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IMDbPro

Astérix conquista América

Título original: Asterix Conquers America
  • 1994
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.9/10
8.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Peer Augustinski, Kristiane Backer, Roger Carel, Craig Charles, Rupert Degas, Ottfried Fischer, Howard Lew Lewis, Thomas Piper, and Pierre Tornade in Astérix conquista América (1994)
Ver Bande-annonce [OV]
Reproducir trailer1:11
1 video
99+ fotos
Hand-Drawn AnimationAdventureAnimationComedyFamilyFantasyWestern

Cesar da la orden de que se capture y destruya a Panoramix. Lucullus, de pura casualidad, lo atrapa y se dirige a los confines de la Tierra para lanzarlo al abismo, dando una oportunidad a C... Leer todoCesar da la orden de que se capture y destruya a Panoramix. Lucullus, de pura casualidad, lo atrapa y se dirige a los confines de la Tierra para lanzarlo al abismo, dando una oportunidad a César de tomar el poblado Galo.Cesar da la orden de que se capture y destruya a Panoramix. Lucullus, de pura casualidad, lo atrapa y se dirige a los confines de la Tierra para lanzarlo al abismo, dando una oportunidad a César de tomar el poblado Galo.

  • Dirección
    • Gerhard Hahn
  • Guionistas
    • René Goscinny
    • Albert Uderzo
    • Pierre Tchernia
  • Elenco
    • Roger Carel
    • Pierre Tornade
    • Henri Labussière
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.9/10
    8.8 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Gerhard Hahn
    • Guionistas
      • René Goscinny
      • Albert Uderzo
      • Pierre Tchernia
    • Elenco
      • Roger Carel
      • Pierre Tornade
      • Henri Labussière
    • 13Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 11Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:11
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Fotos276

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    Elenco principal54

    Editar
    Roger Carel
    Roger Carel
    • Astérix
    • (voz)
    Pierre Tornade
    Pierre Tornade
    • Obélix
    • (voz)
    Henri Labussière
    • Panoramix
    • (voz)
    • (as Henri Labussiere)
    François Chaix
    • Abraracourcix
    • (voz)
    Michel Tugot-Doris
    • Assurancetourix
    • (voz)
    • (as Michel Tugot Doris)
    Jean Dautremay
    • Ordralfabetix
    • (voz)
    Robert Party
    • César
    • (voz)
    Jean-Luc Galmiche
    • Tumullus
    • (voz)
    • (as J-Luc Galmiche)
    Olivier Jankovic
    • Stupidus
    • (voz)
    Nathalie Spitzer
    • Falbala
    • (voz)
    Yves Pignot
    • Centurion
    • (voz)
    Claude Chantal
    • Bonnemine
    • (voz)
    Joël Zaffarano
    • Capitaine
    • (voz)
    • (as Joel Zaffarano)
    Sylvain Lemarie
    Sylvain Lemarie
    • Le chef des indiens
    • (voz)
    • …
    Thierry Buisson
    • Le petit barbu (Un pirate #1)
    • (voz)
    Philippe Sollier
    • Le Goth (Un pirate #2)
    • (voz)
    • (as Philippe Solier)
    Philippe Valmont
    • Sénateur
    • (voz)
    • (as J-Philippe Bouton)
    François Jaubert
    • Sénateur
    • (voz)
    • Dirección
      • Gerhard Hahn
    • Guionistas
      • René Goscinny
      • Albert Uderzo
      • Pierre Tchernia
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios13

    5.98.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    5bazmitch23

    Average Asterix

    I remember watching this flick as a kid, so last night I took a trip down memory lane by watching it on Youtube.

    The first two acts were great, but the third one sucks. The finale was rushed. Normally the climax of a film is meant to action packed and entertaining. Here, it just flies by and you don't care.

    I didn't buy the relationship between Obelix and the Indian girl. The scene where they say goodbye is meant to be sad, but we feel nothing because we only had one scene of them together. Maybe if they had more scenes, that goodbye scene would work properly.

    Craig Charles is miscast as Asterix. When you see Asterix, do you think to yourself "Dave Lister should play him"?

    The guy playing Obelix works though. But the star of the movie is Christopher Biggins' villain. He's such a kiss ass, yet his plan works. And Chris had fun camping it up.

    I liked the Oxford/Camberidge joke and the Romans forming into a pie and slicing a piece. That joke was well done.

    The CGI sucks and it's not a film that'll grab you. It doesn't leave you with the urge to watch it again.

