| A Bug's Life | |
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![]() Theatrical poster |
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| Directed by | John Lasseter Co-director: Andrew Stanton Supervising technical directors: William Reeves Eben Ostby |
| Produced by | Darla K. Anderson Kevin Reher |
| Written by | Andrew Stanton Don McEnery Bob Shaw Story John Lasseter Andrew Stanton Joe Ranft |
| Starring | Dave Foley Kevin Spacey Julia Louis-Dreyfus Denis Leary Phyllis Diller Joe Ranft David Hyde Pierce Brad Garrett Richard Kind Bonnie Hunt Jonathan Harris Hayden Panettiere Madeline Kahn Roddy McDowall Michael McShane John Ratzenberger Ashley Tisdale |
| Music by | Randy Newman |
| Cinematography | Sharon Calahan |
| Editing by | Lee Unkrich |
| Studio | Pixar Animation Studios |
| Distributed by | Walt Disney Pictures |
| Release date(s) | November 25, 1998 |
| Running time | 96 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $60 million |
| Gross revenue | $363,398,565 |
A Bug's Life, officially trademarked as a bug's life, is a 1998 American CGI film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution in the United States on November 25, 1998. A Bug's Life was the second Disney·Pixar feature film and the third American computer-animated film after Toy Story and Antz. It tells the tale of an oddball individualist inventor ant who hires what he thinks are "warrior bugs" — actually circus performers — to fight off a huge swarm of grasshoppers who have made the ant colony their servants. The film was directed by John Lasseter and is also the last film appearances of Madeline Kahn and Roddy McDowall.
The story of A Bug's Life is a parody of Aesop's fable of The Ant and the Grasshopper. It is similar to the comedy Three Amigos, which is about out-of-work actors defending a town while thinking they are merely giving a performance. It also gives a nod to Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai (as well as its Hollywood remake, The Magnificent Seven), which is about Japanese villagers hiring a group of swordsmen to fight off rampaging bandits. It is also dedicated to the late Toshiro Mifune.
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Every season, colonies of ants are expected to harvest food for a Mafia-like bunch of grasshoppers (or possibly just Locusts that are referred to as grasshoppers). One ant, Flik, is an inventor whose creations usually do more harm than good. While trying out a mechanical harvester, he drops his machine and on auto-pilot, it knocks the pile of food into a stream just before the grasshoppers arrive. Their leader, Hopper, gives the ants the rest of the season to make good on what they owe, but orders a double ration of food after Flik stands up to him in defense of the Queen's youngest daughter Dot. Flik is admonished by the colony's royal council. When Flik suggests that he try to recruit some "warrior bugs" to fight the grasshoppers, Princess Atta (Dot's older sister and the eventual successor to the Queen) allows him to do so, but only to keep him out of the way.
Reaching the insect "city," actually garbage under a trailer, Flik encounters a troupe of unemployed circus bugs whose latest performance has just ended in disaster, and mistakes them for the warriors he needs. At the same time, they believe him to be a talent scout who wants to book their act on the island. They return to the colony, much to Atta's surprise, and are immediately greeted as heroes who can end the grasshopper threat. Atta soon becomes suspicious after almost overhearing a conversation where both Flik and the troupe realize their mistakes. However, after they band together to save Dot from a hungry bird, she begins to think that the troupe may be able to stop the grasshoppers after all. She also starts to find herself falling in love with Flik. And the feeling is very mutual.
At the grasshopper gang's hideout, Hopper's brother Molt suggests that they not go back, since they have more than enough food stored up and the weather will soon turn bad. Hopper reminds him and the whole gang that if they do not keep the ants living in fear, the ants might use their superior numbers ("a hundred to one," he estimates) to run the grasshoppers out of the colony for good. The gang sets out for the island to collect their due. When Flik discovers that Hopper is afraid of birds (due to him almost getting eaten by one a few years ago), he proposes that the colony build a model bird to scare him away (the plan is given through the circus bugs, so the royal council believes the "warriors" came up with the idea). The ants put their food-gathering work on hold to carry out this project, but after they finish and put the bird in the island's tree, circus ringmaster P. T. Flea arrives looking for his missing performers and accidentally exposes the truth. Upset at Flik's deception, Atta orders him exiled from the colony, while the other ants hide the bird and rush to collect whatever food they can for Hopper. They are unable to meet the double quota he set, and when the gang arrives, Hopper takes over the anthill and forces the ants to bring him all the food on the island.
Dot overhears the gang's plans to kill the Queen once they have all the food, and she catches up with Flik and the troupe. She persuades them to return and put the bird plan into action, with help from her and some of the other young ants. The model frightens the gang, which almost retreats, until P. T. intervenes and sets the model on fire with lighter fluid. Enraged, Hopper sends his crazed assistant Thumper to injure Flik, but Flik is still able to stand up and rally the other ants, saying that the grasshoppers depend on the extorted food for their own survival. The entire colony swarms against the gang, forcing all except Hopper to leave. However, a thunderstorm begins, causing panic among the ants. Hopper grabs Flik and flies off, intent on killing him. Atta rescues Flik, and the two lure Hopper towards the bird’s nest. Hopper corners Flik and starts strangling him, revealing his intention of returning to the colony with more grasshoppers. Flik is saved when the bird appears, picks up Hopper and feeds him to her chicks.
Later, the colony adopts Flik's harvester to speed up grain collection. Atta becomes the new queen, passes the princess crown to Dot and chooses Flik as her mate. As the troupe leaves, Slim the stick insect notices that they have forgotten Heimlich the caterpillar, who emerges from the chrysalis in which he has encased himself. He pops out with a tiny pair of butterfly wings, far too small to lift him off the ground, but he is picked up by Francis the ladybug and Manny the praying mantis, and the troupe (with Molt, acting as a road crew assistant) departs with the colony’s thanks. Dot joined by Queen Atta and Flik (who are shown holding hands) wave goodbye. The shot then pulls out to reveal that "Ant Island" is a small area in the forest surrounded by a little stream.
