IMDb RATING
7.1/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
The Warner Brothers (and the Warner Sister) go on a quest to find a fallen wishing star.The Warner Brothers (and the Warner Sister) go on a quest to find a fallen wishing star.The Warner Brothers (and the Warner Sister) go on a quest to find a fallen wishing star.
- Awards
- 5 nominations total
Rob Paulsen
- Yakko Warner
- (voice)
- …
Jess Harnell
- Wakko Warner
- (voice)
Tress MacNeille
- Dot Warner
- (voice)
- …
Maurice LaMarche
- The Brain
- (voice)
- …
Sherri Stoner
- Slappy Squirrel
- (voice)
Nate Ruegger
- Skippy Squirrel
- (voice)
Nancy Cartwright
- Mindy
- (voice)
Chick Vennera
- Pesto
- (voice)
John Mariano
- Bobby
- (voice)
- …
Bernadette Peters
- Rita
- (voice)
Paxton Whitehead
- King Salazar
- (voice)
Jeff Bennett
- Captain of the Guard
- (voice)
- (as Jeff Glen Bennett)
- …
Paul Rugg
- Mr. Director
- (voice)
Julie Brown
- Minerva Mink
- (voice)
Tom Bodett
- Narrator
- (voice)
Julie Bernstein
- Singer
- (voice)
Featured reviews
I wrote a much longer review on amazon.com and Usenet's alt.tv.animaniacs group. Since then, I've watched the movie several more times, and all I can say is that my original impressions have been reinforced: The folks who made Animaniacs have produced a fitting last hurrah for the series. There's enough adult-level humor to keep everyone laughing, especially if you pay attention to the throwaway lines. A superficial glance might lead you to believe this is another formulaic Disneyoid animated kidflick, but that's wide of the mark: they skewer the formula, not follow it. Give it a chance and you'll be sold.
This was a great movie from a great cartoon series. The animation was top notch. This movie had the same quality of humor as the series. The premise was pretty good and fitting for the characters. All the characters from the show are used in some form and are just as hilarious as they are in the show. Thumbs up on this one.
Just saw this on HBO, did anyone catch the not-so-hidden reference to the Time-Warner merger of 1996? In the opening sequence, the town of "Warnerstock" (not-so-subtle) was all happy and prosperous until the king passed away and the evil king of "Ticktocia" (tic-toc...Time maybe?) took control through a hostile takeover. the people of Warnerstock were forced to turn a profit...and so-on and so-on. The show was always full of obscure and adult references cleverly and tastefully hidden and mixed with the kiddie humor. Maybe an expression of some internal riff with the whole merger, 'cleverly' displayed in Animaniac fashion.
"Animaniacs" was a cartoon that always struck me as good but highly inconsistent. At any given time there were at least two dozen characters on the show. Each of them starred in their own segments. Some of them worked, some of them didn't. And some of them fell flat.
This problem is finally eliminated in "Wakko's Wish". All of the characters, good (the Warners, Pinky and the Brain), bad (the Goodfeathers, the Hip Hippos), and pointless (Chicken Boo) are involved in this one major story. The story is a tad sentimental for an "Animaniacs" movie but they have a lot of fun parodying the expected cliches as they go along. Check it out, it's a lot of fun. And it's got "Tiny Toons: Summer Vacation" beat by miles.
This problem is finally eliminated in "Wakko's Wish". All of the characters, good (the Warners, Pinky and the Brain), bad (the Goodfeathers, the Hip Hippos), and pointless (Chicken Boo) are involved in this one major story. The story is a tad sentimental for an "Animaniacs" movie but they have a lot of fun parodying the expected cliches as they go along. Check it out, it's a lot of fun. And it's got "Tiny Toons: Summer Vacation" beat by miles.
Wakko's Wish does what Animaniacs fans have come to expect, and in fact demand. The story is entertaining at multiple levels, from the purely visual, to the slapstick, to clever wordplay, to subtle cultural references that surface on watching for the second or third time.
It may look like it is a Disney-esque thing. If you expect that, you may be uneasy when Wakko's Wish gives it what-for and does what Warner Bros. cartoons have always done: had fun with things and not let anyone or anything off the hook.
It may look like it is a Disney-esque thing. If you expect that, you may be uneasy when Wakko's Wish gives it what-for and does what Warner Bros. cartoons have always done: had fun with things and not let anyone or anything off the hook.
Did you know
- TriviaExecutive Producer Steven Spielberg pushed for a theatrical release for this film in 1998, but Warner Bros ended up releasing it straight to video in 1999.
- GoofsDuring the Snow Chase Scene, a cannonball can be seen being shot through the front end and exiting through the back corner of Dr. Scratchensniff's buggy. However, Baron von Plotz and Ralph's buggy are chasing them from behind shooting cannons at them, making it impossible for the cannonball to enter the Dr.'s buggy from the front end.
- Crazy creditsBefore the opening Warner Bros. Family Entertainment logo fades out, Wakko Warner, in tuxedo attire, walks out from behind the shield and takes a huge bite of it, much to Bugs' annoyance.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dave's Obsessions and D-Lists: Top 15 Animaniacs Songs (2015)
- SoundtracksThe Wishing Star
Lyrics and Music by Randy Rogel
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Steven Spielberg Presents Animaniacs: Wakko's Wish
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 2.39 : 1
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