Adam Sandler Andy Samberg Selena Gomez Kevin James Fran Drescher Steve Buscemi Molly Shannon David Spade CeeLo Green
Music by
Mark Mothersbaugh[3]
Edited by
Catherine Apple
Production Sony Pictures Animation company Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
September 8, 2012 (TIFF)
September 28, 2012 (United States)
Running time Country Language Budget Box office
92 minutes[4] United States English $85 million[5] $358.4 million[5]
Hotel Transylvania is a 2012 American 3D computer animated fantasy comedy film produced by Sony Pictures Animation. It was directed by Genndy Tartakovsky (the creator of Samurai Jack, Dexter's Laboratory and Sym-Bionic Titan), and produced by Michelle Murdocca. The film features the voices of Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg, Selena Gomez, Kevin James, Fran Drescher, Steve Buscemi, Molly Shannon, David Spade, and CeeLo Green.[6] The film tells a story of Count Dracula, the owner of a hotel called Hotel Transylvania where the world's monsters can take a rest from human civilization. Dracula invites some of the most famous monsters to celebrate the 118th birthday of his daughter Mavis. When the "non-human hotel" is unexpectedly visited by an ordinary 21-year-old traveler named Jonathan, Dracula must protect Mavis from falling in love with him before the hotel's guests learn there is a human in the castle, which may jeopardize the hotel's future. The film was released on September 28, 2012, by Columbia Pictures. It was met with mixed critical reception, while the general public received it favorably. Despite mixed reviews, Hotel Transylvania earned a total of $358 million on a budget of $85 million. The film was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film. It had launched a franchise, with a sequel, Hotel Transylvania 2, which takes place seven years after the film,[7] in 2015,[8] and a third film scheduled for 2018.[9] A television series is planned for early 2017, and it will focus on the teenage years of Mavis and her friends at the Hotel Transylvania.[10]
Contents
1 Plot
2 Voice cast
3 Production
4 Music
5 Release o 5.1 Home media
6 Reception o 6.1 Critical response o 6.2 Box office o 6.3 Accolades
7 Video games
8 Goodnight Mr. Foot
9 Sequels
10 Television series
11 See also
12 References
13 External links
Plot In the aftermath of the death of Dracula's wife Martha (Jackie Sandler) at the hands of an angry mob, Count Dracula (Adam Sandler) designs and builds a massive five-star hotel in Transylvania in which to raise his daughter Mavis (Selena Gomez) and to serve as a getaway for all the world's monsters. Famous monsters such as Frank (Kevin James) and his wife Eunice (Fran Drescher), Wayne and Wanda Werewolf (Steve Buscemi and Molly Shannon) and their massive immediate family, Griffin the Invisible Man (David Spade), and Murray the Mummy (CeeLo Green) often come to stay at the hotel which is completely human-free and safe for monsters. On Mavis's 118th birthday, Dracula allows his daughter to leave the castle in order to explore the human world, but he sets up an elaborate plan using his zombie bellhops disguised as humans to make them seem intimidating and frighten her home. The plan works, but the zombies inadvertently lure a 21-year-old[11] human named Jonathan (Andy Samberg) to the hotel. Dracula
frantically disguises him as a Flesh Golem and passes him off as "Johnnystein", a distant cousin of Frank's right arm. Jonathan soon encounters Mavis and the two "Zing" (a form of magical attraction). Unable to get Johnny out of the hotel without notice, Drac quickly improvises that Jonathan is a party planner, brought in to bring a fresher approach to his own traditional and boring parties. Jonathan quickly becomes a hit to the other monsters, especially Mavis but this disgusts Dracula greatly. He then orders Johnny to leave, but is brought back by Mavis. After showing her the beauty of a sunrise, she is re-inspired to give humans another chance. Meanwhile, Quasimodo (Jon Lovitz) learns that Johnny is a human with his female pet rat Esmeralda's help and kidnaps him in order to cook him. Dracula intervenes and magically freezes Quasimodo to keep him from telling anyone that Jonathan is human. Dracula then tells Jonathan about his previous experience with humans and resulting hatred for them. Dracula tells why he built the hotel: his wife was killed by an angry mob when Mavis was young which led Dracula to become overprotective. Much to Dracula's surprise, Jonathan shows understanding and knowledge of the vampire lore which leads to getting some respect from Dracula himself. Jonathan then tries to leave for good, but Dracula convinces him to stay due to not wanting to ruin Mavis's birthday. The party is a great