Monsters vs. Aliens
Monsters vs. Aliens is a 2009 American computer-animated monster comedy movie produced by DreamWorks Animation. It was the first computer animated movie to be directly produced in a stereoscopic 3-D format instead of being changed into 3-D after completion, adding $15 million to the movie's budget.[6] The movie was set to release in May 2009. It was pushed up to March 27, 2009. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray September 29, 2009 in North America. It stars Reese Witherspoon, Seth Rogen, Hugh Laurie, Will Arnett, Conrad Vernon, Rainn Wilson, Kiefer Sutherland, Stephen Colbert and Paul Rudd. There is also an animated television series of of the same name by Nickelodeon and Dreamworks Animation Television.
Monsters vs. Aliens | |
---|---|
Directed by | Conrad Vernon Rob Letterman |
Produced by | Lisa Stewart Co-producers: Jill Hopper Latifa Ouaou |
Written by | Maya Forbes Wallace Wolodarsky Rob Letterman Jonathan Aibel Glenn Berger Conrad Vernon |
Starring | Reese Witherspoon Seth Rogen Hugh Laurie Will Arnett Conrad Vernon Rainn Wilson Kiefer Sutherland Stephen Colbert Paul Rudd |
Music by | Henry Jackman |
Edited by | Joyce Arrastia Eric Dapkewicz |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures[2][1] DreamWorks Animation[1] |
Release date | March 27, 2009[3] |
Running time | 94 minutes[4] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $175 million |
Box office | $383,466,116[5] |
Release Dates
Country | Premiere |
---|---|
Albania | 18 March 2009 |
Kazakhstan | 19 March 2009 |
Russia | 19 March 2009 |
Ukraine | 19 March 2009 |
Philippines | 25 March 2009 |
Czech Republic | 26 March 2009 |
26 March 2009 | |
Slovakia | 26 March 2009 |
Bulgaria | 27 March 2009 |
Canada | 27 March 2009 |
Serbia and Montenegro | 27 March 2009 |
United States | 27 March 2009 |
China | 31 March 2009 |
Belgium | 1 April 2009 |
Switzerland | 1 April 2009 (French speaking region) |
Egypt | 1 April 2009 |
France | 1 April 2009 |
Netherlands | 1 April 2009 |
Trinidad and Tobago | 1 April 2009 |
United Arab Emirates | 2 April 2009 |
Argentina | 2 April 2009 |
Austria | 2 April 2009 |
Australia | 2 April 2009 |
Bolivia | 2 April 2009 |
Switzerland | 2 April 2009 (German speaking region) |
Chile | 2 April 2009 |
Germany | 2 April 2009 |
Dominican Republic | 2 April 2009 |
Greece | 2 April 2009 |
Croatia | 2 April 2009 |
Hungary | 2 April 2009 |
Kuwait | 2 April 2009 |
New Zealand | 2 April 2009 |
Peru | 2 April 2009 |
Puerto Rico | 2 April 2009 |
Portugal | 2 April 2009 |
Brazil | 3 April 2009 |
Colombia | 3 April 2009 |
Denmark | 3 April 2009 |
3 April 2009 | |
3 April 2009 | |
Spain | 3 April 2009 |
Finland | 3 April 2009 |
United Kingdom | 3 April 2009 |
Ireland | 3 April 2009 |
Iceland | 3 April 2009 |
Italy | 3 April 2009 |
Lithuania | 3 April 2009 |
Latvia | 3 April 2009 |
Mexico | 3 April 2009 |
Norway | 3 April 2009 |
Panama | 3 April 2009 |
Sweden | 3 April 2009 |
Taiwan | 3 April 2009 |
Uruguay | 3 April 2009 |
Venezuela | 3 April 2009 |
South Africa | 3 April 2009 |
Slovenia | 4 April 2009 |
Indonesia | 8 April 2009 |
9 April 2009 | |
Thailand | 9 April 2009 |
Romania | 10 April 2009 |
Turkey | 10 April 2009 |
Angola | 14 April 2009 |
South Korea | 23 April 2009 |
Pakistan | 1 May 2009 |
Malaysia | 27 May 2009 |
Singapore | 28 May 2009 |
Poland | 29 May 2009 |
Japan | 11 July 2009 |
Cast and characters
Monsters
- Reese Witherspoon as Ginormica: Susan Murphy from Modesto, California who is hit by a radioactive meteor on her wedding day, making her grow to a height of 49 feet 11.5 inches (15.227 m). She is shy and wants nothing more than to return to her old life, but slowly warms up to her new status as a monster. Because of her exposure with the meteorite's radiation, and her size, she is very strong and has a resistance to energy attacks.
