Moshi Monsters: The Movie

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Moshi Monsters: The Movie
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWip Vernooij
Written bySteve Cleverley
Jocelyn Stevenson
Based onMoshi Monsters
Produced byJocelyn Stevenson
Giles Healy
Starring
Edited byMark Edwards
Music bySanj Sen
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • 20 December 2013 (2013-12-20) (United Kingdom)
Running time
81 minutes[2]
CountryUnited Kingdom[3]
LanguageEnglish
Budget£1.5 million[4][better source needed]
Box office$2.9 million[5]

Moshi Monsters: The Movie is a 2013 British animated musical adventure film directed by Wip Vernooij and co-directed by Morgan Francis, based on the massive multiplayer online game Moshi Monsters. The film features the voices of Emma Tate, Tom Clarke Hill, Phillipa Alexander, and Keith Wickham. The film was released to UK and Irish cinemas on 20 December 2013 and grossed $2.9 million. The film’s plot follows Monsters Katsuma and Poppet, who are starring in a documentary about their home and are trying to retrieve a giant golden egg named the Great Moshling Egg from Dr. Strangeglove and his glumpified sidekick Fishlips.

Although the film did not receive a theatrical release in North America, it was broadcast on Starz in May 2019, and was available on Hulu and Sling TV. Its North American release was cancelled.[6][7]

Plot[edit]

In Monstro City, a peaceful island in the ocean, Monsters Poppet (a pink cat creature), Katsuma (a rabbit-tiger hybrid), and Mr. Snoodle (a yellow elephant-like Moshling) are at home. Katsuma starts talking to Poppet and Snoodle about starring in Roary Scrawl's documentary about Monstro City. The trio goes into town to meet him. In Monstro City, a strange-looking Flumpy escapes with a Moshling named Fifi through the sewers. Poppet, Katsuma, and Mr. Snoodle enter the diner, where Roary Scrawl introduces them to fellow Monsters Zommer, Furi, Luvli, and Diavlo. He says he wants them all to star in his movie, which angers fame-hungry Katsuma. The news reports the missing Moshling epidemic and says that arch-criminals Dr. Strangeglove and Sweet Tooth are still on the loose. The news cuts to Buster Bumblechops (who broke his leg during his adventure) talking about a mysterious Great Moshling Egg, which is now on display at his museum. Poppet thinks the egg is an addition to the movie, so they go to visit Buster. Dr. Strangeglove is seen spying in the sewers with the strange Flumpy, who turns out to be his sidekick Fishlips. Fifi is then put in the Glumping machine. Dr. Strangeglove and Fishlips steal the egg. Later, the six Moshi Monsters, Blinki, and Roary arrive at the museum. Buster wants to show them the egg only to find it's not there. They find out that the egg was replaced by a Glump. In its place is a holographic kit left by Dr. Strangeglove, ordering them to find three items by midnight - microwaveable Oobla Doobla, a Blue Jeeper's tears, and Frosted Rainbow Rox, which together will make the component to hatch the egg.

The monsters decide to go on a quest to retrieve the three artifacts, get the egg and defeat Dr. Strangeglove. The first stop the group goes to is Gombala Gombala Jungle. The Oobla Doobla is in the Wooly Blue Hoodoo Village (that communicates through whistles). Poppet and Zommer go separate ways, but Katsuma and the others end up getting captured. Poppet and Zommer soon find them shortly after. The Wooly Blue Hoodoos challenge them to a game of limbo. Poppet fails, but Zommer wins by using his body parts. The monsters end up getting the first artifact.

During the path, the monsters fall into a trap and an underground candy cave and get stuck in hard candy. Sweet Tooth is revealed to be the one who tricked them. While they were distracted Diavlo melts the candy and gets everyone into the carts and they all flee from Sweet Tooth. Diavlo and Luvli escape but they get captured by Dr. Strangeglove, who then kidnaps Zommer. Later, Katsuma, Poppet, Mr. Snoodle, and Furi get to Jollywood. They soon meet Bobbi SingSong. Poppet spies a Blue Jeeper, who likes music and is a rare species, and tries to catch it. Katsuma falls in an accident, causing the Blue Jeeper to laugh-cry, and Poppet catches the tears by using the bottle. Now that Poppet and Katsuma have two artifacts, they try to get help searching for the last piece, but Furi wanders off (before he is captured) and Katsuma, Poppet and Mr. Snoodle get teleported to Mount Sillimanjaro after being distracted during Bobbi Singsong's kerfuffle.

Poppet and Katsuma begin to climb up Mount Sillimanjaro, but they then both have an argument and Katsuma shouts, causing an avalanche to begin. Before the trio becomes buried in snow, Katsuma pulls Poppet and Mr. Snoodle into a cave, causing the snow to cover the entrance up. Katsuma tearfully says it was all his fault because he had ruined everything and caused awful things to happen, and begins to cry. Poppet cheers him up by singing the song ‘’We Can Do It’’ and they manage to find the Frosted Rainbow Rox. Katsuma, Poppet and Mr. Snoodle go to a wooden hut where Dr. Strangeglove stands in front of them. Soon, they fight over the egg, and Strangeglove escapes but Mr. Snoodle attacks him. Dr. Strangeglove asks Mr. Snoodle if he remembers that deep down, he is friendly. But before Mr. Snoodle can reply, Dr. Strangeglove later says that he lied and pushes Mr. Snoodle out of the hut and to his death. Poppet mourns over him and her and Katsuma get captured by Strangeglove.

