In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.
Glen Campbell
- Chanticleer
- (voice)
Christopher Plummer
- The Duke
- (voice)
Sorrell Booke
- Pinky
- (voice)
Eddie Deezen
- Snipes
- (voice)
Sandy Duncan
- Peepers
- (voice)
Toby Ganger
- Edmond
- (as Toby Scott Ganger)
Ellen Greene
- Goldie
- (voice)
Phil Harris
- Patou
- (voice)
- …
Charles Nelson Reilly
- Hunch
- (voice)
- (as Charles Nelson-Reilly)
Dee Wallace
- Mother
- (voice)
Louise Chamis
- Minnie Rabbit
- (voice)
Bob Gallico
- Radio Announcer
- (voice)
- (as Bob Galaco)
Jake Steinfeld
- Farmyard Bully
- (voice)
- …
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film originally included more darker elements, a famous one being a deleted sequence from the kitchen scene. In this sequence the Duke bakes a live baby skunk in a pie and then eats it. Oddly enough, according to Gary Goldman, the reason this was cut wasn't because of the content but because Bluth's studio received a complaint from Goldcrest's marketing representative that most cases of child abuse happen in the kitchen, and involve baking instruments.
- GoofsWhen Snipes signs his hand print on the letter, he places his right hand down, to reveal a left hand print.
- Quotes
Grand Duke: If I kill my nephew, would it be murder or charity?
- Alternate versionsFor the Spanish release of the film, the cartoons were dubbed in Latin Spanish and the humans in Castilian Spanish. For a re-release in South America all the humans were re-dubbed to Latin Spanish.
- SoundtracksSun Do Shine
Sung by Glen Campbell
Written by T.J. Kuenster
Arranged and Produced by T.J. Kuenster
Executive Music Producer: Shopan Entesari
Backing Vocals: The Jordanaires
Featured review
Clearly this wasn't Don Bluth's finest day as a filmmaker- it's nowhere near the imagination present in The Secret of NIMH and An American Tail, but it's still entertaining for kids. It certainly worked when I first saw it, and I remember watching it several times (maybe cause of the songs which were like filtered but enjoyable Elvis-type tunes, or some of the designs with the characters like the evil owls). It's about a little boy who gets transformed into a cat- his storybook, which comes to life, is about a rooster on a farm who can't do his patented COCKADOODLE call- and soon he's swept up in a quest to bring Chaunticlair back from his fall into a career as an Elvis star.
It's not really too amazing, and it's probably even cliché by the standards of any animation let alone Bluth's. But there's enough invention and fun and quirks to make it worthwhile as a children's film, if not as an overall family flick (adults will most likely enjoy the final performance of Phil Harris, the voice of Baloo). Some of it is even very funny, like when the dastardly inept small owl who keeps spouting exclamations like "ANNIHILATION!" tries to skewer the heroes while tied up. It's like a minor rockabilly farm comedy, and there's certainly worse out there for your kids.
It's not really too amazing, and it's probably even cliché by the standards of any animation let alone Bluth's. But there's enough invention and fun and quirks to make it worthwhile as a children's film, if not as an overall family flick (adults will most likely enjoy the final performance of Phil Harris, the voice of Baloo). Some of it is even very funny, like when the dastardly inept small owl who keeps spouting exclamations like "ANNIHILATION!" tries to skewer the heroes while tied up. It's like a minor rockabilly farm comedy, and there's certainly worse out there for your kids.
- Quinoa1984
- Mar 16, 2009
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Rock-A-Doodle 3D
- Filming locations
- Ardmore Studios, Herbert Road, Bray, County Wicklow, Ireland(Edmond's farm)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $18,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,657,385
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,603,286
- Apr 5, 1992
- Gross worldwide
- $11,657,385
- Runtime1 hour 17 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1(original & negative ratio)
- 1.85 : 1
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