success the next night. But when Jonathan and Mavis share their first kiss, Dracula overreacts and in his outburst confesses to deceiving Mavis with the town. A still-frozen Quasimodo bursts in and the Fly (Chris Parnell) translates his frozen language that reveals Johnny's humanity causing overwhelmingly negative reactions from the guests. Mavis is undeterred by her attraction and wants to be with Johnny even though he is human, but Jonathan rejects her out of respect for her father and leaves the hotel. Mavis then angrily yells at Dracula and flies off. Dracula arrives to comfort Mavis on the roof looking at the present her mother gave her for her birthday and finds out that it is a book about how her mother and Dracula had a Zing. Dracula then realizes that Mavis and Jonathan had a Zing, but he got in the way. After apologizing to the monsters that are trying to check out and confessing that even he does not know if humans have changed, Dracula manages to convince Frank, Wayne, Griffin, and Murray to help him find Jonathan, and they learn from Wayne's daughter Winnie that he is bound on a flight out of Transylvania soon. They head to the airport and encounter a Monster Festival along the way. Instead of being frightened by the real monsters appearing, the humans help Dracula by providing him shelter from the sunlight so he can get to the airport quickly, only to see Jonathan's plane taking off. Deciding to take the risk, Dracula gives chase, burning in the sunlight. After getting Jonathan's attention, Dracula makes his way to the front of the plane and uses his mind-controlling power on the pilot (Brian Stack) to help him apologize for his actions. Jonathan accepts his apology; then Dracula manipulates the pilot to return to the Transylvanian airport for a "refuel". Dracula returns Jonathan to Mavis. Jonathan confesses that their Zing was mutual and the two kiss, making Dracula realize his little girl is all grown up and can make her own decisions. The monsters finish celebrating Mavis's party as Dracula, Mavis, Jonathan, Frank, Eunice, Murray, Wayne, Wanda and Griffin sing "The Zing" in front of the other monsters.
Voice cast
Adam Sandler as Count Dracula, the owner and hotel manager of Hotel Transylvania, and Mavis's over-protective father.[11]
Andy Samberg as Jonathan Locker ("Johnnystein"), a 21-year-old human who stumbles onto Hotel Transylvania.[11]
Selena Gomez as Mavis, Dracula's 118-year-old "teenage" vampire daughter who likes humans and falls in love with Johnny.[12] o Sadie Sandler voices Mavis as a child, as well as Wayne's daughter Winnie.
Kevin James as Frank/Frankenstein, Eunice's husband and one of Dracula's best friends who acts as an uncle to Mavis and mostly hangs out with Murray.
Fran Drescher as Eunice, Frankenstein's wife and Wanda's best friend.[11]
Steve Buscemi as Wayne, a male werewolf who is also one of Dracula's best friends and the husband of Wanda.[11]
Molly Shannon as Wanda, a female werewolf, Wayne's pregnant wife and Eunice's best friend.[11]
David Spade as Griffin the Invisible Man, one of Dracula's best friends.[6]
CeeLo Green as Murray the Mummy, a short fat mummy who is one of Dracula's best friends and mostly hangs out with Frankenstein.[6]
Jon Lovitz as Quasimodo Wilson, a Hunchback gourmet chef and the former Bell-ringer of Notre Dame who desires to make a dish with any human as the main ingredient.[11][13]
Luenell as Mavis's Shrunken Head, a wisecracking shrunken head that serves as a "Do Not Disturb" sign on the door of Mavis's room.[14]
Chris Parnell as Mr. Fly, Hotel Transylvania's fitness coordinator who can also understand "frozen" languages.
Brian George as Suit of Armor, the head of Hotel Transylvania's security guards.
Brian Stack as Pilot, the pilot of Jonathan's airplane.
Jackie Sandler as Martha, Dracula's wife and Mavis's mother who was killed by an angry mob when Mavis was young.
Rob Riggle as Skeleton Husband
Paul Brittain as Zombie Plumber o Paul Brittain also voices one of the Hydra Heads.
Robert Smigel as Fake Dracula, an attendee at a Transylvanian festival. o Robert Smigel also voices Marty, a pink Gill-man at Hotel Transylvania.
Jonny Solomon as Gremlin Man, one of the Gremlins at Hotel Transylvania. o Jonny Solomon also voices one of the Hydra Heads.
Jim Wise as Shrunken Head. o Jim Wise also voices one of the Hydra Heads.
Craig Kellman as Guy in Crowd, a guy who shouts in the crowd at the festival. o Craig Kellman also voices one of the Hydra Heads.
Brian McCann as Hairy Monster, a monster that almost resembles a Yeti. o Brian McCann also voices one of the Hydra Heads.
Tom Kenny as one of the Hydra Heads.
James C. J. Williams as a Construction Foreman, a deformed humanoid who helped to build Hotel Transylvania.