    Worth watching if you like Asterix, but its not as good as The Twelve Tasks Of Asterix which is my fave Asterix movie.
    bob the moo

    Good animation but has no wit or character of the books

    Knowing that the Druid Getafix is only one of the mighty Gauls capable of brewing the magic potion, the Romans plan to kidnap him and throw him over the edge of the world (the world, of course being flat). The Romans carry out their plan but are pursued by Asterix and Obelix. However when the edge of the world comes Asterix and Obelix don't find death – they find America and must search for Getafix before their village runs low on potion and is overrun.

    In terms of story, this film takes one of the weak Asterix books and deviates from it – big mistake! The Asterix books are generally so good that to try and improve or change them for film is a bad move. The story is OK for kids though – even faithful it's pretty simple – however what it loses is the wit of the books. There are a few good lines early on, but most of this is slapstick that doesn't please anyone but young kids.

    The animation is great compared to other Asterix films – this uses some nice visual tricks, the best being the opening shot of the globe that turns out to be flat and only Europe! The voices are also pretty good – Craig Charles is a pretty good Asterix once you get used to his scouse accent. Howard Lewis is not a great Obelix – but at least he isn't playing him like a fool. However Christopher Biggins is poor and the support characters are weak. Surprisingly for a mid-90's film, this is full of racist stereotypes – from rubber lipped blacks, to `ging-gang-gooley' speaking Indians.

    The poor characterization also infects the main characters – for example the relationship between Asterix and Obelix is usually affectionate but here they bicker all the time and don't come across as friends.

    Overall this film gets the animation just right and the voices are pretty good. It's just a real shame that the film then gets the characters, the story and the comedy very wrong. Still, it's good enough for kids.
    10Truman-15

    Fun Film

    Asterix (Craig Charles of Red Dwarf Fame) and Obelix are on a Journey to America to save their beloved druid Getafix.

    Along the way he encounters all kinds of trouble from Indians to Animals. Some other great visuals, accompanied by a Great Soundtrack this is a Fun Film. Great Stuff.
    5ElMaruecan82

    Asterix' charm killed off by a cheap attempt to copy Disney...

    So... "Asterix Conquers America"? Yeah right, I'm not sure that playing the Disney card will help Asterix to conquer America. Way to go, dear writers, if that's the first Asterix movie an American watches, be sure it'll be the last, too.

    Indeed, you'll have more fun in any five minutes you take from "Asterix and Cleopatra" or "The Twelve Tasks" than one hour of this film. And lacking fun, or wit, is the one weakness an Asterix film can't afford. The most blatant case was the first "Asterix the Gaul" that took itself a bit seriously at the beginning, but give it a break, it was the first. This one had six movies to take inspiration from, four decades of existence, characters rooted in French Pop-Culture and more than anything, 25 albums, from which to copy paste any script.

    And they still screwed it up, by adapting a book, but what a loose adaptation. The film is based on an adventure written by René Goscinny where our two heroes accidentally land in America after a misleading fishing trip (when you tell Obelix to throw the net, be sure you asked him to attach it first). The discovery of a new territory, weird but edible gobble-gobble creatures and then the first interactions (or attempts to) with the Natives was a source of countless gags and subtle anachronisms, culminating (that's the word) with a wonderful visual reference to the Statue of Liberty. And it even had a great third act in Viking territory. Some Asterix films borrowed plots from many books, but there was enough potential in "The Great Crossing".

    But somewhere the writers only took America as a setting, a plot parenthesis in a rather dull and empty plot. Was it just because they really meant to conquer the American market? Or they knew Disney's "Pocahontas" will create a new interest toward Native-related films and bring some extra viewers? There's nothing substantial in the way the Natives participate to the story, which isn't saying much since the story, itself, is rather weak. Basically, the Romans kidnap the Druid Getafix because he's the one who makes the magic potion. If you pay attention, this is exactly the same set-up than the last Asterix "The Big Fight", the film even recycles the same characters and a few images, but that's not an issue, the problem is with the set-up.

    The film starts in the most incongruous way, with a view on space and a progressive close-up on Earth, shown as flat as a pizza, to illustrate how the Ancients conceived the form of our planet. It's integral to the plot since, instead of putting the Druid in jail, they want to throw him at the end of the Earth. Why not? But as much as the pizza joke was funny, the film insisted so much on the Italian stereotypes that it proves one thing: either the writers never read an Asterix story or the film was mostly targeted for a German audience. After six films, never had a centurion spoke like Tony from "Lady and the Tramp" or punctuated his sentences with 'bella' and 'al dente'. That was annoying but the worst was still the big-lipped villain. Did they try to make a new Stromboli? He looked nothing like a character Uderzo (of Italian background) would draw. I don't know if I'm the only one, but the sight of that guy really turned me off.

