Snoopy se lance dans sa plus géniale mission alors que lui et ses amis s'envolent dans les cieux à la poursuite de leur ennemi juré, tandis que son meilleur ami Charlie Brown poursuit sa pro... Tout lireSnoopy se lance dans sa plus géniale mission alors que lui et ses amis s'envolent dans les cieux à la poursuite de leur ennemi juré, tandis que son meilleur ami Charlie Brown poursuit sa propre quête épique pour conquérir l'amour de sa vie.Snoopy se lance dans sa plus géniale mission alors que lui et ses amis s'envolent dans les cieux à la poursuite de leur ennemi juré, tandis que son meilleur ami Charlie Brown poursuit sa propre quête épique pour conquérir l'amour de sa vie.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Vedettes
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 49 nominations au total
- Charlie Brown
- (voice)
- Snoopy
- (archive sound)
- (voice)
- …
- Lucy
- (voice)
- Miss Othmar
- (voice)
- (as Troy 'Trombone Shorty' Andrews)
- …
- Marcie
- (voice)
- Patty
- (voice)
- The Little Red-Haired Girl
- (voice)
- (as Francesca Angelucci Capaldi)
- …
- Fifi
- (voice)
- Linus
- (voice)
- Schroeder
- (voice)
- Little Kid
- (voice)
- Peppermint Patty
- (voice)
- (as Venus Omega Schultheis)
- Sally
- (voice)
- Violet
- (voice)
- Pigpen
- (voice)
- (as AJ Tecce)
- Franklin
- (voice)
- (as Marelik 'Mar Mar' Walker)
- Shermy
- (voice)
- (as William 'Alex' Wunsch)
Avis en vedette
Blue Sky Does The Peanuts Justice
An Adorably Great Movie for All Ages!!!
I'm crystal clear on that now, as this movie does a wonderful job of weaving together the many separate concepts of the Peanuts series. I really fell in love with the franchise by watching this film, and I can see how it will be very rewatchable.
My only criticism is that the film does cram a bit too much into its ninety minutes. It all comes together nicely, but it was clear that the script was trying to accomplish a LOT in this movie. It felt almost as though nothing was left for a sequel, but I suppose the idea was to introduce as much of the series as possible. The slightly crammed feel of the film is the only reason I didn't give it a perfect ten stars. But it's fantastic, even if a bit overdone!
I don't know what to say
P.S. In watching some of the older shows recently, I remembered that the best of the TV shows was where they basically just strung a bunch of the daily cartoons together, rather than tell a traditional story. Charles Schulz was a cartoon genius, and had a penchant for running a series of consecutive strips on the same subject, sort of a continual story with a daily punch line, which is directly transferable to the screen. Maybe they could go back to that format next time around?
Cute, charming and completely in the spirit of the original Peanuts
I was expecting the worst when this was announced. I'm glad to announce that I was wrong. This is a charming, amusing and excellent update of the Peanuts. Actually there's no updating of the characters and their world. They still use phones and typewriters, No computers, cells or such exist here. The animation is now all CGI but manages to retain the charm of the hand-drawn originals. The aerial battles between Snoopy and the Red Baron are VERY well-done. The voices are now done by actual children and not adults like the previous ones did. Also there's no crude humor or violence--this is VERY G rated. Even better it has messages that say be yourself and don't give up no matter what. And of course it has a big old happy ending! Warm, amusing and perfect for the whole family. Recommended.
clichéd to say but true: absolute fun for the whole family
But fears are assuaged as I return from seeing the movie and find the movie is very successful at what it aims to be. In short, this is at its best... just another Peanuts movie, but that's a sincere compliment. You watch some of those movies and specials, which have stood the test of time due to the wit of the writing and the beautiful (yes, beautiful) animation that does simply to bring Charles Schulz's comic to life, and those shows and movies (i.e. the best, A Boy Named Charlie Brown, but also Snoopy Come Home and Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown) with issues that kids deal with, whether or not they directly relate to the hero. In this story it's all about this new girl coming to school (we never learn her name, there's really no need to), and how good old Chuck can barely deal with his ridiculously nervous reaction. How can he even say hello to her, much less carry a conversation? What can he do to build up his confidence? Can Lucy with her Nickel-store advice and 10-step book help? Can he become a success in some way?
