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Robinson Crusoe (released in North America as The Wild Life) is a 2016 Belgian-French 3D computer-animated adventure comedy film directed by Vincent Kesteloot and Ben Stassen and written by Lee Christopher, Domonic Paris and Graham Weldon. The film is loosely based on Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe, but from the point of view of the island's animals.
Robinson Crusoe | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by |
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Produced by |
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Written by |
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Based on | Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe |
Starring |
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Music by | Ramin Djawadi |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
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Budget | $13 million |
Box office | $39.5 million |
Screenplay
All the animals inhabited a tiny isolated South Pacific Island. One of them, a Scarlet Macaw named Mak and his friends, including an echidna named Epi, a chameleon named Carmello, a Tapir named Rosie, a kingfisher named Kiki, an old goat named Scrubby, and a pangolin named Pango all lived the perfect lives; blue skies, beautiful turquoise water, and lots of delicious food and crunchy insects. But every day is the same and Mak is really bored. Convinced there is more than just water over the horizon, he dreams of leaving his little paradise and exploring the new world. Meanwhile, an English hunter named Robinson Crusoe and his dog, Aynsley have booked passage on a ship to the new world to seek riches and gold. During a very violent storm at night, the two are accidentally locked in the ship's hull along with a pair of embittered cats, Mal and May, while the crew escapes with their lives, leaving the latter behind. During the storm, Mak, his friends and the rest of the animals of the island try to save Scrubby from falling to his death, which nearly goes bad, while trying to seek shelter in a cave on the high grounds from the storm.
Arriving on the island, the next morning, Crusoe begins to look for gold and riches while the animals of the island, unsure of what to make of the strangers, hide out on the beach. Mak, seeing his chance to get off the island, convinces the other animals of the island to hide while he keeps an eye on them. Unfortunately, the next day, he is attacked by Mal and May, who have survived the storm. Luckily, Aynsley he drives them away to drive them off and Crusoe takes Mak aboard the wreckage to recover from his wing injury from the attack. He renames the bird Tuesday (after their second day on the island) and Aynsley convinces him that he and Crusoe are friends.
Determined to take possession of the island and make Crusoe leave the island, Mal and May trick the animals of the island into believing Crusoe has murdered Mak. They have them attack Crusoe while they go after Mak and Aynsley in order to cover their tracks. In the ensuing chaos, Aynsley is pinned under a door as the remains of the ship begins to catch fire. Mak makes it out in time, but Aynsley dies in the explosion, which strands Mal and May on "Curse Island", a little island where all the evil, exiled animals live.
After Crusoe mourns Aynsley's death, Mak leads a grieving Crusoe to the others animals, having realized the cats' deception, in an attempt to cheer him up. Slowly but surely, the animals they realize that it is not bad and begin helping him adjust to life on the island by providing him with fruits for food and helping him build a tree house, a "pipeline" for the fresh water supply, and a watchtower in case of any passing ships. However, Kiki becomes increasingly annoyed by the others' willingness to adapt to Crusoe's lifestyle as the months go by. Yet, sometimes, Crusoe seems upset by the dwindling possibility of a rescue. One afternoon, Kiki, worked up, flies out near the remains of the ship; lamenting about their lives with Crusoe, until Mal and May, with multiple litters of youngsters and having survived with nothing to eat but bugs on the rock, manage to get back on the main island from the wooden plank remains of the ship and decide to put an end to Crusoe and his friends' lives and wreak havoc on their little piece of Eden.
Despite Mal and May's best efforts, the animals they manage to defeat them back momentarily. Realizing the cats won't stop harassing them, at night, Mak leads them to the watchtower and, with his friends' help, traps them inside while the animals of the island knock it down the cats into the sea. However, their victory is short lived when a fire set by May earlier endangers Crusoe and the evil animals, who was knocked unconscious in the previous fight. Mak manages to get him out, also to the evil animals who were stuck in a log on fire. They manage to get them out to the animals evil but Crusoe becomes caught in some rigging and is rendered unconscious again by a falling wooden plank.