    To the story now, we have the obligatory fish-fight scene to introduce the Gallic village, fish isn't fresh but Getafix needs some for the magic potion. He sends Asterix and Obelix, gets kidnapped, but don't worry, less than ten minutes after, they'll all find themselves together in the fishing boat, landing in future America. What follows is a series of cute moments, so dry in gags, that you really don't know where this is going. The film turns into Disney-like stuff, Gauls meet Natives, even love, discover customs and sing together (and what songs!). Since the film had to fill the second act, they needed a secondary villain, the Chief sorcerer filled the box, he poisons Obelix who turns crazy (and we've got to wait for him to be cured) then kidnaps the druid and asks him to make the magic potion. The next scene is revealing of the writers' amateurship.

    Getafix gives the sorcerer the recipe, naturally, he fooled him, the sorcerer hits a rock and hurts his hand. So, no growing barber or crazy effects, he didn't even think of making him sleep, he just made him angry, so angry he pulls a knife, then Getafix cries for help, well shouldn't have he anticipated that before? Basically, he did something unfunny that didn't even make sense. And this is symptomatic of the movie, you shouldn't try to focus on the plot very much, just follow the story and enjoy perhaps its one redeeming quality. Thankfully, the drawers gratified our eyes with the sexiest animated Native girl, the only superlative the film deserves. Seriously, she looks like Naomi Campbell and makes Pocahontas looks like her raccoon.

    This girl was like the only significant Native of female persuasion, and no one would complain, with her vertiginous cleavage and a body honored by a few subliminal shots. Speaking of my experience, I was in my teen years when I first saw the film and I never expected a character from an Asterix film to turn me on, well, I guess that compensated for the big-lipped fatso. The Native girl, finally cures Obelix from his brief amnesia and says our friends goodbye, during a farewell song that tries too much again, what did they expect? An Oscar nomination? Anyway, our heroes come back to Gaul, and basically, the third act is just the climactic sequence of "The Big Fight"… a big fight. Great.

    If that adventure proved them the Earth wasn't flat, this is sure how the film fell.
    5dcldan

    Fun! (for a Saturday afternoon)

    Well that's a film for kids, that is clear! However, that not means that Asterix in America is boring. The story is simple, but results convincing and entertains, which is its intention. The quality of the draws is not very good (I didn't expect them to be good, either) but the film doesn't try to result impressive. The only intention of the film is to make some laughs and to pass a good time, and, if you are not very exigent and you try to relax and smile, it is very possible that you enjoy this film. Of course it is not a masterpiece, but it has any intention of being it! Just relax and try not to be very critic, nothing more...

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      In an early version of the movie there was a scene where Vitalstatistix opens his fly, pulls out a fish and asks Unhygienix to smell it, but Albert Uderzo (Asterix creator) hated the joke and asked for it to be removed.
    • Errores
      Caesar and the other Romans seem to think the world is flat. In truth, they would have known it was round, since scientists from Greek culture had determined this several centuries earlier.
    • Versiones alternativas
      In 2003 the film was re-released in Germany with a different dubbing featuring the voices of John Friedmann and Florian Simbeck (the infamous comedy duo "Erkan & Stefan", best known for their pseudo-Turkish/Bavarian accent). That dub was also included on the DVD/Blu-ray (called the "Schwörerdeutsch-Version").
    • Conexiones
      Edited from Astérix et le Coup du menhir (1989)
    • Bandas sonoras
      We Are One People
      Written by Harold Faltermeyer & David Cooke

      Performed by Aswad

      French version performed by Zouk Machine

      Rap by Soloman

      Produced by Harold Faltermeyer & Uli Fisher

      Published by BMG Ufa

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    Preguntas Frecuentes15

    • How long is Asterix in America?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 18 de febrero de 2001 (México)
    • Países de origen
      • Alemania
      • Francia
      • España
      • Estados Unidos
      • Reino Unido
      • Canadá
      • Dinamarca
      • Japón
    • Sitio oficial
      • Asterix.com (France)
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Asterix in America
    • Productoras
      • Alliance Films
      • Extrafilm
      • Fox Pathé Europa
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • DEM 19,000,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 25 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby SR
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Peer Augustinski, Kristiane Backer, Roger Carel, Craig Charles, Rupert Degas, Ottfried Fischer, Howard Lew Lewis, Thomas Piper, and Pierre Tornade in Astérix conquista América (1994)
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