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Hubi, der Pinguin

Originaltitel: The Pebble and the Penguin
  • 1995
  • 0
  • 1 Std. 14 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,6/10
5889
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Hubi, der Pinguin (1995)
A lovable but introverted penguin named Hubie (Martin Short) plans to present his betrothal pebble to the bird of his dreams.
trailer wiedergeben2:27
1 Video
40 Fotos
Buddy KomödieQuestTierabenteuerAbenteuerFamilieKomödieMusikalischAnimationsfilmHandgezeichnete Animation

Ein liebenswerter, aber introvertierter Pinguin namens Hubie plant, seinen Verlobungskiesel dem Vogel seiner Träume zu überreichen.Ein liebenswerter, aber introvertierter Pinguin namens Hubie plant, seinen Verlobungskiesel dem Vogel seiner Träume zu überreichen.Ein liebenswerter, aber introvertierter Pinguin namens Hubie plant, seinen Verlobungskiesel dem Vogel seiner Träume zu überreichen.

  • Regie
    • Don Bluth
    • Gary Goldman
  • Drehbuch
    • Rachel Koretsky
    • Stephen Whitestone
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Martin Short
    • Jim Belushi
    • Annie Golden
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,6/10
    5889
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Don Bluth
      • Gary Goldman
    • Drehbuch
      • Rachel Koretsky
      • Stephen Whitestone
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Martin Short
      • Jim Belushi
      • Annie Golden
    • 47Benutzerrezensionen
    • 10Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:27
    Official Trailer

    Fotos40

    Poster ansehen
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    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 34
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung19

    Ändern
    Martin Short
    Martin Short
    • Hubie
    • (Synchronisation)
    Jim Belushi
    Jim Belushi
    • Rocko
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as James Belushi)
    Annie Golden
    Annie Golden
    • Marina
    • (Synchronisation)
    Tim Curry
    Tim Curry
    • Drake
    • (Synchronisation)
    Alissa King
    • Petra
    • (Synchronisation)
    Stevie Louise Vallance
    Stevie Louise Vallance
    • Priscilla
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Louise Vallance)
    • …
    Will Ryan
    Will Ryan
    • Royal
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Neil Ross
    Neil Ross
    • Scrawny
    • (Synchronisation)
    Stan Jones
    Stan Jones
    • McCallister
    • (Synchronisation)
    S. Scott Bullock
    • Chubby
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Philip L. Clarke
    • King
    • (Synchronisation)
    Shani Wallis
    Shani Wallis
    • Narrator
    • (Synchronisation)
    B.J. Ward
    B.J. Ward
    • Megellenic #1
    • (Synchronisation)
    Hamilton Camp
    Hamilton Camp
    • Megellenic 2
    • (Synchronisation)
    Angeline Ball
    Angeline Ball
    • Gwynne
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Kendall Cunningham
    • Timmy
    • (Synchronisation)
    Pat Musick
    • Pola
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Michael Nunes
    • Beany
    • (Synchronisation)
    • Regie
      • Don Bluth
      • Gary Goldman
    • Drehbuch
      • Rachel Koretsky
      • Stephen Whitestone
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen47

    5,65.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8TheLittleSongbird

    One of the better Don Bluth movies

    I don't know why the rating is so low. This is a beautiful movie, that only has a couple of flaws. It is not as good as An American tail and Land Before time, but way better than Rock A Doodle Doo and Troll in Central Park . I really don't understand the criticism that it is unimaginative, with Rocko flying. Hello? Elephants can't fly, and look what Disney did with Dumbo! The songs and musical score are lovely, especially Now and Forever and Sometimes I wonder. The only song I didn't like was Good Ship Misery, because it was badly sung. The animation generally was good too, the highlight being the killer whales scene. True there were a lot of colour changes and some animation errors(Good Ship Misery), especially in Drake's song. And unlike some people I thought Marina and Hubie's romance is very sweet. The worst character animation was that of Drake. Nobody would draw a penguin like that. The voice overs were what made the movie, and they WEREN'T racist. Shani Wallis is lovely as the narrator, accompanying the beautifully-animated Antarctica-landscape beginning, certainly an improvement on the narration in Rock a Doodle Doo. Martin Short portrays Hubie's nervousness with such conviction, and James Belushi steals the show with a hilarious characterisation of Rocko. Annie Golden made me cry with her beautiful singing voice, her rendition of Sometimes I Wonder is heart-rending and Marina is such a cute and beautiful penguin, and Tim Curry voiced Drake beautifully, even if he got a tad annoying. In fact, Don't Make Me Laugh is special to me because that is the best I have ever heard Tim Curry sing since Blue Money.And by the way, Curry is the most experienced singer on the soundtrack, so I was shocked by the comment that compared the singing to howling monkeys. Barry Manilow and Sheena Easten's duet at the end was sublime too. All in all a beautiful and imaginative movie, if a little on the short side. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    4IonicBreezeMachine

