2012 British-American stop-motion comedy film
This article is about the 2012 film. For the book on which the film is based, see The Pirates ! In an venture with Scientists
The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! ( released in North America, Australia and New Zealand as The Pirates! Band of Misfits ) is a 2012 3D stop-motion animated daredevil comedy film produced by the british studio apartment Aardman Animations and the american studio Sony Pictures Animation as their second and final collaborative project. Directed by Peter Lord, the film is based on the 2004 novel The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists, the foremost book from Gideon Defoe ‘s The Pirates! serial. [ 7 ] It follows a crew of amateur pirates in their attack to win the Pirate of the Year competition.

The film was distributed by Columbia Pictures and was released on 28 March 2012 in the United Kingdom, and on 27 April 2012 in the United States. [ 8 ] The Pirates! features the voices of Hugh Grant, Martin Freeman, Imelda Staunton, David Tennant, Jeremy Piven, Salma Hayek, Lenny Henry and Brian Blessed. The Pirates! is the fifth feature film by Aardman Animations, and its first stop-motion animated feature since Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in 2005, and Aardman ‘s first stop-motion animated film released in 3D and shoot in 2.35:1 widescreen. The film received broadly positivist reviews, [ 9 ] and was a modest box function achiever, earning $ 123 million against a budget american samoa high as $ 55 million. [ 4 ] [ 10 ] The film was nominated for the 2013 Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, but lost to Pixar ‘s Brave. It was the moment film from Sony Pictures Animation to be nominated after Surf’s Up .

plat [edit ]

In London, 1837, Queen Victoria is told that England rules the entire ocean, with the exception of the pirates, whom she despises. meanwhile, the Pirate Captain leads a close-knit group of amateur pirates who are trying to make a mention for themselves on the high seas. To prove his worth, the Captain enters the annual Pirate of the Year competition, the winner being whoever can plunder the most gold. After respective failed attempts to plunder mundane ships, they come across HMS Beagle and capture its lone passenger, Charles Darwin, who recognizes the crew ‘s pet “ parrot, ” Polly, as the end living dodo. Darwin recommends that they enter her in the scientist of the Year contest at the Royal Society of London in hopes of impressing Queen Victoria, his love interest. The pirates disguise themselves as scientists to enter the contest, and the dodo display wins the crown respect, which turns out to be a meeting with the Queen. The Captain hides Polly precisely before the meet. She requests that Polly be put in her caressing menagerie, but the Captain refuses and by chance reveals his true identity. The queen orders him executed, but Darwin steps in to spare the Captain ‘s life, telling the queen that entirely he knows where Polly is hidden. The queen pardons the Captain and orders Darwin to find Polly by any means necessary. Darwin takes the Captain to a tavern with Mr. Bobo, his train chimpanzee, and they steal the shuttlecock. The Pirate Captain chases them into the Tower of London, where the Queen is waiting. She dismisses Darwin and alternatively offers the Pirate Captain enough care for to ensure his win as Pirate of the Year in exchange for Polly. He accepts the volunteer and returns to his crew, assuring them Polly is still safe in his byssus. At the Pirate of the Year ceremony, the Captain is announced as the winner, but rival pirate Black Bellamy reveals the Queen ‘s excuse and explains that if pardoned, then one is no longer a pirate and, as such, can not be Pirate of the year. The Captain is stripped of his care for and plagiarist overdress and admits the loss of Polly to his crew, who abandon him. The Captain returns to London and decides to rescue Polly. He reunites with Darwin, learning that the Queen is a extremity of an exclusive company of world leaders that feast on queer creatures, and that Polly is to be served at their next banquet. The Pirate Captain and Darwin work together to steal an airship and find the Queen ‘s flagship, the QV1, while Mr. Bobo sets out to find the rest of the Captain ‘s crew to enlist their serve. Aboard the QV1, the Queen locates the Captain and Darwin and attempts to kill both of them, but Mr. Bobo and the gang hail to the rescue and defeat her. They unintentionally mix the embark ‘s hoard of baking sodium carbonate with vinegar, causing a fierce reaction that breaks the embark in two. The Captain rescues Polly and they escape safely, leaving behind the angered Queen. With his reputation among pirates restored because of the large bounty placed on his head by the Queen, the Pirate Captain and his crew continue to explore the eminent seas in search of venture .

Voice cast [edit ]

production [edit ]

Unlike Aardman ‘s final film Flushed Away, which was computer animated in the style of claymation, Aardman extensively used calculator graphics to complement and enrich the chiefly stop-motion film with ocular elements such as sea and scenery. Peter Lord commented, “ With Pirates!, I must say that the newfangled engineering has made Pirates! actually liberating to make, easy to make because the fact that you can shoot a lot of green shield stuff, the fact that you can easily extend the sets with CGI, the fact that you can put the sea in there and a beautiful wooden boat that, honestly, would never sail in a million years, you can take that and put it into a beautiful CGI setting and believe it. ” [ 18 ]

Naming [edit ]

For the release in the United States, the film was retitled The Pirates! Band of Misfits, as Defoe ‘s books do n’t have “ the same following outside of the United Kingdom ”, so it was not necessary to keep the original claim. [ 19 ] Hugh Grant, the part of The Pirate Captain, said that the studio “ did n’t think the Americans would like the longer title ”. [ 20 ] Response from the director of the film, Peter Lord, was that “ some people reckoned the United Kingdom title would n’t charm / amuse / work in the United States. Tricky to prove eh ? ” [ 21 ] Quentin Cooper of the BBC analysed the change of the title and listed respective theories. One of them is that the british audience is more tolerant for the eccentricity of the british animators. Another is that the movie makers did not want to challenge the United States viewers who do not accept the hypothesis of development. He besides developed his own explanation, in which he notes that the news “ scientist ” is rarely used in the Hollywood films due to it not being “ cool ”, representing “ the harebrained scientist or the dweeby nerd that snip fishy, have no social skills, play video games, long for unachievable women ”. [ 19 ]

controversy [edit ]