In Strangeglove's ship, the Monsters are now locked in a cage about to be killed while Dr. Strangeglove and Fishlips take the ingredients to the egg. Suddenly, Poppet hears a noise and it is revealed that Mr. Snoodle survived the fall. He explains through his trumpeting that he survived by whistling. He landed safely in a balloon and flew back down to the Moshis. Due to Katsuma not knowing how to whistle, he instead only ends up blowing raspberries, but Mr. Snoodle manages to do it successfully. They all free the Moshlings and attack the Glumps, defeating Dr. Strangeglove in the process.

When they return to Monstro City, the Moshi Monsters bring the Great Moshling Egg back to the museum, just before it hatches. The creature is revealed to be a Mrs. Snoodle (a feminine version of Mr Snoodle), and Katsuma finally whistles for the first time ever. Deep in the jungle, there are more rare eggs waiting to be hatched in the temple at the beginning of the movie. During the first part of the credits, Mr. Snoodle and Mrs. Snoodle do a dance called the Snoodle Doodle, and then pictures showing the aftermath of the film are shown on the left side of the screen while an instrumental of ‘’We Can Do It’’ plays.

Cast[edit]

  • Emma Tate as Katsuma and Luvli
  • Phillipa Alexander as Poppet
  • Ashley Slater as Dr. Strangeglove and Zommer
  • Boris Hiestand as Fishlips and Newsreader
  • Tom Clarke Hill as Furi and Roary Scrawl
  • Keith Wickham as Buster Bumblechops and Diavlo
  • Rajesh David as Bobbi SingSong
  • Steve Cleverley as Sweet Tooth

Production[edit]

The film was produced by Mind Candy and Cornwall-based animation studio Spider Eye Productions.[1][8] It was financed and produced entirely in the UK.[9]

Reception[edit]

The film received mixed-to-negative reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 60% based on reviews from 10 critics, with an average rating of 4.8/10.[2]

Helen O'Hara of Empire magazine wrote: "For the very young, the surreal, sweet-toothed pleasures will be captivating. For the older audience member, it may be the longest 81 minutes they've ever spent."[10] Tim Robey of The Telegraph gave it 3 out of 5 and wrote: "The film was lulling and sweetly harmless; the franchise's 80 million global subscribers can't all be wrong."[11] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian wrote that "even fans of the online game Moshi Monsters may find the film version an incredibly annoying and baffling bore."[12] Mark Kermode gave the film 1 out of 5 stars, believing it may entertain very young children, but "will leave adults bored, stupefied, revolted and appalled, but mostly bored".[13]

Guy Lodge of Variety wrote: "Moshi Monsters: The Movie welcomes new converts with an effective combination of seizure-inducing color and insidiously catchy songs." He called the voicework "adequate" and called the songs a welcome distraction.[14]

Home media[edit]

Moshi Monsters: The Movie was released on DVD on Monday 14 April 2014 in the UK.[15] It comes with either a Jackson or Mrs Snoodle trading card and a Mrs Snoodle code for online and the Moshi Village app.[16]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Wolfe, Jennifer (20 August 2013). "Mind Candy Confirms First Ever Moshi Monsters Movie". Animation World Network. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Moshi Monsters: The Movie (2013)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 10 October 2021. Edit this at Wikidata
  3. ^ "Moshi Monsters The Movie (2013)". BFI. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023.
  4. ^ "Moshi Monsters: The Movie (2013)". IMDb. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2014.
  5. ^ "Moshi Monsters: The Movie". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  6. ^ Grant Hermanns (28 April 2020). "Starz Unveils May 2020 Calendar Including Mother's Day Collection". ComingSoon.net.
  7. ^ "Watch Moshi Monsters: The Movie Streaming Online | Hulu (Free Trial)". www.hulu.com. Archived from the original on 29 February 2020. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
  8. ^ "Moshi Monster The Movie". Spider-Eye.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  9. ^ Rhodri Marsden (17 April 2014). "Moshi Monster creator: The man behind a British success story". The Independent.
  10. ^ Helen O'Hara (16 December 2013). "Moshi Monsters: The Movie". Empire.
  11. ^ Tim Robey (19 December 2013). "Moshi Monsters: The Movie, review". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 7 December 2017. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  12. ^ Peter Bradshaw (19 December 2013). "Moshi Monsters: The Movie – review". The Guardian.
  13. ^ Mark Kermode (22 December 2013). "Moshi Monsters: The Movie – review". The Guardian.
  14. ^ Lodge, Guy (17 December 2013). "Film Review: 'Moshi Monsters: The Movie'". Variety.
  15. ^ "DVD Review: MOSHI MONSTERS - THE MOVIE". STARBURST Magazine.
  16. ^ "Moshi Monsters with Trading Card and Moshling Code". Amazon UK. 14 April 2014.

External links[edit]