    Don Bluth's Studio ends with a mess

    Hubie (Martin Short) a good hearted but clumsy Adélie penguin with a stutter has a crush on Marina (Annie Golden), a kind soft spoken Penguin. While Hubie does find a perfect pebble to propose with, the cruel alpha male, Drake (Tim Curry), also has his eyes on Marina throws Hubie off a cliff and Hubie becomes lost at sea. When Hubie is captured by humans he teams up with a brash abrasive Northern rockhopper penguin named Rocko (Jim Belushi) who dreams of flying in an effort to return home before Marina is forced to marry Drake.

    The final film of Don Bluth Irish based studios that had been the creator's home from 1985 until 1995. The final film in a three picture financing deal with Hong Kong based Media Assets, the movie had a tumultuous development cycle with Warner Bros. Delaying production to focus on Thumbelina and distribution changing hands to MGM who demanded late in production changes to the film. Director's Don Bluth and Gary Goldman jumped ship from the floundering studio in favor of a lucrative deal with 20th Century Fox to set up an Animation Studio, disowning the film which has no credited director, though MGM claimed this was totally Bluth and Goldman's film. With a troubled production history it's no wonder why the movie feels like a disjointed mess, albeit one with fleeting moments of beauty.

    The impetus of The Pebble and the Penguin was spurred very much by the success of Disney's Beauty and the Beast, in Bluth's words something for children and "the date movie crowd", that really doesn't come through all that well. While the movie is technically a love story, Hubie and Marina are basically a done deal within the first 10 minutes. Not only are they together, but there's really no defining character to Marina other than she isn't a superficial airhead like her friends are. We know she's nice....and that's it. Marina spends the rest of the movie doing two things: Rejecting Drake and pining for Hubie. Drake is clearly modeled after Gaston with his bodybuilder physique and the ability to make women swoon and faint by entering a room and he's perfectly serviceable as a villain, only elevated by the fact that Tim Curry voices the character and brings energy to what's essentially a very underwritten role. Rocko was probably my favorite character, if only because I found Jim Belushi's abrasive way in which he portrays the character to be a nice break from the alternating bounciness and blandness of the other characters, but even Rocko seems inconsistently written with him changing moods or motivations on a dime for no other reason than the plot needs him to. There's a major revelation wherein Rocko finds out he was lied to by Hubie and his anger lasts all of maybe 30 seconds at most and then it continues the same way with no further mention. And then there's Hubie, on the surface he seems like a decent enough underdog lead, but Martin Short's portrayal of him I found more grating than anything else. Martin Short has a recurring problem in films be it Clifford, Pure Luck and this one in that his delivery just doesn't translate all that well to the movies he's in despite him being a proven funny comedian. Hubie comes off throughout the movie as whiny, obsessive, or emotionally needy and I just didn't find him all that charming.

    The animation is at least nice, in parts anyway. The characters are expressive and there's energy to the animation, but there's also some sloppiness that's rather noticeable no doubt due to the production troubles. There are many sequences with odd color coding, static characters in either the foreground or background that give blank stares into space, and even cases of recycling of animation. The movie feels like a hatchet job with a lack of flow and connective tissue between scenes as we jump and skip between sections like a needle hitting record skips. It has the feeling of something where parts were removed while others were being inserted. There's a framework for a serviceable story in place, but the parts used to build it are so haphazardly assembled it lacks emotional impact.

