Stuart Little 2
Stuart Little 2 | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Rob Minkoff |
Produced by |
Douglas Wick Lucy Fisher |
Screenplay by | Bruce Joel Rubin |
Story by |
Douglas Wick Bruce Joel Rubin |
Based on |
Characters by E. B. White |
Starring |
Michael J. Fox Melanie Griffith Nathan Lane Geena Davis Hugh Laurie Jonathan Lipnicki James Woods Steve Zahn |
Music by | Alan Silvestri |
Cinematography | Steven Poster |
Edited by | Priscilla Nedd-Friendly |
Production company |
Red Wagon Entertainment Franklin/Waterman Productions |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 77 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $120 million[1] |
Box office | $170 million[1] |
Stuart Little 2 is a 2002 American live-action/CGI animated film, directed by Rob Minkoff and starring Geena Davis, Hugh Laurie and Jonathan Lipnicki and the voices of Michael J. Fox, Nathan Lane, Melanie Griffith, James Woods and Steve Zahn. The film is a sequel to the 1999 film, based on original children's book by E. B. White. The film was released to theaters on July 19, 2002. It is also the final film in the trilogy to have a theatrical release.
The film was followed by the third and final film, a direct-to-video sequel entitled Stuart Little 3: Call of the Wild in 2005.
Plot
Three years after the first film, Stuart and George become older brothers to their baby sister, Martha. Stuart later questions his ability after a grueling soccer match alongside George, who kicked him with a soccer ball. He becomes even more downhearted after George's model airplane gets broken in an accident because of him. However, Stuart's father, Frederick Little, tells him that for every Little, every cloud has a "silver lining".
On his way home from school, Stuart saves a canary named Margalo from a peregrine falcon named Falcon, and they become friends. However, Margalo is secretly assisting Falcon to steal from households after earning the homeowners' trust. When he tells her to find and take an object of value, or lose the sanctuary he promised her, she can't seem to concentrate on her assignment, as she is beginning to fall in love with Stuart. Falcon eventually loses patience and threatens to eat Stuart alive unless Margalo gives him the ring. Worried for his safety, she takes Eleanor Little's wedding ring.
When the Littles discover that the ring is missing, they think it has fallen down the sink drain. Stuart offers to be lowered down the drain on a string to get it, but is unable to retrieve it after the string breaks. a guilty Margalo saves him, then leaves the Little house the following night for Stuart's safety. Upon realizing Margalo's disappearance, Stuart assumes she has been kidnapped by Falcon and decides to rescue her with the pet cat Snowbell
with the help of Monty, Snowbell's old friend, the duo discover that Falcon's headquarters is at the disused observation deck of the Pishkin Building. They attach a balloon to a popcorn box to get Stuart to the top, where he finds out that Margalo is Falcon's slave. Falcon captures him and drops him onto the street. Luckily, Stuart is accidentally saved by a passing garbage truck. Falcon then shuts Margalo inside a paint can as punishment. Meanwhile, Snowbell makes his way to the top of the building while the Falcon is absent and frees Margalo, who tells Snowbell that Falcon killed Stuart. A distraught Snowbell vows revenge.
On a garbage barge where he has ended up, Stuart almost loses hope before finding George's broken model airplane. Realizing this is a "silver lining", he fixes it and uses it to fly back to the building. Meanwhile, the Littles have now discovered that George has been lying and angrily demand to know where Stuart is. George tries not to reveal Stuart's whereabouts to his parents, but at last confesses that Stuart's at the Pishkin Building. The family heads out to the location. Meanwhile, the Falcon returns and tries to kill Snowbell, but Margalo distracts him by taking the ring and fleeing, allowing Falcon to give a chase. Stuart catches up in the plane and saves Margalo. The Littles follow him by taxi as he begins flying through the park, with Falcon pursuing him.
At last, after an ensuing fight, the Falcon is struck by the plane and defeated. Stuart falls when his parachute is sliced apart by the plane's propeller, but is rescued by Margalo. Although Falcon survives being struck, he is injured and falls out of the sky, landing in a garbage can next to Monty, who apparently devours him.
and Margalo gives Eleanor her ring back while Stuart and Snowbell are reunited with the Littles. Sometime later, Margalo says goodbye to the Littles and leaves with the other birds to migrate south for the winter. At this moment, Martha says her first words: "Bye bye, birdie." The family head back home.
Cast
- Michael J. Fox as Stuart Little, the title character, the middle child of the Little family.
