Pingu: The Movie (2018 film)

Pingu: The Movie (also known in other territories as Pingu's Big City Adventure) is a 2018 American-British-Swiss animated film based on the stop-motion children's television show, Pingu. The film is produced by DreamWorks Animation in a association with Mattel Creations and HiT Entertainment and distributed by Universal Pictures in the US and StudioCanal in the UK. Nick Herbert and Liz Whitaker directed the film, Ross Hastings wrote the screenplay, Alan Sylvestri composed the music, and David Sant, and Marcello Magni provided the voices.

The film first premiered in the United Kingdom on February 16, 2018, the United States on March 9, 2018, and then in Switzerland on April 13, 2018. The film received generally positive reviews from critics, with praise for it's animation, humor, and faithfulness to its source material but criticized for it's screenplay, and it grossed $270.8 million worldwide against a budget of $50 - $55 million. The film was nominated at the 91st Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature but lost to Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. It got nominated at the Golden Globe Awards, BAFTA Awards, won Best Animated Film at the Toronto Film Critics Awards and earned 4 nominations at the Annie Awards and won it for Best Animated Feature.

Pingu: The Movie would spark a franchise of films, which includes two sequels—Pingu 2: Lost in the Artic (2021) and Pingu 3: Take Me Home (2023), A revival/continuation of the series, that premiered in Japan 5 months before the film, titled Pingu in the City aired in 2017 and later in the UK and the US in 2018, and an upcoming sequel entitled Pingu 4 set to be released in 2025.

Synopsis
Pingu and his family are about to move into the big city and Pingu is not ready for the changes in his life. But with the help of friends both old and new, Pingu will find a way to embrace his new life in Penguin City.

Plot
[Will be worked on when the film is done]

Cast

 * David Sant as Pingu, Father, Grand-pappy, Grandpa, Pingj, Robby, Pingo, Pingg, Pen-Pen, Chef Fred, Carpenter, The Inventor, Football Manager.
 * Marcello Magni as Mother, Pinga, Auntie, Aunt, The Twins, Pingi, Pendra and Flower Shop Lady.

Production
This movie's production was announced in 2006 by Nick Herbert and DreamWorks Animation before the last episode of original Pingu series, Pingu and the Abominable Snowman was aired. The film was first planned being July 2008 but it was pushed to 2010, and then December 2012, but their deal with Universal caused the movie to be pushed to 2017, and then their purchase by Universal caused the movie to be pushed a year later.

The animation was animated and outsourced by Animal Logic, the Australian animation and visual effects digital studio behind The LEGO Movie franchise and Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole. For the animation, DreamWorks and Animal Logic made the film's animation replicate a stop motion film in the style of the original series despite everything done through computer graphics, right down to the backgrounds, designed by Steve Odekerk, and everything looking like if it was made out of plasticine like the series.

The cast from the 5th & 6th seasons (David Sant and Marcello Magni) reprised their roles for the film.

Songs
The film features a song in the end credits called Believe it or Not by Joey Scarbury, which was a theme song from the 1980s superhero comedy-drama, The Greatest American Hero.

Box office
Pingu: The Movie grossed $76,197,737 in the United States and Canada, and $194,662,662 in other territories, for a worldwide total of $270,860,399, against a production budget of $50 - $55 million.

In the United Kingdom, the film only grossed £67,000,000 ($82,674,650).

Critical Response
On Rotten tomatoes the film received an approval rating of 88% based on 110 reviews and an average rating of 8.9/10. On Metacritic, the film has a score of 84 out of 100 based on 49 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.

Home media
Pingu: The Movie was released on DVD, Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray, Digital HD on May 18, 2018 by Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. The film was released on Universal's streaming service, Peacock on March 10, 2023, just in time for the 5th anniversary of the film's release.

Follow-ups
A Japanese revival/continuation of the series, called Pingu in the City (ピングー in ザ・シティ, Pingū in za Shiti), first aired in Japan on NHK on October 7, 2017 (5 months before the film), ITVBe's preschool block LittleBe in the UK on February 25, 2019, and on NBCUniversal's Peacock in the US on March 15, 2019.

The sequel, titled Pingu 2: Lost in the Artic was released on August 13, 2021. In the story, Pingu and his friends attempt to search for Pinga across the Artic only to get themselves lost and have to find their way back to Penguin City. Despite receiving mixed reviews from critics, it was an immediate hit at the box office.

The second-sequel, titled Pingu 3: Take Me Home was released on August 11, 2023. In the film, Pingu and his family return back to their old home back in Penguinville but Pingu and Pinga seem to miss their new home back in Penguin City. The film was another hit at the box office and critics gave the positive reception, calling it an improvement then the previous film.

On November 2023, Universal Pictures announced that a fourth film titled Pingu 4 is under production and is scheduled for a summer 2025 release date.

Trivia

 * This is the first Pingu film for several things
 * This marks Pingu's first theatrical animated feature ever made.
 * This is the first Pingu production to be made since the 2009 BBC Children in Need music video.
 * The is the first film to be distributed by Universal Pictures, making it DreamWorks' first animated film to distributed by the company after their purchase in 2016.
 * The backgrounds for the film were designed by Steve Odekerk, the founder of O Entertainment.
 * This is DreamWorks' first CG stop motion animated film since 2006's Flushed Away, Animal Logic's second computer stop motion animated film after The Lego Batman Movie (a month later to it's US release), the first stop motion film not animated by Aardman Animation and the first stop motion/CG stop motion animated DreamWorks film the studio made without Aardman.
 * This film takes place in between the original Pingu series and its follow-up series, Pingu In The City.

Credits
See Pingu (2018 Movie)/Credits

Deleted Scenes
See Pingu (2018 Movie)/Deleted Scenes

Bloopers
See Pingu (2018 Movie)/Bloopers