    The Pebble and the Penguin is the kind of movie that was made for "too many cooks". It has the feeling of something that was hampered by executive mandate and was put together with the mentality of "just finish it already". Maybe if Warner Bros. Had allowed it to be finished first instead of prioritizing Thumbelina maybe it would've been a better product, but as is: It's a mess of a movie that doesn't know how to assemble all the elements it has into a cohesive whole.
    6Animany94

    An improvement over Thumbelina and Troll In Central Park!

    I had heard a lot of bad things about Don Bluth's movies from the 90's and sure Thumbelina, Rock-a-Doodle and Troll in Central Park are bad, but I found Pebble and the Penguin okay. Not at all near his masterpieces from the 80's which I simply love, but okay.

    Tim Curry is the highlight of the movie, because it's Tim Curry, c'mon. He is the ultimate voice of a bad-guy and an amazing singer too! His song, "Don't Make Me Laugh", was bad-ass even though it sort of came out of nowhere.

    I like the other characters as well. Martin Short did a good job as the introverted and shy Hubie and Annie Golden voiced Marina very well and sincerely and gave us a beautiful song. My least favourite was actually Rocko, he was meant to be this grumpy penguin, but I found that he was a constant asshole being passive-aggressive towards Hubie. But he is not totally one-dimensional, because he changes as the movie progresses and teaches Hubie some lessons too.

    The animation had a lot to it. It changed a lot throughout the movie, but mostly it fit the scenes. The music was pretty good too and I don't get why many people say that there are too many songs. They were catchy and well sung. A certain improvement after Thumbelina and Troll.

    Tim Curry's character's design was a little stupid, because a penguin on steroids is a little far-fetched to be honest. That was what he looked like, but he was entertaining and that is enough.

    In general, an underrated film that will amuse the kids and maybe adults' eyes will get caught by certain aspects of it.
    4TheUnknown837-1

    a cheap, poorly-drawn cartoon expanded into a seventy-minute feature -- but if you have young children, it might be a worthy rental

    By the mid 1990s, the career of animator-director Don Bluth had seemed to drop to its all-time low. Before, Bluth had made a series of popular animated films, many which remain beloved today such as "The Land Before Time" (1988), "The Secret of NIMH" (1982), and "An American Tail" (1986). But beginning with "Thumbelina" in 1994, his films seemed to decrease more and more in quality and popularity and one of the many unfortunate entries is 1995's box office bomb "The Pebble and the Penguin", a film that didn't attract audience members beyond parents and children under the age of seven. Frankly, the latter are the only audience members I can comprehend taking enjoyment out of this rather bland animated feature.

    The story is absurd. The film stars a poorly-drawn, stammering, and chubby penguin named Hubie (voiced by Martin Short) who falls in love with a female penguin with a surprisingly healthy flower on her head (voice by Annie Golden). SORT OF like in real life, penguins present their bride-to-bes with a pebble as a substitute for a ring. But when Hubie is swept away by the current, he teams up with a lone rockhopper (James Belushi) with a dream of flying and they race against time to return to Antarctica before it's too late. The reasons why they could be too late is one of many underdeveloped elements of this weak story that would still be weak even if they were there.

    It becomes very clear very early on why this animated children's musical does not and will not work for anybody older than say six or seven years of age. It just does not have any of the qualities that are required for a good animated feature. Number one, the film looks bad on account of a very poor drawing style. The animation in this film is very cartoony (even as far as animated films go); it's dark, gloomy, there is no vibrancy in the colors, and on top of that, the design of the film and the elements in it are universally droll and laughable. Take for instance, the penguins who star in the film. With only a few background exceptions, every single penguin looks absolutely nothing at all like a bird. Hubie, for example, looks absurdly ridiculous with wide cheeks, a stubby beak, big eyes, and that preposterous hat that he wears wherever he goes. Combined with his hand-like "flippers" he looks like Chris Farley in a penguin suit. Result: he's an ugly, poorly-drawn cartoon character. But the most absurd-looking and absurdly-designed character is the evil penguin, Drake, who frankly looks nothing at all like a penguin. He's a muscle-man wearing a penguin mask. He's got a chest broader than that of Arnold Schwarzenegger, and teeth larger than the teeth of the leopard seals and killer whales that serve as the film's predators. Basically, he's a two-dimensional, recycled villain. He lives in a cave shaped like a skull, he wears a cape, laughs a lot, and gets mad when people laugh with him. Result: who cares? And what's also bad, and maybe worse, is that this is an animated musical and there's not a single noteworthy or memorable song to found anywhere within its running time. The opening hymn was harmless—not memorable, but harmless. But after that, the songs became duller and duller and there was one in particular that had me grimacing all the way through. It's the moment that viewers press the fast-forward button for whenever it comes up.

