Regular Show: The Movie

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Regular Show: The Movie
Regular Show the Movie.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by J. G. Quintel
Animation Directors: Robert Alvarez
Produced by
  • Ryan Slater
  • Supervising producers: Sean Szeles and Mike Roth
Screenplay by
  • J. G. Quintel
  • Sean Szeles
Story by
  • J. G. Quintel
  • Matt Price
  • John Infantino
  • Mike Roth
  • Michele Cavin
  • Sean Szeles
Based on Regular Show
by J.G. Quintel
Starring
Music by Mark Mothersbaugh
John Enroth
Albert Fox
Edited by Bobby Gibis
Production
company
Distributed by
Release dates
August 14, 2015 (Los Angeles)
September 1, 2015 (Digital)
October 13, 2015 (DVD)
November 25, 2015 (Cartoon Network)
Running time
68 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $3.5 million

Regular Show: The Movie is a 2015 American animated science fiction buddy comedy film based on the Cartoon Network original series, Regular Show. It is produced by Cartoon Network Studios and had its television premiere on November 25, 2015 on Cartoon Network.

The movie first screened in August 14, 2015 at The Downtown Independent theater in Los Angeles, where it screened from August 14, 2015 to August 20, 2015.[2]

The film was released digitally on September 1, 2015, and was released on DVD on October 13, 2015.[3]

Plot[edit]

In the distant future, Rigby leads a rebellion squadron (consisting of Benson, Skips, Hi-Five Ghost, Muscle Man, and Pops) against an evil cyborg named Mr. Ross and his army when he is erasing time. When Rigby and his team reach Ross's weapon, they find it is guarded by the future version of Mordecai, who is a cyborg himself and has discovered a transgression Rigby did to him in the past and attempts to kill him. When the team gets incapacitated, Benson sacrifices himself in order for Rigby to get to a space ship/time-machine to head to the past to stop the chaos. Just as Rigby is about to travel back in time, Mordecai shows up and shoots Rigby when he hits the time travel button.

In the present, Mordecai and Rigby barely keep themselves from being fired when they run late for work. When the space ship from the future shows up and crashes into the ground, future Rigby appears and tells the employees that when Mordecai and Rigby were in high school, they created a time machine that backfired, but created a "Timenado", a tornado with the ability to travel through space and time and was turned into a weapon by Mr. Ross. They later got expelled for blowing up the science lab. Furthermore, the future Rigby reveals that Mordecai shot him, shocking the park residences that Mordecai and Rigby have ended their friendship. Before dying, future Rigby tells present Rigby that he must "tell the truth" in order to save the universe, even if it costs him his friendship with Mordecai. When questioned about the details, Mordecai explains that they created the time machine because Rigby got into their dream college, College University, but Mordecai didn't. After the unfortunate ploy, Mr. Ross, their science teacher/volleyball coach at the time, was held responsible and sent to prison. Benson tries to convince everyone that the whole thing is a hoax, until Muscle Man finds a plasma shotgun and accidentally destroys Benson's car with it. After deliberating, the employees decide they need to use the ship to go to the past and stop the end of the universe.

The group manages to get to the past, but wind up damaging the engines in the process. Skips, Muscle Man and High Five Ghost stay behind to fix the ship while Benson and Pops follow Mordecai and Rigby in finding the time machine. They succeed in slipping into the high school but are forced to split up when they're confronted by the volleyball team. With no other options, Mordecai and Rigby are forced to get help from their past selves, who have access to the science lab because Mr. Ross, who was feuding with Rigby after his antics cost the team the championship, was forced by Principal Dean to allow Rigby to do an extra credit assignment in order to pass. The extra credit assignment was the time machine Mr. Ross was creating. He was creating it for two reasons: go back in time and win the volleyball state championship and to "get revenge". After successfully convincing past Rigby to create a model volcano instead, the past selves leave the lab, giving the present pair enough time to destroy the time machine. Pops and Benson arrive late to the carnage, all beaten and bruised after their volleyball jock encounter.

The group, assuming the work was over, head back to spaceship/time machine only to find the repairs stalled due to an encounter with Muscle Man and High Five Ghost's past selves. Complicating matters further is that temporal ruptures begin appearing just as the repairs are finished. Rigby, who had slipped away earlier, alerts them to the fact that past Mordecai and Rigby are heading to the high school to finish a second time machine Mr. Ross planted (although it is unknown where he got it). The employees race back to the science lab, but are quickly incapacitated by Mr. Ross and future Mordecai, allowing past Mordecai and Rigby to botch the time machine and create the Timenado. Mr. Ross then forces Rigby to admit the truth: he never got into College U, but Mordecai did, but he faked both Mordecai's rejection letter and his Acceptance letter in order to maintain their friendship. Mr. Ross then tries to kill Mordecai in the confusion, but future Mordecai intervenes, taking a heavy wound and forcing Mr. Ross to retreat.

