IMDb RATING
5.6/10
9.4K
YOUR RATING
The Rugrats get tangled in an exotic adventure, where they're helped by the Thornberrys, a family that travels the world making nature documentaries.The Rugrats get tangled in an exotic adventure, where they're helped by the Thornberrys, a family that travels the world making nature documentaries.The Rugrats get tangled in an exotic adventure, where they're helped by the Thornberrys, a family that travels the world making nature documentaries.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Tim Curry
- Nigel Thornberry
- (voice)
Elizabeth Daily
- Tommy Pickles
- (voice)
- (as E.G. Daily)
Kath Soucie
- Phil DeVille
- (voice)
- …
Dionne Quan
- Kimi Finster
- (voice)
Cheryl Chase
- Angelica Pickles
- (voice)
Joe Alaskey
- Lou Pickles
- (voice)
Michael Bell
- Drew Pickles
- (voice)
- …
Melanie Chartoff
- Didi Pickles
- (voice)
Julia Kato
- Kira Finster
- (voice)
Phil Proctor
- Howard DeVille
- (voice)
Jack Riley
- Stu Pickles
- (voice)
Tara Strong
- Dil Pickles
- (voice)
Cree Summer
- Susie Carmichael
- (voice)
Featured reviews
Drew offers to take his family and friends on a paradise cruise and everyone is excited. However when it transpires that his "cruise ship" is a tiny fishing boat nobody is that impressed but go along anyway. A perfect storm sees them cast adrift on an uninhabited island. While the adults come to terms with never making it off the island alive the babies are pumped about the whole thing, with Tommy convinced that he can find his idol, Nigel Thornberry somewhere in the rain forest.
Having found the other two Rugrats movies to be reasonably colourful and fun I decided to give this franchise amalgamation a try despite my low expectations. The film does deliver what you expect though and will be loved by fans of both series. The plot is nonsense of course but it gets the two series together well and provides enough story to keep it going with nary a dull moment. Although it is no Pixar, the film does have a lot more adult references than the first two films put together and they did enough to keep me interested. It also helped that the baby humour is minimised and replaced with just solid family humour.
The animation is colourful and warm and flows really well not the most imaginative stuff but perfect for a family audience. The regular voice cast are all as good as normal in the forms of Curry, Daily, Cartwright and others. Meanwhile the additions of Bruce Willis and Chrissie Hynde are both amusing. Overall then a solid and enjoyable family film colourful and amusing and worth a look if you are seeking out something to distract a family audience.
Having found the other two Rugrats movies to be reasonably colourful and fun I decided to give this franchise amalgamation a try despite my low expectations. The film does deliver what you expect though and will be loved by fans of both series. The plot is nonsense of course but it gets the two series together well and provides enough story to keep it going with nary a dull moment. Although it is no Pixar, the film does have a lot more adult references than the first two films put together and they did enough to keep me interested. It also helped that the baby humour is minimised and replaced with just solid family humour.
The animation is colourful and warm and flows really well not the most imaginative stuff but perfect for a family audience. The regular voice cast are all as good as normal in the forms of Curry, Daily, Cartwright and others. Meanwhile the additions of Bruce Willis and Chrissie Hynde are both amusing. Overall then a solid and enjoyable family film colourful and amusing and worth a look if you are seeking out something to distract a family audience.
It's still better than the first movie but not as strong as the second. There aren't as many jokes that work and the story isn't as strong either. Thankfully the new characters are still great.
The movie introduces the babies in a jungle pretending to be like The Wild Thornberrys, which happens to be a fake-out. Meanwhile, the adults are preparing for their vacation in the South China Seas. Stu has everyone's tickets for the Lipschitz Cruise. We then see that Susie is coming on vacation with them because her parents will be out of town. The Lipschitz cruise ship leaves without them and we Stu and Spike on a normal boat called the S.S. Nancy.
The adults get disgruntled and attempt to get on the cruise ship by sending signals and driving the boat there themselves. A large wave attacks them and it turns the ship upside- down. They get out of the rinky-dink tub, Betty opens up a life raft and they hop on there while the boat sinks. The family becomes stranded on a deserted island, and they begin disputing about how they're all gonna survive. Betty eventually becomes a leader after drawing a circle in the sand and she gets all the adults to work together as a team to find ways to survive on the island.
Meanwhile, the babies go their separate ways after Angelica scares them about how they're not gonna survive in the island. Spike runs into Eliza, and Spike starts to speak for the first time (since Eliza is capable of talking to animals) and Nigel Thornberry suffers amnesia and goes on adventures with the toddlers. Chuckie gets his clothes stolen from Donnie, and Chuckie ends up wearing his clothes as well. Angelica, since she is pretty much a b****, becomes good friends with Debbie, due to them sharing the same type of personality.
Nigel and the babies try and find the clouded leopard named Siri. The parents eventually encounter Mrs. Thornberry. Their attempt at finding the babies in the Bathosphere worked, but the fuel in there was empty, and Stu solved the problem, making him a hero at the end. The credits end with the children reuniting with their families and taking the Lipschitz Cruise back home, giving the movie a fantastic ending.
The adults get disgruntled and attempt to get on the cruise ship by sending signals and driving the boat there themselves. A large wave attacks them and it turns the ship upside- down. They get out of the rinky-dink tub, Betty opens up a life raft and they hop on there while the boat sinks. The family becomes stranded on a deserted island, and they begin disputing about how they're all gonna survive. Betty eventually becomes a leader after drawing a circle in the sand and she gets all the adults to work together as a team to find ways to survive on the island.