Production
Director Genndy Tartakovsky presented a few scenes from the film at the 2012 Annecy International Animated Film Festival.[15][16]
Hotel Transylvania was in development since 2006, when Anthony Stacchi and David Feiss were set to direct the film.[17] In 2008, Jill Culton took over the directing position,[18] and around 2010, Chris Jenkins,[19] with Todd Wilderman.[20] In February 2011,[21] Genndy Tartakovsky took over as the sixth scheduled director,[22] and made his feature directorial debut with the film.[11][20] In less than a year, Tartakovsky rewrote the script with the help of "the Sandler camp's multiple notes"[23] and reimagined the film to follow the energy, organicity and exaggeration of 2D animation, particularly as seen in the work of director Tex Avery.[24] "I took all the aesthetics I like from 2-D and applied them here," Tartakovsky said. "I don't want to do animation to mimic reality. I want to push reality."[22] "I wanted to have an imprint so you'd go, 'Well, only Genndy can make this.' It's hard, especially with CG, but I feel there's a lot of moments that feel that they're very me, so hopefully it'll feel different enough that it has a signature to it."[25] In November 2011, it was announced that Miley Cyrus would voice Mavis, Dracula's teenage daughter,[6] but in February 2012, Cyrus left the film to coordinate a musical comeback.[26]. It was later announced that Selena Gomez would replace Cyrus.[27]
Music
"Where Did the Time Go Girl (Party Version)" Written by Robert Smigel, Adam Sandler, and Dennis White. Produced by Static Revenger.
"Daddy's Girl" Written by Adam Sandler and Robert Smigel. Performed by Adam Sandler.[28]
"Call Me Mavy" Performed by Traci L.[29]
"Good Time" by Owl City and Carly Rae Jepsen (Philippine TV plug).[30]
"Problem (The Monster Remix)" Written by Henry Walter, Lukasz Gottwald, Becky Gomez (as Rebbeca Marie Gomez) & Will.i.am (as William Adams). Performed by Becky Gomez (as Becky G) featuring Will.i.am.
"Overprotected" Written by Max Martin. Performed by Britney Spears.
"Sexy and I Know It", performed by LMFAO
"The Zing" Written by Adam Sandler, Robert Smigel, and Dennis White. Produced by Static Revenger. Performed by Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg, Cee Lo Green, Kevin James, and Selena Gomez.[28]
"Helpless", written and performed by Peter Tvrzink[28]
"Sweet 118", written by Andy Samberg, Stuart Hart and Trevor Simpson. Performed by Andy Samberg.[28]
"Hush Little Baby", performed by Adam Sandler.[28]
"Monster Mash", performed by Bobby Pickett.[28]
Release Hotel Transylvania premiered on September 8, 2012, at the Toronto International Film Festival.[4] Distributed by Columbia Pictures, the film received a wide release on September 28, 2012.[2] On October 26, 2012, Regal Entertainment Group Cinemas began exclusively playing the traditionally animated short film Goodnight Mr. Foot before the film. Based on Hotel Transylvania, the short was directed and animated by Genndy Tartakovsky.[31]
Home media Hotel Transylvania was released on Blu-ray (2D and 3D) and DVD on January 29, 2013. It was accompanied by the short animated film, Goodnight Mr. Foot.[32]
Reception Critical response Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 44% of critics gave the film positive reviews, with an average rating of 5.3/10, based on 140 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads: "Hotel Transylvania 's buoyant, giddy tone may please children, but it might be a little too loud and thinly-scripted for older audiences."[33] Another review aggregate, Metacritic, calculated an average score of 47 out of 100, based on 32 reviews.[34] CinemaScore polls conducted during the opening weekend revealed that the average grade cinemagoers gave Hotel Transylvania was an A- on an A+ to F scale.[35] IGN editor Geoff Chapman rated the film 9 out of 10 and wrote "This is a fun film, full of quirky gags and lovable characters. There are a few songs that smack a bit like soundtrack marketing for the kids, and the story is of course fairly predictable, but this movie is about enjoying a fun journey with great characters. It's a romp that kids and families will all enjoy. Hotel Transylvania is definitely somewhere you'll want to check in."[36]
Box office Hotel Transylvania earned $148,313,048 in North America, and $210,062,555 in other countries, for a worldwide total of $358,375,603.[5] The officially reported budget for the film was $85 million,[5] although Deadline.com claimed that the film actually cost $104 million.[37] For the
film's marketing, Sony spent $52.1 million in the United States, and $31 million in other countries.[38] Hotel Transylvania topped the box office with $11 million on its first Friday, and $42.5 million domestically and $50.6 million worldwide for its opening weekend, which at the time of its release broke the record for the largest-grossing September opening,[37] a record which was overtaken by its sequel Hotel Transylvania 2 in 2015, with a weekend gross of $48.5 million.[39] The film also earned the highest-grossing domestic debut for Sony Pictures Animation (also later overtaken by Hotel Transylvania 2).[40][39] According to Sony's president of worldwide distribution, Rory Bruer, Sony was very satisfied with the film's performance, which was "beyond anyone's imagination, and the holds are ridiculous. It exceeds expectations in every new market it opens in."[41] Hotel Transylvania was theatrically released in China on October 28, 2013,[42] more than a year after the worldwide premiere, and contributed $11,180,000 to the overall gross.[43]