DreamWorks Animation's similar movie Antz was released a little more than a month before A Bug's Life. DreamWork's Jeffrey Katzenberg left Disney in 1994 and said the idea for Antz came from a 1991 story pitch by Tim Johnson that was related to Katzenberg in October 1994.[2] However, Disney had been working on developing an ant movie since 1988.[3] Pixar head John Lasseter pitched A Bug's Life the day Katzenberg left Disney in August 1994, and said he felt "betrayed" when he learned Antz was scheduled for release before A Bug's Life.[3] According to Lasseter and Steve Jobs, Katzenberg offered to stop development of Antz if Disney moved the release date of A Bug's Life, which was coming out opposite DreamWork's The Prince of Egypt. Pixar refused.[3]
The release date of Antz was moved up from March 1999 to October 1998 in response to Disney's refusal.[2] Even though A Bug's Life was the first to be pitched, Antz was finished and released first.[2] A Bug's Life, however, was more profitable.
Reviews for A Bug's Life were overwhelmingly positive at the time of the film's release. It received a 91% "certified fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, the second lowest rated feature from Pixar at the site, after Cars with 75% and a 77 on Metacritic.[4][5]
A Bug's Life made approximately $162.7 million in its United States theatrical run, easily covering its estimated production costs of $45 million. The film made $200,600,000 in foreign countries. The film made a worldwide gross of $363.3 million, surpassing the competition from DreamWorks's Antz.
The DVD of the film was the first wholly-digital transfer of a feature film to a digital playback medium. No analog processes came between the creation of the computer images and their representation on the DVD.
The pan and scan or 'full screen' version of the video (on the DVD as well as VHS releases) has been reframed and restaged; rather than sacrifice image in some parts of the film, the frame has been extended or objects moved to fit the narrower aspect ratio. Pixar continued this process on its later video releases. Also, the different characters (Flik, Dot, Francis, etc.) were on one (by themselves) cover of the video cover, considered a collectible in many cases.
To show off its new DVD capabilities, a copy of the film was included with the Apple iMac DV, which made its debut in 1999. A laserdisc version was also released in Japan by Pioneer, one of the last.
The widescreen version of the film preserves its original aspect ratio of 2.35:1. A Bug's Life is the first fully computer animated feature to be created with this ratio.
A set of "fluffs" and "outtakes" was included, in which various animated characters "blew" their dialog, or broke up laughing inappropriately. In one, Flik yells the line "To infinity, and beyond!", quoting Buzz Lightyear from an earlier Pixar film, Toy Story. Later, Woody leans into view with an upside down clapperboard to mark the end of a botched take.
Another DVD was released as a 2-disc Collector's Edition. This DVD is fully remastered and has substantial bonus features about the film. On May 19, 2009, a Blu-ray version was released. These versions included a DisneyFile Digital Copy.
Theatrical and video releases of this film include Geri's Game, a Pixar short made in 1997, a year before this film was released.
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A Bug's Life is a computer animated film, released by Disney and Pixar to theatres in 1998. It concerns an oddball ant named Flik, who recruits circus bugs to defend his colony from grasshoppers. The story is an interpretation of the classic Kurosawa film, The Seven Samurai.
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From outtakes"
| A Bug's Life | |
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| Developer(s) | Traveller's Tales (PlayStation, Windows, Nintendo 64) Psygnosis (PlayStation) Tiertex Design Studios (Game Boy Color) |
| Publisher(s) | Disney Interactive Activision (Nintendo 64) THQ (Game Boy Color) Midway Games (Super Nintendo) |
| Release date | April 30, 1999 |
| Genre | 3D platformer |
| Mode(s) | Single player |
| Age rating(s) | ESRB: E |
| Platform(s) | Windows, PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Game Boy Color, Super Nintendo |
| Credits | Soundtrack | Codes | Walkthrough | |
A movie game based on Pixar's A Bug's Life. It's pretty simple. The player walks around throwing berries at bad bugs while trying to accomplish the current mission (usually get from point A to point B). There is a complex system that allows the player to plant different kinds of seeds in certain spots to grow a variety of plants to complete tasks. However, these tasks are not crucial to completing the level, and are pretty much sidequests.
| A Bug's Life | |
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| Directed by | John Lasseter Andrew Stanton |
| Produced by | Darla K. Anderson John Lasseter |
| Written by | Story: Joe Ranft Additional Story: Gefwee Boedoe Jason Katz Jorgen Klubien Robert Lence David Reynolds Screenplay: |
| Starring | Hayden Panettiere Dave Foley Kevin Spacey Julia Louis-Dreyfus Denis Leary Phyllis Diller Frank Oz David Hyde Pierce Brad Garrett Richard Kind Bonnie Hunt Joe Alaskey Madeline Kahn Roddy McDowall Michael McShane John Ratzenberger Vincent Price |
| Music by | Randy Newman |
| Cinematography | Sharon Calahan |
| Editing by | George Lucas |
| Distributed by | Walt Disney Pictures |
| Release date(s) | November 25, 1998 (U.S.) December 26, 1998 (AUS) February 5, 1999 (UK) |
| Running time | 96 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $45 million |
| Gross revenue | Worldwide: $363.3 million |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
A Bug's Life is a 1998 movie made by Pixar. It focuses on the world of insects and other small creatures, and the fight between ants and grasshoppers.
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