Whether you're coming to this as someone who has been watching Peanuts all your life, or if you have a little kid (or are one) and have never seen one of these and it's your introduction, it is a wholly delightful experience. Schulz's kids were co-screenwriters, which could have been great or not-so-great (one never knows if the purity will work or become too stifling, or if there are too many attempts to make it "hip" and "Modern", which means it won't age so well years down the line). All of the Peanuts characters we know and like are here - I couldn't find one major one who wasn't, and everyone gets a moment or two (I even forgot for a moment Lucy's crush for Schroeder, but it's here too). And of course Snoopy as the super rascal/charmer/adventurer of the lot who tries to do things like sneak into school as a teacher ("No dogs allowed!" duh) and spends his part time writing stories about being an ace pilot with the "Red Baron" plane.
With the exception of a couple of elements that, frankly, I could've taken or left, like some of the Red Baron bits (some are OK, some may drag unless you're a kid into the action-loaded visuals), and the inclusion of a couple of pop songs (not annoying ones, but they are of this time period) and a lack (not completely, but not enough) of Vince Guaraldi's irreplaceable jazz score, the movie really works. I cared about Charlie Brown on his journey through building up his confidence, through ups and downs that were not, and occasionally were, his fault. And along the whole way, there's that special thing that made Peanuts work, has always made it work, and will continue for many years to come: you want to see this guy win, and yet it's funnier/more realistic when he falls on his face. But maybe every Charlie Brown has his day in this case? Between the talent show, school dance, book report, summer pen-pal deal, can Charlie Brown say ONE word to this girl? Who knows.
They're all here and its spirit is pure. What else do you need to know? The Peanuts Movie is a blast of family entertainment in the young and old sense of the word, full of clever lines and visual-eye-pleasing slapstick and, (happy surprise) pathos.
Blocage sonore
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSnoopy's noises and Woodstock's chirpings are taken by Bill Melendez's performances from earlier Peanuts animated productions from 1965 to 2000 (including movies, TV series and TV specials). Years later the same technique was used in Tom et Jerry (2021), where are featured archive recordings of William Hanna, who did all of the original screeches, yells, gasps, shrieks, howls and screams for Tom and Jerry heard in the original cartoons from 1942 to 1957.
- GaffesAt the summer fair, Charlie Brown gets in the way of Violet in one of the games. She remarks with Lucy's voice.
- Citations
Little Red-Haired Girl: Oh, hi, Charlie Brown.
Charlie Brown: You remembered my name?
Little Red-Haired Girl: Of course I did.
Charlie Brown: Before you leave, there's something I really need to know. Why, out of all the kids in our class, would you want to be partners with me?
Little Red-Haired Girl: That's easy. It's because I've seen the type of person you are.
Charlie Brown: An insecure, wishy-washy failure?
Little Red-Haired Girl: That's not who you are at all. I like the compassion you showed for your sister at the talent show. The honesty you had at the assembly. And at the dance, you were brave and funny. And what you did for me, doing the book report while I was away, was so sweet of you. So when I look at you, I don't see a failure at all. You have all the qualities I admire.
[bus horn honks]
Little Red-Haired Girl: Sorry, I have to go now.
Charlie Brown: Wait.
[gives her her pencil]
Charlie Brown: I think this belongs to you.
Little Red-Haired Girl: Oh, thank you! I've been looking everywhere for this!
[gets on the bus]
Little Red-Haired Girl: I'll write to you, pen pal.
- Générique farfeluThere is a scene after the closing credits: Linus's model plane, whose runaway flying was a running gag throughout the film, finally sputters to a stop over the pond and falls straight in.
- Autres versionsOn the Disney+ version of the film, during the end credits, the names of the child actors who performed the characters voices are completely missing. Other than Miss Othmar and Fifi (Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews and Kristin Chenoweth respectively), we only see the names of the characters themselves almost as though it were just a 'curtain call' making who voiced them a mystery.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Troldspejlet: Episode #50.12 (2014)
- Bandes originalesSkating
Written by Vince Guaraldi
Performed by The Vince Guaraldi Trio (as Vince Guaraldi Trio)
Courtesy of Concord Music Group, Inc.
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Peanuts Movie?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Peanuts Movie
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 99 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 130 178 411 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 44 213 073 $ US
- 8 nov. 2015
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 246 233 113 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1