    I felt "The Pebble and the Penguin" was lame all around save for the very few moments when Hubie and the rockhopper penguin Rocko are placed in peril at the jaws of leopard seals and killer whales, who were thankfully, given no dialogue and treated as animals instead of cartoon characters. But in a way, for this reason, I cannot wholeheartedly recommend this movie to children. This is the reason. The film displays killer whales are the natural predator of the penguins. My concern is that children familiar with "Free Willy" (1993) may be offended or downhearted by seeing their favorite denizen of the sea portrayed as a bloodthirsty carnivore. The leopard seal was a better antagonist and was more funny seeing as how his jaws opened wider than a rattlesnake's and how he appeared to smile while growling. But the point really is, these moments with the predators—and there are only a few—are the only interesting moments. And they're not enormously interesting, mind you.

    Bottom line, I cannot recommend this to anybody below the age of seven. My advice: if you have children around that page, rent it for them. They might enjoy it.
    Wizard-8

    Incredibly bad

    From what I read, Don Bluth was kicked off this movie before it was completed, and it was shipped out and finished by animators in Hungary. (This explains why on the movie itself, there is no director listed.)

    This is probably true, because the animation keeps making subtle changes in style, color, and quality - sometimes in the SAME SCENE! Also, the pacing is very choppy, with frequently the characters all of a sudden shown in a new situation with no explanation as to how they got where they were all of a sudden.

    Truly awful songs by Barry Manilow, and strident characters who have no depth to them. Not much of a story, either. It's no wonder this movie bombed big time, though I am shocked that Amazon indicates that the movie is out of print!

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Producer/Co-director Don Bluth so hated the final results of this movie after production was wrapped up that he and his partner, co-director Gary Goldman, demanded to be uncredited. As a result, a credit of "A Don Bluth Ireland Limited Production" has been placed where the directors' credits should've been.
    • Patzer
      Before the cast begins singing "Good Ship Misery", the dubbing for the coupled penguins in the cage is swapped during the line "Welcome Hubie! Although Welcome probably isn't the appropriate word."
    • Zitate

      Hubie: Hey Rocko! What do you call a flower before it opens?

      Rocko: What?

      Hubie: What do you call a flower before it opens?

      Rocko: A bud.

      Hubie: I love it when you call me bud!

      Rocko: [Groans]

    • Crazy Credits
      The opening credit/overture sequence is shown with the animated penguin characters playing and cavorting on the sheet music for the songs they're singing.
    • Alternative Versionen
      The VHS release omits the "Distributed by MGM/UA" text.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Kiss of Death/Jury Duty/Stuart Saves His Family/The Basketball Diaries/The Pebble and the Penguin (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Now and Forever
      Music by Barry Manilow

      Lyrics by Bruce Sussman

      Performed by Martin Short, Annie Golden, Jon Joyce, Kevin Bassinson, Susan Boyd, Randy Crenshaw, Yvonne Williams, Bob Joyce, Sally Stevens, Joe Pizzulo, Steve Lively, B.J. Ward, Kevin Dorsey, Stevie Louise Vallance, and Andrea Robinson

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Pebble and the Penguin?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 31. August 1995 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Irland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Dänemark
      • Ungarn
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Wikipedia
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • La piedra y el pingüino
    • Drehorte
      • Sullivan Bluth Studios - 3800 West Alameda Avenue, Burbank, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Don Bluth Ireland
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 28.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 3.983.912 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 1.123.041 $
      • 16. Apr. 1995
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 3.983.912 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 14 Min.(74 min)
    • Sound-Mix
      • DTS-Stereo
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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