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==Reaction==
==Reaction==
''Jump In!'' broke the record previously set by ''[[The Cheetah Girls 2]]'' as the highest rated DCOM premiere with 8.2 million viewers. <ref>[http://multichannel.com/article/CA6408870.html]</ref> and garnering a 5.4 at the [[Internet Movie Database]]. It was later beat out for highest ratings by [[High School Musical 2]] ([[Corbin Bleu]] also starred) on [[August 17]], [[2007]] which gained 17.24 million viewers than Jump In!'s 8.2 million.
''Jump In!'' broke the record previously set by ''[[The Cheetah Girls 2]]'' as the highest rated DCOM premiere with 8.2 million viewers. <ref>[http://multichannel.com/article/CA6408870.html Disney Movie Skips to Another Record - 1/22/2007 - Multichannel News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and garnering a 5.4 at the [[Internet Movie Database]]. It was later beat out for highest ratings by [[High School Musical 2]] ([[Corbin Bleu]] also starred) on [[August 17]], [[2007]] which gained 17.24 million viewers than Jump In!'s 8.2 million.


==Release dates==
==Release dates==

Revision as of 07:59, 9 February 2008

Jump In!
Official film poster for Jump In!
Directed byPaul Hoen
Written byDoreen Spicer
Regina Y. Hicks
Karin Gist
Produced byKevin Lafferty
StarringCorbin Bleu
Keke Palmer
Laivan Greene
Shanica Knowles
David Reivers
Kylee Russell
Rebecca Williams
Patrick Johnson, Jr.
Narrated byPatrick Johnson, Jr.
Distributed byDisney Channel
Release dates
January 12, 2007
Running time
85 minutes
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

Jump In! is the 69th Disney Channel Original Movie, which premiered on January 12, 2007. It was released on Disney Channel UK on April 27 2007. The movie, starring Corbin Bleu from High School Musical and Keke Palmer from Akeelah and the Bee, revolves around a young boxer, Izzy Daniels (Corbin Bleu), who trains to follow in his father's footsteps by winning the Golden Glove. When his friend, Mary (Keke Palmer), however, asks him to substitute for a team member in a Double Dutch tournament, the young man discovers a hidden passion for jumping rope.[1] Filming took place from June-July 2006 in Toronto, Canada.

Synopsis

Seventeen-year-old Izzy Daniels is a star boxer and the son of a golden-glove champion. His eight year old sister, Karin, is crazy about Double Dutch and Izzy is asked to take Karin and her friends to a Double Dutch competition, where Mary and her team are entering. Izzy has often seen them Double Dutch and is always bothering them, but during the competition he acts out of character, standing and cheering along with everyone else.

Izzy finds he likes Mary, a member of the jump team The Joy Jumpers, who place fourth in the tournament. They make the city finals, but when Yolanda, the fourth member of the team, decides to quit and join their rival team, The Dutch Dragons, they face the prospect of forfeiting the tournament. Izzy, after learning of Yolanda's departure, quips "Why, did she finally figure out Double Dutch is lame?" Mary then challenges Izzy to speed jump, and when he does it much better than they expect, they ask him to join the team, but he refuses because of what his friends might think. When the other members of the Joy Jumpers, Keisha and Shauna, ask him to fill in until they find a permanent replacement, he finally relents. His conditions are that they practice before school and in his dad's boxing gym, where no one's going to watch.

Meanwhile, Izzy has a boxing match with Rodney Tyler, the school bully, determining who will win the "Golden Gloves", which goes to the best boxer. Izzy beats him, but Rodney doesn't accept it. He claims he just got lucky and pushes Izzy for a rematch. Izzy says no, and walks out of the gym.

Izzy improves tremendously at Double Dutch, and begins to love the sport. He tells the Joy Jumpers that he'd like to be on their team permanently, and they happily agree. Izzy and Mary started to like each other and kiss in their fire-escape. However, when Rodney finds Izzy jumping Double Dutch before class, he snaps some photos, prints them and hangs them all over the school. He then tells Izzy, "So that's why you won't give me a rematch! 'Cuz you're too busy jumping Double Dutch!" Izzy becomes mad and says he'll do the rematch. But in the middle of the fight, he tells Rodney that he's sick of being mad and that he's not going to let his anger control him. He walks out of the match and Rodney runs after him, intent on beating him up. But he trips on the cords surrounding the ring, giving Izzy a chance to get even. Instead, he just walks out.

