Balto II: Wolf Quest
Balto II: Wolf Quest | |
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DVD release cover | |
Directed by | Phil Weinstein |
Produced by | Phil Weinstein |
Screenplay by | Dev Ross[1] |
Starring |
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Music by | Adam Berry |
Edited by |
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Production company | |
Distributed by | Universal Studios Home Entertainment |
Release dates |
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Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Balto II: Wolf Quest is a 2002 American direct-to-DVD[1] sequel to Universal Pictures/Amblin Entertainment' 1995 Northern animated film Balto.
Plot
Balto and his mate Jenna have a new family of six puppies. Five of their puppies look like their husky mother, while one pup named Aleu takes her looks from her wolfdog father. When they all reach eight weeks old, all of the other pups are adopted to new homes, but no one wants Aleu due to her wild animal looks. Soon, she stays with her father. A year later, after she is almost killed by a hunter, Balto tells Aleu the truth about her wolf heritage. In anger and sadness, she runs away, hoping to find her place in the world. Balto then goes out to find her.
At the same time, Balto has been struggling with strange dreams of a raven and a pack of wolves, and he cannot understand their meaning. While traveling to find Aleu, he hopes he'll find answers. He meets with mysterious creatures, like a cunning red fox, an intimidating trio of wolverines that taunt him, the same guiding raven from his dreams, and a furious grizzly bear that suddenly disappears.
During the journey, his friends Boris, Muk and Luk hope to find Balto, but they are halted by some unknown force. They soon realize that this journey to find Aleu is meant only for the father and daughter themselves.
Aleu, after taking refuge in a cave, meets a field mouse called Muru, who lets Aleu realise that being part-wolf isn't so bad. He teaches her that everyone has a spirit guide as soon as they are born, and their heritage tells them what they are but not who they are. After learning valuable lessons from the field mouse, Aleu realizes that Muru is her spirit guide. She asks him what to do, and he tells her to have confidence and to continue her journey with the wisdom he had given her. Eventually, Balto and Aleu reunite and forgive each other.
The two of them travel onward, and encounter a starving pack of wolves by the ocean, led by an old wolf named Nava, who has magic powers and can contact the mysterious white wolf, Aniu, in his "dream visions". He tells his pack that one day soon, they will be led by a new leader, "the one who is wolf but does not know". Everyone believes that Balto, who is half wolf himself, is the chosen one that Aniu was speaking of. However, Niju, a young wolf and member of Nava's pack, hopes that he will be the next leader since he is stronger and more powerful than the old, wise Nava. He plans to accomplish that with his followers Nuk, Yak and Sumac. During the night, the four wolves plot to get the pack to their side and to kill Nava, Aleu, and Balto.
The day comes to depart from their home to follow the caribou, the wolves' food source, across the large sea, using pieces of ice like a bridge, with Balto in the lead. When Nava is separated from the rest of the pack, Aleu joins him to help him across, but runs into Niju, who is ready to take the elderly leader's life and the young half-wolf's as well. Balto abandons the pack to save his daughter, but before anyone gets hurt, they realise that the pack is floating away, leaderless. Nava cannot make the swim in his old age, so Balto tells Niju to be their new leader and to swim across to the pack, but Niju refuses to leave his homeland. Balto is prepared to help the pack, but Aleu realizes that this is where she truly belongs. After saying goodbye to her father, she makes the swim to the pack to become its leader as Nava returns to his home to find Niju. As Balto makes his way back to Nome, the raven reveals its true form as the great white wolf, Aniu, who is Balto's mother.
Voice cast
- Maurice LaMarche as Balto
- Jodi Benson as Jenna
- Lacey Chabert as Aleu
- David Carradine as Nava
- Mark Hamill as Niju
- Charles Fleischer as Boris
- Peter MacNicol as Muru
- Rob Paulsen as Terrier, Sumac, Wolverine #2
- Nicolette Little as Dingo
- Melanie Spore as Saba
- Kevin Schon as Muk, Luk, Wolverine #1
- Joe Alaskey as Hunter, Nuk
- Monnae Michaell as Aniu
- Mary Kay Bergman as Fox, Wolverine #3
- Jeff Bennett as Yak
Reception
Rotten Tomatoes' page for Balto II: Wolf Quest does not have a rating, because only one review was counted (that one being a negative review). However, out of nine reviews counted by the RT community, the film holds a 56% "rotten" rating.[2]
Awards
Balto II: Wolf Quest was nominated for an Annie Award[3] in 2003 for "Outstanding Storyboarding in an Animated Television Production". Annie's are honors bestowed in animation similar to other awards presented by academies. They honor the industry's highest achievements.
The Humanitas Prize was received by Balto II's screenplayer, Dev Ross, during 2002 for this movie in the Children's Animation category.[4] The Humanitas website states that "A signature Humanitas story challenges us to use our freedom to grow and develop, confronts us with our individual responsibility and examines the consequences of our choices."[5] Other winners of the Humanitas Prize include A River Runs Through It, Schindler's List, and WALL-E.
References
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Balto II: Wolf Quest |
- Balto II: Wolf Quest at the Internet Movie Database
- Balto II: Wolf Quest at AllMovie
- Sourcecast Interview with director Phil Weinstein
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