- Seth Rogen as B.O.B.: A mass in which you can't kill made when a genetically-altered tomato was injected with a chemically-altered ranch dessert topping. His greatest strength is to eat anything as well as you can't destoy him. His one weakness is that his change on form didn't give him a brain, making him very dumb. He sometimes mistaks the other monsters' goals in life for his own. His main goal in life is to eat things.
- Hugh Laurie as Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D: A smart but mad scientist who, in an experiment to inspire himself with the resilience and powers of a cockroach, ending up with a giant cockroach's head and some personality things of the cockroach. He is charming and powerful.
- Will Arnett as the Missing Link: A 20,000-year-old fish-ape hybrid who was found frozen and thawed out by scientists, only to escape and make trouble at his old lagoon habitat. Normally thought to as Link, he behaves as a jock most of the time, but is rather out of shape. Despite this, he is an expert martial-artist and takes it upon himself to lead the team in attacks, even if his attitude doesn't always work to their advantage.
- Conrad Vernon as Insectosaurus: Formerly a 1 inch (25 mm) grub transformed by nuclear radiation into a 350 ft monster with the power to shoot silk out of his nose. He is unable to speak clearly, and is mesmerized by bright lights (normally used to lead him to other places). He also has a close friendship with the Missing Link, who can understand what Insectosaurus is saying. In his butterfly form, he has wings and is able to fly and becomes the Monsters' mode of transportation.
Aliens
- Rainn Wilson as Gallaxhar: An evil alien overlord who hopes to take over Earth. He is served by big robot probes and has a big cloning machine. He says to have suffered many traumas in his youth, driving him to destroy his own homeworld, and plans to make a new one on Earth - although viewers never hear most of the story. He wants to collect quantonium - the stuff that transformed Susan - to give his cloning machine enough power to make an army of clones of himself to conquer Earth, and is determined to extract it from Susan. Gallaxhar serves as the main antagonist of the movie.
- Amy Poehler as Gallaxhar's Computer: A smooth-working, user-friendly computer that follows his orders, with a sarcastic tone.
Making of the movie
Ed Leonard, CTO of DreamWorks Animation, says it took about 45.6 million hours to make Monsters vs. Aliens, more than eight times as many as the first Shrek. Many hundred Hewlett-Packard xw8600 workstations were used, along with a large and powerful render farm of HP ProLiant blade servers. It had over 9,000 server cores, to read through the animation. The movie had to have 120 terabytes (120,000 gigabytes) of data to complete. It also had one explosion scene alone having 6 terabytes (6000 gigabytes).[7]
Since Monsters vs. Aliens, all big movies released by DreamWorks Animation will be made in a 3-D format, using Intel's InTru3D technology.[8]
Monsters Vs. Aliens Media
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Monsters vs. Aliens". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved July 7, 2017.
- ↑ "Monsters vs. Aliens". AllMovie. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
- ↑ Monsters Scared Off by Avatar. E! Entertainment. 2007-09-20. http://www.comcast.net/entertainment/index.jsp?fn=2007/09/20/233314.html. Retrieved 2007-09-20.
- ↑ "Monsters vs. Aliens". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
- ↑ "Monsters vs. Aliens (2009) - Financial Information". The Numbers.
- ↑ Wloszczyna, Susan. First look: Monsters vs. Aliens is the ultimate; a 3-D 'first'. https://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/news/2008-03-10-monsters-aliens_N.htm. Retrieved 2008-05-16.
- ↑ Boshoff, Theo (31 March 2009). "Monsters, aliens come alive". ITWeb. http://www.itweb.co.za/sections/computing/2009/0903311157.asp.
- ↑ Intel (2008-07-08). "Intel, DreamWorks Animation Form Strategic Alliance to Revolutionize 3-D Filmmaking Technology". Press release. http://www.intel.com/pressroom/archive/releases/20080708corp.htm. Retrieved 2008-11-05.