The only girl boxer, Tammy, understands how Izzy feels. She gives him a pep talk on how she never quit boxing when the guys teased her, and that he shouldn't quit either, just because they made fun of him.

Meanwhile, Mary, Keisha and Shauna meet up for the city finals, but without Izzy, they feel like giving up. Izzy then walks in and asks, "What, were you really gonna start without me?" He apologizes and Mary smiles and hands him a uniform. They change their name to the Hot Chili Steppers and all is forgiven as the tournament begins. They get first in the compulsory, then second in speed. This ties them with the Dutch Dragons and the freestyle will determine it all. The Hot Chili Steppers get first, and go on to the State Championship.

After their performance, Izzy notices Rodney in the crowd, and asks him for a truce, which he accepts.

The narrator in the story was Rodney, and he was telling the story to kids, so the movie was depicted to be a story which Rodney was telling.

Cast

Actor Role
Corbin Bleu Isadore "Izzy" Daniels
David Reivers Kennith Daniels
Keke Palmer Mary Thomas
Shanica Knowles Shauna Lewis
Patrick Johnson, Jr. Rodney Tyler / Narrator
Jeremiah Ancheta Jhem Daniels
Laivan Greene Kiesha Ray
Kylee Russell Karin Daniels
Rebecca Williams Tammy Lewis
Jajube Mandela Yolanda Brooks
John Kane George Scott

Production

The film was originally set to star Raven Symoné and be named Double Dutch, but due to unknown reasons it was later revamped into Jump In! with Corbin Bleu.

Jump In! is the 69th Disney Channel Original Movie and went into production in 2006. Earlier titles for the film included "Jump", "Jump In" and "Jump Start", with some early trailers even showing the "Jump Start" title.

Karin Gist and Regina Hicks are credited as writers on "Jump In." They are also writer/Producer, writer/ Executive Producer respectively on the sitcom "Girlfriends."

Doreen Spicer, the original writer of "Jump In!", is credited as co-Developer and Supervising Producer of The Proud Family.

Promotion for the film began in the Summer of 2006, with a poster appearing in the program for the High School Musical Tour. Advertisements highlighted Corbin Bleu's association with High School Musical and ran heavily during re-airings of that film. Several videos from the film were also put into heavy rotation on Disney Channel, airing during breaks in regular programming.

Corbin Bleu became very good at jumping and even performed some of his own stunts like the donkey kick and pushups, but he did have a stunt double for some of the jumping like back flips and individual jumping. At the end of the movie, Andy Royalle makes a guest appearance as one of the jump-ropers.

Reaction

Jump In! broke the record previously set by The Cheetah Girls 2 as the highest rated DCOM premiere with 8.2 million viewers. [2] and garnering a 5.4 at the Internet Movie Database. It was later beat out for highest ratings by High School Musical 2 (Corbin Bleu also starred) on August 17, 2007 which gained 17.24 million viewers than Jump In!'s 8.2 million.

Release dates

Country Channel Date
United States Disney Channel January 12, 2007
Australia Disney Channel Australia April 14, 2007
United Kingdom Disney Channel UK April 27, 2007
Denmark Disney Channel Scandinavia May 4, 2007
Germany Disney Channel Germany May 5 2007
Argentina Disney Channel Latin America, Canal 13 May 26, 2007 & August 19, 2007
Asia
(Philippines, Malaysia,
South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam)
Disney Channel Asia June 17, 2007
Chile Disney Channel LA Sur May 27, 2007
Japan Disney Channel Japan May 19, 2007
Latin America Disney Channel Latin America May 26, 2007
Portugal Disney Channel Portugal June 16, 2007
Italy Disney Channel Italy June 20, 2007
India Disney Channel India June 30, 2007
Taiwan Disney Channel Taiwan July 7, 2007
Brazil Disney Channel Brazil July 8, 2007

Special screenings

  • Jump In! and Dance It to the Limit: A special screening of the movie with a special dance-along to Push It to the Limit, hosted by the male announcer of Disney Channel.
  • Jump In! Jab & Gab: A special screening of the movie, in which viewers play the online game, Jab & Gab and send shout-outs to their friends, family or the cast of the movie.
  • Jump In! Pop up Edition: Gives viewers an inside look on different parts of the movie, while popping up on your television. This special screening aired Friday, June 1st on Disney Channel.

