Barnyard (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Barnyard
Directed by Steve Oedekerk
Produced by Steve Oedekerk
Written by Steve Oedekerk
Starring Kevin James
Jeff Garcia
Tino Insana
Courteney Cox Arquette
Cam Clarke
Rob Paulsen
Sam Elliott
Danny Glover
Andie MacDowell
Wanda Sykes
Dom Irrera
Maria Bamford
Steve Oedekerk
Distributed by Flag of the United States Paramount Pictures
Flag of Switzerland Universal Pictures
Running time Approx. 83 minutes
Language English
Budget $51 million
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Barnyard is a computer-animated film, produced by Nickelodeon Movies and distributed by Paramount Pictures, that was released on August 4, 2006 (October 20, 2006 in the United Kingdom). The film was directed by Steve Oedekerk (Kung Pow and many thumb movies), who was also the principal scriptwriter, and stars the voices of Kevin James, Courteney Cox Arquette, Sam Elliott, Danny Glover, Andie MacDowell and Wanda Sykes. The film was rated PG by the MPAA for some mild peril and rude humor. Most of the production was carried out in San Clemente, California. It is distributed in Switzerland, Spain, and Netherlands by Universal Pictures.

A spin-off TV series, Back at the Barnyard, premiered September 29th, 2007.[1] This makes it the second Nicktoon to be spun-off from a movie, the first being Jimmy Neutron.

Contents

While some characters in the film are humans, most are anthropomorphic animals which in the presence of humans pretend to be ordinary animals. In particular, when no humans are around they walk on two legs, and talk; much like Toy Story.

The film opens with Otis (Kevin James), a "male cow" (see below), climbing on a surfboard with a block of ice underneath it on a hill with four of his friends: Peck (Rob Paulsen), the rooster who can't crow; Pip (Jeff Garcia) the mouse, Otis's best friend; Pig (Tino Insana), the perpetually hungry pig; and Freddy (Cam Clarke), a ferret constantly battling the desire to eat Peck or the other chickens. Otis and friends fly down the mountain and eventually crash into a chicken farm. They land in the barn for a meeting being held by his adoptive father and barnyard leader, Ben the cow (Sam Elliott). Though obviously irritated by Otis's late arrival, Ben continues the meeting.

After the meeting, Ben lectures Otis on the younger cow's irresponsibility-- the cell phone call during the meeting and Otis's laid-back nature in general. The elder cow tells his son to grow up, saying that he will never be happy if he spends all his time goofing off. When Otis begins to gripe about his night watch shift, Ben tells him that, "A strong man stands up for himself. A stronger man stands up for others."

After a day spent goofing around with friends and meeting Bessy and Daisy, two new female cows, Otis talks Ben out of his guard shift in order to attend a party in the barn. Later that night, a pack of coyotes led by Dag (David Koechner) sneak into the barnyard and raid the chicken coop. Ben fights them off, but collapses after the altercation. Etta the chicken (Andie MacDowell) rushes to the barn house party and tells Otis about Ben. Otis rushes out of the barn and finds Ben, wounded, lying on the ground. He looks at Otis, as if to say something, but then passes away.

After Ben's death, Otis is elected to be the new farm leader. However, he still lacks maturity in his new position resulting in being caught in a daytime party by the farmer. Otis also leads the rebellious Jersey cows in stealing the neighbor's car to get revenge on a cow-tipping boy.

While patrolling for coyotes, Otis confronts the pack, but is easily defeated. Dag and his gang return the next day, kidnapping a bunch of chickens in broad daylight while Otis is preoccupied about leaving the farm. To make up for his mistake, Otis sets off to confront the coyotes again. He is defeated again, but his friends eventually show up and help him to send the pack fleeing. After the battle, Otis and company return to the farm where Daisy the cow gives birth to a calf she names Ben.

Actor Animal Name
Kevin James Male cow Otis
S. Scott Bullock Male cow Eddy
Courteney Cox Arquette Female cow Daisy
Sam Elliott Male cow Ben
Danny Glover Male mule Miles
Andie MacDowell Hen chicken Etta
Wanda Sykes Female cow Bessy
Jeff Garcia Male mouse Pip
Rob Paulsen Rooster, male gopher, and pizza delivery boy Peck/Gopher/Pizza Guy
Cam Clarke Male ferret Freddy
Tino Insana Male pig Pig
Dom Irrera Male sheepdog Duke
David Koechner Male coyote Dag
Madeline Lovejoy Female chick Maddy
Maurice LaMarche Male cow Igg
John DiMaggio Male cow Budd
Maria Bamford Human Mrs. Beady
Fred Tatasciore Human Unnamed Farmer
Steve Oedekerk Human boy/Human male adult/Various animals Eugene Beady (aka Snotty Boy)/Mr. Beady/Additional animals
Nathaniel Martin Stroman Rooster Root
Paul Butcher Rooster Elvis- Singing Chicken

Complex scenes in Barnyard were rendered using 64-bit computers from Sun Microsystems, based on a 620-computer render farm, including Sun Fire x64 servers. [2] It was Nickelodeon's most technically challenging animated film, which included vast landscapes with realistic rendering and lighting, as well as complex scenes with over 200 characters.

The switch from a Dell/Microsoft Windows render farm to a Sun/Linux render farm occurred midway in the production [3], when the schedules began to slip and the management recognized that the horsepower based on 32-bit hardware was insufficient so that the release date had to be rescheduled to autumn. With Sun's solution, the release was shifted back to summertime.

Over 180 characters were rigged for animation [4] with rigs being capable of two and four leg stances and walk cycles, squash and stretch, procedural secondary animation of flesh and hair, and motion capture from Omation's 22-camera Vicon mocap stage.

The key software applications running on Sun servers, for rendering purposes, included Avid Technology's Softimage XSI animation software, Mental Ray rendering software, and Eyeon's Digital Fusion digital compositing software.

It grossed $16 million its opening weekend, and made $73 million in its domestic theatrical release. It has made $108 million in its worldwide theatrical release.

The film has a 24% rating at rottentomatoes.com, but has a number of advocates, including Michael Medved, who gave Barnyard four stars (out of four) calling it "hilarious, thrilling" and "flat out one of the year's best films."[5].

In the real world a male bovine is called a bull or a steer and does not have an udder. However, in this film several characters are "male cows" with an udder. There is also a different character who is a bull, so the creators really must have thought cows and bulls are separate animals[citation needed]. While the director said he did this for fun, many commentators considered it an error, and/or found it irritating[citation needed]. Some reviewers jokingly referred to the film as a bovine Transamerica[citation needed]. This is, however, not the first time cattle have been portrayed in this way. In the United Kingdom, Boddington's Ale featured an animated "male cow" in some of its 1990s advertising, and recent computer animated adverts for Anchor butter portray two "male cows" as having udders. Also, the Dairylea adverts in the UK have male cows with udders. A more recent advert portrays that they really are male because they all have male voices.


Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.