Mouse hunting
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | Mouse hunting |
Original title | MouseHunt |
Country of production | United States |
original language | English |
Publishing year | 1997 |
length | 93 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 6 |
Rod | |
Director | Gore Verbinski |
script | Adam Rifkin |
production |
Bruce Cohen , Tony Ludwig , Alan Riche |
music | Alan Silvestri |
camera | Phedon Papamichael |
cut | Craig Wood |
occupation | |
|
Mouse Hunt is an American comedy film of Gore Verbinski from the year 1997 .
action
After the death of their father, the brothers Ernest and Lars Smuntz inherit both an old house and a dilapidated yarn factory that is on the verge of ruin, so that they urgently need to raise money. The brothers discover that the house they inherited from 1876 was designed by the famous architect Charles Lyle LaRue and is therefore very valuable. Both see it as the way out of their financial worries. They also discover that a mouse lives in the house and want to get rid of it.
Since conventional mouse traps seem to do nothing (while they are loading the traps, the mouse steals the whole cheese wheel) Ernest and Lars first try a cat, then they instruct the exterminator Caesar to kill the mouse. However, both the cat and Caesar fail, leaving behind immense destruction. After numerous spectacular and unsuccessful attempts to get rid of the mouse, including the use of a shotgun, the brothers, who have meanwhile been stressed for various reasons, get into an argument, and Lars hits the mouse with a piece of fruit by chance. Neither Ernest nor Lars manage to kill the unconscious mouse. You put them in a package and send the mouse to Fidel Castro . In Cuba , however, it turns out that the package was not sufficiently franked. It will be sent back.
Before the auction, a man bids the house $ 10 million, but the offer is turned down. During the auction, the mouse reappears. The brothers want to drown them in water and flood the room where the auction is taking place. The auction is canceled, the house collapses later.
The now indebted and homeless brothers drive to the yarn factory, the last thing they have left, but do not notice that the mouse is following them. While they are now indulging in desperation in their father's office, the mouse steals cheese again, but instead of eating it, she uses the factory to make edible yarn from cheese. Thanks to this new product, the factory has been saved, Ernest and Lars come to terms with the mouse that will be used in quality control in the future.
Reviews
James Berardinelli wrote on ReelViews that there was little to praise. The audience could not identify with the characters. Berardinelli praised the special effects.
Awards
- Nomination for the Saturn Award in 1998 for "best fantasy film".
- Key Art Award in 1998.
- Nominated for the Kids' Choice Award for the character of the mouse in 1998.
- World Animation Celebration Award in 1998 for the computer animation.
synchronization
role | actor | Voice actor |
---|---|---|
Ernest Smuntz | Nathan Lane | Lutz Mackensy |
Lars Smuntz | Lee Evans | Johannes Berenz |
April Smuntz | Vicki Lewis | Liane Rudolph |
Alexander Falko | Maury Chaykin | Helmut Krauss |
Lawyer | Eric Christmas | Friedrich W. Building School |
Quincy Thorpe | Michael Jeter | Eberhard Prüter |
Caesar | Christopher Walken | Frank Glaubrecht |
Smuntz Sr. | William Hickey | Helmut Heyne |
backgrounds
The comedy was produced by DreamWorks SKG . It was shot in California .
Footnotes
- ↑ Mouse hunt on Reelviews.net
- ↑ German synchronous index: German synchronous index | Movies | Mouse hunting. Retrieved April 2, 2018 .
Web links
- Mouse Hunt in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Mäusejagd at rotten tomatoes (English)