Trivia

  • Corbin Bleu's real-life father, David Reivers, played the part of Kenneth Daniels, Izzy's father, in the movie.
  • Normally during the premiere of a new DCOM, teaser trailers and promos for the next DCOM would air. But in this case, the big news released during the film's premiere was for the Kim Possible season four premiere.
  • Originally the movie was to star Raven-Symone and was called "Double Dutch" but was scrapped due to Raven working on other projects.
  • The duration in which each scene changes to another, there would be a New York City subway train. The train shown was the number 1 line. In reality, the number 1 line only reaches from Van Cortlandt Park 242nd Street in the Bronx, all the way down to South Ferry in Manhattan. The number 1 line does not run in Brooklyn, where the story is taken place.


  • In the movie, the group that Izzy Daniels is in is called the Hot Chili Steppers. This is an obvious parody of Red Hot Chili Peppers, a real-life rock band. The version in Spanish dubs the name Salto Extrapicante. This led to a failed lawsuit in March 2007 [citation needed].
  • During the final contest, an actual champion Double Dutch team from Brooklyn makes a cameo. They just happened to be in Toronto for a tournament at the same time the movie was being filmed.
  • Avery Normandin, who appeared in High School Musical (1 and 2), was a cameo in this film during the song "Push It To The Limit", and he also appeared in the fighting match between Izzy and Rodney.

DVD

The DVD release of Jump In! carried the subtitle "Freestyle Edition" and was released on April 3, 2007. And July 2, 2007 in England

Special features include the following:

  • Keke Palmer's "Jumpin'" Music Video
  • T-Squad's "Vertical" Music Video
  • Behind the Scenes Featurette - "Learning the Moves"
  • Making of Featurette - "Inside the Ropes"
  • Avery Normandin, who appeared in High School Musical (1 and 2), was a cameo in this film during the song "Push It To The Limit", and he also appeared in the fighting match between Izzy and Rodney.

Soundtrack

Jump In! Soundtrack

A soundtrack featuring songs from the movie was released on January 9, 2007. The full soundtrack could also be heard on [1] the official Jump In! website. It was removed on January 5, 2007. It debuted at #5 on the Billboard 200 on January 17, 2007, with 49,000 copies sold,[3] and rose to #3 in the next week, selling 57,000 copies.[4] In its third week, it fell to number nine with 44,000 copies sold.[5] In March 2007, the album was certifed Gold by the RIAA.As of December 5, 2007 the album has sold 584,800+ copies in the U.S

Track listing

  1. "It's On" - NLT
  2. "It's My Turn Now" - Keke Palmer
  3. "Push It to the Limit" - Corbin Bleu
  4. "Vertical" - T-Squad
  5. "Where Do I Go From Here" - Sebastian Mego
  6. "Jump to the Rhythm" - Jordan Pruitt
  7. "Jumpin’" - Keke Palmer
  8. "Go (Jump! Mix)" - Jupiter Rising
  9. "I’m Ready" - Drew Seeley
  10. "Gotta Lotta" - Prima J
  11. "Live It Up" - Jeannie Ortega
  12. "Jump" - Lil’ Josh
  13. "Let It Go" - Kyle

Notes

  1. ^ Corbin Bleu's online journal, June 24, 2006,
  2. ^ Disney Movie Skips to Another Record - 1/22/2007 - Multichannel News
  3. ^ Katie Hasty, "'Dreamgirls' Remains No. 1 As Sales Keep Sliding", Billboard.com, January 17, 2006.
  4. ^ Jonathan Cohen, "Daughtry Edges Out 'Dreamgirls' To Claim No. 1", Billboard.com, January 24, 2007.
  5. ^ Jonathan Cohen, "Pretty Ricky, Shins Grab Top Album Chart Spots", Billboard.com, January 31, 2007.

External links

Preceded by Disney Channel Original Movies Succeeded by
Preceded by Highest Rated Disney Channel Original Movie Succeeded by

he joins a girls jumprope team