Meanwhile, the babies go their separate ways after Angelica scares them about how they're not gonna survive in the island. Spike runs into Eliza, and Spike starts to speak for the first time (since Eliza is capable of talking to animals) and Nigel Thornberry suffers amnesia and goes on adventures with the toddlers. Chuckie gets his clothes stolen from Donnie, and Chuckie ends up wearing his clothes as well. Angelica, since she is pretty much a b****, becomes good friends with Debbie, due to them sharing the same type of personality.
Nigel and the babies try and find the clouded leopard named Siri. The parents eventually encounter Mrs. Thornberry. Their attempt at finding the babies in the Bathosphere worked, but the fuel in there was empty, and Stu solved the problem, making him a hero at the end. The credits end with the children reuniting with their families and taking the Lipschitz Cruise back home, giving the movie a fantastic ending.
The end credits for "Rugrats Go Wild!" include a section headed "Klasky Csupo Accounting," which unfortunately figures; this third theatrical outing for the Rugrats and second one for the Wild Thornberrys plays more like a marketing exercise than an actual movie.
With this big-screen crossover of two TV shows, you'd think that they'd both get equal time, but due to their show having been more successful and having their full name in the title (it was originally called "Rugrats Meet The Wild Thornberrys" before someone decided that was too obvious), Tommy, Chucky and the rest get more time on screen than the far more appealing Eliza Thornberry and Co; it's not until near the end that they're on anything like equal footing, and by then the movie's been sabotaged by a plot that's too skimpy for words (the Pickles, Finster and DeVille families - plus Susie - get stranded on the same island that the Thornberrys have pitched up on for their latest jaunt, and cue much running around and shrieking), an ounce of actual amusement amongst a ton of shrill and strained gags, too many characters squeezed into too little time, and far too many songs, pop or otherwise (Chrissie Hynde. Why?).
Having Bruce Willis do the voice of Spike doesn't help much, and neither does including some of the most heavy-handed movie references this side of a Leslie Nielsen comedy. In fact, the movie officially becomes a waste of time when their boat capsizes and it turns into a mini-homage to "The Poseidon Adventure," capped by Angelica singing "The Morning After" in her toy karaoke machine. (If only she had been the character played by Stella Stevens.)
But even that's more forgiveable than having Stu say "I can't help feeling partially responsible." Stealing lines from "The Simpsons" is the final insult... Eliza's older sister and Betty DeVille are the only ones to emerge intact. Note to Paramount: ENOUGH ALREADY!
With this big-screen crossover of two TV shows, you'd think that they'd both get equal time, but due to their show having been more successful and having their full name in the title (it was originally called "Rugrats Meet The Wild Thornberrys" before someone decided that was too obvious), Tommy, Chucky and the rest get more time on screen than the far more appealing Eliza Thornberry and Co; it's not until near the end that they're on anything like equal footing, and by then the movie's been sabotaged by a plot that's too skimpy for words (the Pickles, Finster and DeVille families - plus Susie - get stranded on the same island that the Thornberrys have pitched up on for their latest jaunt, and cue much running around and shrieking), an ounce of actual amusement amongst a ton of shrill and strained gags, too many characters squeezed into too little time, and far too many songs, pop or otherwise (Chrissie Hynde. Why?).
Having Bruce Willis do the voice of Spike doesn't help much, and neither does including some of the most heavy-handed movie references this side of a Leslie Nielsen comedy. In fact, the movie officially becomes a waste of time when their boat capsizes and it turns into a mini-homage to "The Poseidon Adventure," capped by Angelica singing "The Morning After" in her toy karaoke machine. (If only she had been the character played by Stella Stevens.)
But even that's more forgiveable than having Stu say "I can't help feeling partially responsible." Stealing lines from "The Simpsons" is the final insult... Eliza's older sister and Betty DeVille are the only ones to emerge intact. Note to Paramount: ENOUGH ALREADY!
Rugrats Go Wild! (AKA Rugrats Meet The Wild Thornberrys Movie) (2003)
Rugrats Go Wild! is a fun movie. This movie was really entertaining, and had many exciting adventures. It was really cool seeing the Rugrats meeting The Wild Thornberrys. Debbie and Anjelica were a perfect duo,a nd the whole movie was just plain fun! I give it a 10/10.
Rugrats Go Wild! is a fun movie. This movie was really entertaining, and had many exciting adventures. It was really cool seeing the Rugrats meeting The Wild Thornberrys. Debbie and Anjelica were a perfect duo,a nd the whole movie was just plain fun! I give it a 10/10.
Did you know
- TriviaThe final feature film of the Rugrats film franchise, and the last Nickelodeon movie sequel until Bob l'éponge, le film: Un héros sort de l'eau (2015).
- GoofsWhen Donnie Thornberry is being chased, he has Chuckie's sneakers on, but they disappear and reappear in subsequent shots..
- Crazy creditsDuring the first half of the end credits, additional photos from the cruise are shown.
- Alternate versionsTV versions of the movie remove the flashing numbers for the scratch and sniff cards that were included in the theatrical and home release versions.
- SoundtracksThe Rugrats Theme
by Mark Mothersbaugh
- How long is Rugrats Go Wild?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $25,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $39,402,572
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $11,556,869
- Jun 15, 2003
- Gross worldwide
- $55,250,496
- Runtime
- 1h 21m(81 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
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