Complicating matters is that the fire attracts the attention of a band of pirates led by the Captain Long John Silver, who drive off the "animals" trying to save Crusoe on the same night and "rescue" him the next morning. Crusoe manages to placate them with a fictionalized version of what happened at the expense of the captain forcing him into the crew and refusing to return him back home to England due to the fear of being hung from the gallows; despite considering Crusoe's story as nothing more than yarn. During his story-telling, Mak, who followed Crusoe onto the boat, tells the true story of what really happened to a pair of mice named Rufus and Cecil.
A poorly planned escape attempt by Crusoe results in a hectic chase. Mak rescues him (by tricking the pirates with a perfect voice imitation of the Captain momentarily) and the mice and make their way back to the island while the cats, who snuck onto the ship on a jerry-rigged life raft made out from the remains of the watchtower, which Crusoe later uses to row back to the island, are adopted in by the pirates.
During the credits, stills of the animals and the evil animals that are now reformed' lives with Robinson Crusoe along with Rufus and Cecil are revealed as they repair the tree house while readjusting to their lives on the island and the cats adjusting to life with Long John Silver and his crew.
Character | German | English | Brazilian Portuguese |
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Robinson Crusoe | Matthias Schweighöfer | Yuri Lowenthal | Danton Mello |
Papagei Dienstag / Mak | Kaya Yanar | David Howard Thornton | Manolo Rey |
Tapir Rosie | Cindy aus Marzahn | Laila Berzins | Mabel Cezar |
Ziegenbock Zottel / Scrubby | Dieter Hallervorden | Joey Camen | Rodrigo Oliveira |
Stachelschwein / Epi | Aylin Tezel | Sandy Fox | Ana Lucia Menezes |
Carmello | Gerald Schaale | Colin Metzger | Márcio Simões |
Kiki | Melanie Hinze | Lindsay Torrance | Miriam Ficher |
Pango | Tobias Lelle | Jeff Doucette | Daniel Müller |
Ping / May | Ghadah Al-Akel | Debi Tinsley | Luisa Viotti |
Pong / Mal | Tommy Morgenstern | Jeff Doucette | Claudio Galvan |
Edgar / Aynsley | Bert Franzke | Doug Stone | Marco Ribeiro |
Rufus | Jesco Wirthgen | Joe Ochman | Guto Nejaim |
Cecil | Jan Makino | Michael Sorich | Cafi Balloussier |
Tom Cat | - | Kyle Hebert | Ricardo Rossatto |
Friday | - | Jay Jones | - |
Captain Pirate | Axel Lutter | Dennis O'Connor | Isaac Bardavid |
Sleeping Sailor | - | George Babbit | - |
Sailor #1 | - | Joe Ochman | Marcelo Sandryini |
Sailor #2 | - | Lex Lang | Hercules Franco |
Bosun | Jan David Ronfeldt | Ron Allen | - |
Box office
As of 11 September 2016 the film has grossed $8.0 million in North America and $30.4 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $38.4 million.
In the United States, where the film is marketed as The Wild Life, it was released on 9 September 2016, alongside The Disappointments Room, Sully and When the Bough Breaks, and was projected to gross around $5 million from 2,493 theaters in its opening weekend. It went on to gross $3.4 million in its opening weekend, finishing 5th at the box office. In China, the film was released on 4 October 2016, and has grossed CN¥48.6 million.
Critical response
Robinson Crusoe received negative reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 15%, based on 52 reviews, with an average rating of 4.2/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "The Wild Life uses its classic source material as a half-hearted springboard into a colorfully animated but essentially empty experience that only the youngest of viewers will find at all entertaining." On Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average to reviews, the film has a score of 36 out of 100, based on 17 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".
Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B-" on an A+ to F scale.