Recess: School's Out
Recess: School's Out | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Chuck Sheetz |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by | Jonathan Greenberg |
Story by |
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Based on |
Recess by Paul Germain & Joe Ansolabehere |
Starring | |
Music by | Denis M. Hannigan |
Edited by | Tony Mizgalski |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Buena Vista Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $23 million[1] |
Box office | $44.4 million[1] |
Recess: School's Out is a 2001 American animated comedy film based on the Disney television series Recess.[2] It was produced by Walt Disney Pictures, Walt Disney Television Animation and Walt Disney Television Animation Digital Production with animation done by Sunwoo Animation and Sunwoo Digital International. The movie was distributed by Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, and released theatrically in the United States on February 16, 2001.
Plot
School's out at Third Street School, but T.J. is unhappy, because his friends have all decided to go to various camps to improve their skills. T.J. unhappily rides around town, doing things by himself, when he notices that there's something going on at the school. He sneaks inside and finds them using a tractor beam to levitate a safe. Panicked, he tries to tell his parents and the police, but no one believes him. When he gets Principal Prickly to come to see what's going on, he is dematerialized. T.J. uses his sister Becky's diary to blackmail her into driving to all the camps to pick his friends up.
T.J. and his friends steal a box of documents, but when they find it filled with boring information, they accuse him of inventing a plot to bring them back. They are about to head back to camp when they see the tractor beam come out of the school and shoot out a green laser and agree that something is going on. The next day, T.J. finds Pricky's golf pants in a Dumpster, so T.J. and his friends infiltrate the school at night. While there, they are caught spying and flee. T.J. is captured and his put in a storage room where Prickly is tied up. A man named Dr. Phillium Benedict comes in to talk to them.
After Benedict leaves, Prickly relates how, back in the 1960s, Benedict became principal of Third Street School and moved to abolish recess to improve test grades. Prickly went to the superintendent as a means of recourse. The superintendent fires Benedict and promotes Prickly to principal. Benedict's girlfriend, Muriel P. Finster, breaks up with him. Later, Prickly says, Benedict went on to become Secretary of Education but was fired when he tried to abolish recess nationwide.
T.J. and Prickly escape, but are caught again. T.J. uses his walkie-talkie (in Prickly's drawer) and tells his friends Benedict wants to destroy summer vacation. T.J.'s friends go through the box of documents again. Spinelli finds a date book that says lunar perigee on it; Gretchen deduces that Benedict is trying to move the moon's orbit via tractor beam when it is closest to the Earth. Benedict reveals to T.J. and Prickly that his plan is to make it cold during summer so that kids will be forced inside to study.
T.J.'s friends get his sister, Becky, to drive to the camps again, where they pick up all the children. Gus draws up the plans to attack the school. T.J. and Prickly escape the cage that Benedict has imprisoned them in. Gus' plan works, and most of the guards and ninjas are knocked out. All the kids pour into the auditorium. Another set of guards protects Benedict as he prepares to pull the lever. However, Muriel P. Finster arrives. After rejecting Benedict again, she brings the teachers in and a fight breaks out. Prickly punches Benedict, but as Benedict slumps, he triggers the beam and Prickly cannot reverse it. T.J. tosses his baseball to Vince, whose accurate arm destroys the machine. The police arrest Benedict and his cronies.
Cast
- Andrew Lawrence as Theodore Jasper "T.J." Detweiler
- Rickey D'Shon Collins as Vince LaSalle
- Jason Davis as Mikey Blumberg
- Robert Goulet as Mikey's singing voice
- Ashley Johnson as Gretchen Grundler / Ashley J.
- Courtland Mead as Gus Griswald
- Blake McIver Ewing as Gus' singing voice
- Pamela Segall as Ashley Spinelli
- Dabney Coleman as Principal Peter Prickly
- Melissa Joan Hart as Becky Detweiler
- April Winchell as Muriel Finster / Mrs. Detweiler / Lunch Lady #3
- James Woods as Dr. Phillium Benedict
- Clancy Brown as Bald Man
- Peter MacNicol as Professor Fenwick
- Tony Jay as Dr. Rosenthal
- Andrea Martin as Lunchlady Harriet
- Tress MacNeille as Lunchlady Irma / Ms. Lemon / Dr. Steinheimer
- Elizabeth Daily as Captain Sticky
- R. Lee Ermey as Col. O'Malley
- Katey Sagal as Mrs. Flo Spinelli
- Paul Willson as Mr. Detweiler
- Allyce Beasley as Ms. Grotke
- Clyde Kusatsu as Mr. Yamashiro
- Nicholas Turturro as Cop #1
- Kevin Michael Richardson as Cop #2
- Dan Castellaneta as Guard #1
- Diedrich Bader as Guard #2
- Robert Stack as Superintendent
- Charles Kimbrough as Mort Chalk
- Erik von Detten as Erwin Lawson / Captain Brad
- Lane Toran as King Bob / King Fred
- Ron Glass as Dr. Lazenby / Tech #2
- Michael Shulman as Francis the Hustler kid
- Anndi McAfee as Ashley A.
- Gregg Berger as Tech #1
- Jack Riley as Golfer #1
- Philip Proctor as Golfer #2 / Scientist #2
- Kath Soucie as Director
- Ken Swofford as Coach
- Justin Shenkarow as Soldier kid / Wrestler kid
- Patrick Renna as Jordan
Music
Recess: School's Out (Original Movie Soundtrack) | |
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Soundtrack album by Various Artists | |
Released | January 13, 2001 |
Genre | Soundtrack |
Label | Walt Disney |
Soundtrack | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic |
- "Dancing in the Street" - Martha and the Vandellas - 2:38
- "Born to Be Wild" – Steppenwolf - 3:27
- "One" – Three Dog Night - 3:01
- "Incense and Peppermints" – Strawberry Alarm Clock - 2:46
- "Wipe Out" – The Surfaris - 2:37
- "Nobody But Me" – The Human Beinz - 2:14
- "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In" – The 5th Dimension - 2:29
- "Green Tambourine" – Robert Goulet - 2:36
- "Recess Suite" – Denis M. Hannigan - 5:07
- "Dancing in the Street" – Myra - 3:57
Note: "Purple Haze" by Jimi Hendrix was also used in the film, though it is not included on the soundtrack.
Reception
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 61% of 70 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 5.8/10. The site's consensus reads: "Though basically a TV cartoon stretched out to movie-length, Recess has enough successful jokes and smart writing to make it a worthwhile view."[3]
Box office
The film earned $36,706,141 in North America and another $7,754,709 from other countries. The worldwide gross was $44,460,850, against a $23 million budget.[1]
Home media
Recess: School's Out, was released on VHS and DVD on August 7, 2001.[3]
References
- 1 2 3 "Recess School's Out (2001)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2015-01-26.
- ↑ "Scale Down the Bad Guy in Kids' Animated Films". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
- 1 2 "Recess: School's Out (2001)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Recess: School's Out |
- Official website
- Recess: School's Out at the Internet Movie Database
- Recess: School's Out at the TCM Movie Database
- Recess: School's Out at Box Office Mojo
- Recess: School's Out at The Big Cartoon DataBase