In January 2012, it was reported that the latest trailer of The Pirates! attracted some very negative reactions from the “ leprosy community ”. In the dawdler that was released in December, The Pirate Captain lands on a ship demanding amber, but is told by a crowd member, “ Gold ? Afraid we do n’t have any gold, old man. This is a leper boat ! ” His arm then falls off, and he says “ See ? ” [ 22 ] Lepra Health in Action and some officials from the World Health Organization claimed that the antic depicted leprosy in a derogative manner, and it “ reinforces the misconceptions which leads to stigma and discrimination that prevents people from coming forward for treatment ”. They demanded an apology and removal of the offending scenery, [ 23 ] to which Aardman responded : “ After reviewing the matter, we decided to change the setting out of respect and sensitivity for those who suffer from leprosy. The last thing anyone intended was to offend anyone … ” LHA responded that it was “ truly beguiled that Aardman has decided to amend the film ”, while the dawdler was expected to be pulled down from websites, [ 24 ] and the concluding version of the film changes the line in interview to “ Gold ? This is a plague boat, old man ! I ‘d give my correct arm for some gold ! ” and when his arm falls off, he rather says “ Or my leave ! ” [ 25 ]

music [edit ]

The film ‘s sexual conquest was composed by Theodore Shapiro who made his enliven sport sexual conquest introduction with this film. The score was released digitally by Madison Gate Records on 24 April 2012, [ 26 ] and as a cd-r on-demand on 17 May 2012. [ 27 ] The film besides includes a total of previously released songs by versatile artists, including “ Swords of a Thousand Men “ by Tenpole Tudor, “ Ranking Full-Stop ” by The Beat, “ Fiesta ” by The Pogues, “ London Calling “ by The Clash, “ You Can Get It If You Really Want “ by Jimmy Cliff, “ Alright “ by Supergrass, and “ I ‘m not Crying ” by Flight of the Conchords. [ 28 ]

release [edit ]

base media [edit ]

The Pirates! was released on DVD, Blu-ray, and Blu-ray 3D on 28 August 2012 in the United States, [ 29 ] and on 10 September 2012 in the United Kingdom. [ 30 ] The film is accompanied with an 18-minute [ 31 ] short discontinue motion animated film called So You Want to Be a Pirate!, where The Pirate Captain hosts his own talk show about being a true pirate. [ 32 ] The short was besides released on DVD on 13 August 2012, entirely at Tesco stores in the United Kingdom. [ 33 ] As a forwarding for the release of The Pirates!, Sony attached to every DVD and Blu-ray a code to download a LittleBigPlanet 2 minipack of Sackboy dress that represents 3 of the characters : The Pirate Captain, Cutlass Liz and Black Bellamy. [ 34 ] [ 35 ]

reception [edit ]

Box agency [edit ]

The film has grossed $ 123,054,041 worldwide. $ 26 million came from United Kingdom, [ 36 ] $ 31 million from the United States and Canada, along with around $ 92 million from other territories, including the United Kingdom. [ 4 ] As of 2017, it is the fourthly highest-grossing stop-motion animated film of all time. In North America, it ranked fifth on its possibility day, taking in $ 2,749,959, slenderly higher than Arthur Christmas ’ $ 2.4 million opening day. The film finally made $ 11.1 million on its opening weekend and reaching moment at the box office behind Think Like a Man while averaging $ 3,315 through its 3,358 field ’ second, on its second weekend, it dropped by 50.6 %, ranking fourth with $ 5,502,482, then to seventh place with $ 3,143,442, dropping by 42.9 %. In the United Kingdom, it opened to third with $ 3,486,095 behind The Hunger Games and Wrath of the Titans, averaging $ 6,443 through its 554 cinema, it saw a 1.3 % decay on its moment weekend with $ 3,486,280, averaging $ 6,240 per cinema, and bringing the UK megascopic to $ 12,251,022 .

critical response [edit ]

On recapitulation collector Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an 86 % approval rat based on 153 reviews ; the average score is 7.30/10. The web site ‘s consensus reads, “ It may not quite scale Aardman ‘s accustomed delirious heights, but The Pirates! hush represents some of the smartest, most skillfully animated fare that advanced film has to offer. ” [ 9 ] Metacritic, which assigns a leaden average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, gives the film a score of 73 based on 31 reviews, indicating “ generally favorable reviews ”. [ 37 ]

Accolades [edit ]

Internet Meme [edit ]

A quote that states, ” Well, yes, but actually, no ” comes from the main quality, the Pirate Captain, and has been used in internet memes that are related to companies or organizations which try to convince people that there is no argue to worry when this is actually not the case. however, the quality was initially misquoted – he actually says “ adept think, but actually no. ” [ 45 ]

Cancelled sequel [edit ]

By August 2011, Aardman had been already working on a sequel estimate, [ 46 ] and by June 2012, a story had been prepared, awaiting Sony to back the project. [ 47 ] Eventually, Sony decided not to support the project due to insufficient external earnings. According to Lord, “ it got close, but not quite close adequate. I was all fired up for doing more. It was such playfulness to do ! We actually have a bill poster for The Pirates! In an Adventure with Cowboys!. That would have been good capital. ” [ 48 ]

References [edit ]