Accolades Award
Annie Awards[44] [45]
Golden Globe Awards[46]
Visual Effects Society[47][48]
Kid's Choice Awards[49]
Category Best Animated Feature Character Design in an Animated Feature Production Directing in an Animated Feature Production Music in an Animated Feature Production Production Design in an Animated Feature Production Voice Acting in an Animated Feature Production Editorial in an Animated Feature Production Best Animated Feature Film
Recipient Carlos Grangel Carter Goodrich Genndy Tartakovsky Mark Mothersbaugh Marcello Vignali Adam Sandler
Nominated
Catherine Apple Genndy Tartakovsky
Lydia Bottegoni, James Outstanding Animation in an Crossley, Mike Ford, Daniel Animated Feature Motion Picture Kramer Outstanding Animated Character Bill Haller, Tim Pixton, Jorge in an Animated Feature Motion Vigara (for Dracula) Picture Favorite Voice from an Animated Adam Sandler (as Dracula) Movie
Video games
Result
Won
A social game based on the film, titled Hotel Transylvania Social Game and made by Sony Pictures Interactive, was released on August 15, 2012. The game allows players to create their own Hotel Transylvania, where they must take care of the hotel's guests.[50] Another video game, titled Hotel Transylvania, developed by WayForward and published by GameMill Entertainment, was released on September 18, 2012, for Nintendo DS and Nintendo 3DS at retail.[51][52] The game was also released in the Nintendo eShop in North America on November 15, 2012.[53] A mobile game, titled Hotel Transylvania Dash, developed by Sony Pictures Consumer Products Inc. and PlayFirst, was released to iTunes App Store on September 20, 2012. The game is a variation of Hotel Dash mobile game and features the film's art and characters.[54] A mobile digital storybook app, titled Hotel Transylvania BooClips Deluxe App, developed by Castle Builders and Sony Pictures Animation, was released to iTunes App Store, Nook Store, Google Play for the Android, iBookstore, Microsoft's Metro, and for the PC and Mac via www.BooClips.com, both in English and in Spanish, on September 20, 2012.[55]
Goodnight Mr. Foot Goodnight Mr. Foot is a traditionally animated short film based on Hotel Transylvania, featuring Bigfoot from the film. Premiering in time for Halloween, on October 26, 2012, the short was shown exclusively in Regal Entertainment Group Cinemas, before the theatrical shows of Hotel Transylvania. As Sony Pictures Animation's first traditionally animated film, it was written and directed by Genndy Tartakovsky himself, who also animated the short with the help of Rough Draft Studios. Animated in the style of Bob Clampett, Tex Avery and Chuck Jones,[31] Tartakovsky created the short in four weeks during the final production stages of the main film. [56] Bigfoot (who has a non-speaking role in Hotel Transylvania) was voiced by Corey Burton while the Witch Maid was voiced by Rose Abdoo. Both voice actors provided additional voices in Hotel Transylvania.[57] Taking place before the events of Hotel Transylvania, the short stars Bigfoot, whose rest in Hotel Transylvania is being constantly disturbed by an overly enthusiastic witch maid.[31]
Sequels Main article: Hotel Transylvania 2 A sequel, titled Hotel Transylvania 2, was released on September 25, 2015.[8] Its story takes place seven years after the first film, with the hotel now open to human guests, and its owner, Count Dracula, having only one worry on his mind—that his 5-year-old grandson is not a pure-blood vampire.[7] The original crew and cast returned for the film, with new additions consisting of Mel Brooks as Dracula's father, Vlad;[58] Nick Offerman and Megan Mullally as Jonathan's parents, Mike and Linda;[59] and Asher Blinkoff as Mavis and Johnny's half-human/half-vampire son, Dennis.[60]
In November 2015, Sony Pictures Animation announced that Hotel Transylvania 3 will be released on September 21, 2018.[61] Michelle Murdocca, the film's producer, said before the second film's release that she and director Genndy Tartakovsky will not return, since they were working on Tartakovsky's Can You Imagine?[62]
Television series A television series based on the film is planned for early 2017.[10] Developed and produced by Nelvana, in partnership with Sony Pictures Animation, the series will focus on the teenage years of Mavis and her friends at the Hotel Transylvania.[10] Sony Pictures Television will handle distribution in the United States, while Nelvana will distribute the series outside the United States.[10]
See also
List of films featuring Frankenstein's monster
Vampire film
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