- Melanie Griffith as Margalo, Stuart's new friend, a canary bird under control of a ferocious falcon. She is forced by the Falcon to steal Eleanor's ring, but after developing feelings for Stuart, she realizes that friendship is more important. She leaves at the end to migrate south for the winter.
- Nathan Lane as Snowbell, the family cat. He ventures out to the city with Stuart to save Margalo.
- James Woods as The Falcon, the antagonist, a ferocious and tyrannical creature who forces Margalo to steal items from households. However he is defeated and presumably killed when Stuart jumps out of his plane, which heads towards the nosediving falcon.
- Geena Davis as Eleanor Little, Stuart and George's mother, who is deemed very overprotective of Stuart.
- Hugh Laurie as Frederick Little, Stuart and George's father and Eleanor's husband. He tells Stuart about the "silver lining".
- Jonathan Lipnicki as George Little, Stuart's older brother. When Stuart leaves to search for Margalo, George becomes pressured to cover up the situation to his parents until they find out.
- Steve Zahn as Monty, Snowbell's alley cat friend who still wants to devour Stuart after three years. He gives Stuart and Snowbell information on the falcon.
- Anna and Ashley Hoelck as Martha Little, George and Stuart's new little sister. Throughout the movie Eleanor attempts, and fails, to get her to talk. She then does so at the end of the movie, when Margalo leaves and she utters the words "Bye bye Birdie" much to the family's delight.
- Marc John Jefferies as Will, George's new friend.
- Jim Doughan as the soccer coach, who is also strict when he tells a mean kid on the team named Wallace to stop teasing George.
- Brad Garrett as Rob, the plumber
- Amelia Marshall as Rita, Will's mom
Release
This film was originally released on VHS and DVD on December 3, 2002.
Reception
The film received positive reviews. Rotten Tomatoes has reported that 81% of 122 critics gave the film a positive review,[2] indicating that Stuart Little 2 did surprisingly better in critical response than its predecessor. The site's consensus reads: "Stuart Little 2 is a sweet, visually impressive sequel that provides wholesome entertainment for kids."[2] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 66 out of 100, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[3]
Soundtrack
The soundtrack, Music from and Inspired by Stuart Little 2, was released by Epic Records on July 16, 2002 on Audio CD and Compact Cassette. The final two tracks are score cues composed by Alan Silvestri.[4] Tracks in bold are not heard in the film.
- "I'm Alive" by Celine Dion − 3:28
- "Put a Little Love in Your Heart" by Mary Mary − 3:09
- "Top of the World" by Mandy Moore − 3:22
- "Another Small Adventure" by Chantal Kreviazuk − 2:57
- "One" by Nathan Lane − 2:18
- "What I Like About You" by The Romantics − 2:56
- "Hold On to the Good Things" by Shawn Colvin − 3:30
- "Count on Me" by Billy Gilman − 3:42
- "Smile" by Vitamin C − 3:58
- "Alone Again (Naturally)" by Gilbert O'Sullivan − 3:38
- "Born to Be Wild" by Steppenwolf − 3:30
- "Little Angel of Mine" by No Secrets − 3:47
- "Falcon Finito" by Alan Silvestri − 6:51
- "Silver Lining" by Alan Silvestri − 4:21
Video game
Stuart Little 2 (2002) was released for PlayStation, Game Boy Advance, and Microsoft Windows.
Awards and nominations
Year | Awards | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | BAFTA Children's Award | Best Feature Film | Douglas Wick Lucy Fisher Rob Minkoff Bruce Joel Rubin | Nominated |
2003 | Golden Trailer Award | Best Animation/Family Film | Nominated | |
Visual Effects Society Award | Best Character Animation in an Animated Motion Picture | Tony Bancroft David Schaub Eric Armstrong Sean Mullen | Won | |
Best Visual Effects Photography in a Motion Picture | Earl Wiggins Mark Vargo Tom Houghton Anna Foerster | Nominated | ||
Young Artist Award | Best Family Feature Film | Rob Minkoff | Nominated |
Notes
- 1 2 "Stuart Little 2 (2002)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2012-10-01.
- 1 2 "Stuart Little 2". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2012-10-01.
- ↑ http://www.metacritic.com/movie/stuart-little-2
- ↑ "Stuart Little 2 - Original Soundtrack". AllMusic. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Stuart Little 2 |
- Official website
- Stuart Little 2 at the Internet Movie Database
- Stuart Little 2 at AllMovie
- Stuart Little 2 at the TCM Movie Database
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