Upset over the duplicity, Mordecai angrily ends his friendship with Rigby, forcing Rigby to run off with the spaceship/time machine. Before dying, future Mordecai gives his present version his ship (which is also a time machine) and tells him to patch things up, saying what Rigby did was no excuse to side with Ross. As the group tries to rebound, a distress call from future Gene the Vending Machine prompts them to help out. Meanwhile, after a failed suicide attempt to drive into the sun, Rigby encounters Father Time, who is falling apart due to the Timenado, and is convinced to apologize to Mordecai. Rigby heads to the future and races back to the Timenado, but gets intercepted along with Mordecai by Mr. Ross at the crystal core. With Techmo's help, the duo manage to decapitate Ross and, after Rigby and Mordecai restore their friendship, they use plutonium to destroy the Timenado. They later convince past Rigby to apologize to past Mr. Ross before he's arrested, thus ending the issues between them and altering the future.

Back in the present, Mordecai and Rigby agree that, despite how cool their future selves turned out, they won't let their friendship degrade to trying to kill each other, thus erasing their future selves from the timeline. The next day, as Benson catches them away from the park, the pair race back in the spaceship/time machine with Rigby saying they'll "never be late again".

Production[edit]

Development[edit]

The movie was first announced in February 2015 during the Cartoon Network upfront.[4] Creator J.G. Quintel announced on June 11, 2015 via Twitter that production of the movie has been completed.[5] A trailer for the movie was shown at the 2015 Comic Con International event on July 10, 2015[6] and was later released online on July 12, 2015. Despite the movie being announced in February 2015 it began production in 2014.

During production of the fourth season, the network asked the creator if they'd like to do a forty-minute special episode, Quintel turned it down and asked to do a movie instead, the network agreed. The idea was then put into development.[7]

Quintel confirmed that the movie is canon and is set in the middle of season six and season seven.[7]

The sixth season of Regular Show was affected by the movie. It was set to have 40 episodes, but due to the production of the movie, only 31 were produced. Season seven will feature the regular 40 episodes per season.

Actor and comedian Jason Mantzoukas voiced the movie's main antagonist, Mr. Ross the Evil Volleyball Coach, while David Koechner voiced Principal Dean as well. Many other regular voice actors for the show also voiced their characters in the film.

Cast[edit]

Soundtrack[edit]

The soundtrack for the film featured four real-life songs including, "March of the Swivel Heads", "The Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades" and "Pale Blue Eyes".

Release[edit]

Theatrical release[edit]

The movie first screened at the LA Downtown Independent on August 14, 2015 and continued to screen until August 20, 2015. The movie also screened at select Alamo Drafthouse Cinemas across the United States[2] and it had a select showtime at the SVA Theatre of New York and at the Cinema Montrereal CANADA during October 2015.

Television premiere[edit]

Regular Show: The Movie premiered on November 25, 2015 in the United States on Cartoon Network and premiered on Cartoon Network in the United Kingdom and Ireland and Cartoon Network in Australia and New Zealand on November 28, 2015. The film premiered in Asia (including Philippines) on November 30, 2015. The film premiered in Central and Latin America on December 7, 2015. The movie premiered on Cartoon Network in Canada on November 25, 2015.[8]

Home media release[edit]

The film was released to digital on platforms such as iTunes and Google Play Movies & TV on September 1, 2015. The movie was later released to DVD by Warner Home Video on October 13, 2015.[3] The movie has grossed $98,080 in domestic DVD sales.[9]

Reception[edit]

Critical response[edit]

Ratings[edit]

The movie was watched by 2.17 million viewers and received a 0.5 rating in adults 18-49.[10]

Awards & nominations[edit]

Regular Show: The Movie was on the short-list for becoming nominated for the Best Animated Feature Film category at the 88th Academy Awards, although it did not get nominated.[11]

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2015 Behind the Voice Actors Best Male Vocal Performance in a TV Special/Direct-to-DVD Title or Theatrical Short[12] JG Quintel Nominated
Best Male Vocal Performance in a TV Special/Direct-to-DVD Title or Theatrical Short[12] William Salyers Nominated
Best Voice Ensemble in a TV Special/Direct-to-DVD Title or Theatrical Short[12] Regular Show: The Movie Won

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Amazon: Regular Show: The Movie". Amazon. Retrieved 28 June 2016. 
  2. ^ a b "Regular Show - The Movie". regularshow.bpt.me. Retrieved September 7, 2015. 
  3. ^ a b "'Regular Show: The Movie' Sets Digital & DVD Launch Ahead Of the World Premiere". August 13, 2015. Retrieved August 13, 2015. 
  4. ^ "Cartoon Network Unveils Upfront Slate For 2015-2016". Deadline.com. Retrieved August 15, 2015. 
  5. ^ Quintel, J.G. "The Regular Show Movie is finished....". J.G. Quintel verified Twitter. Retrieved August 15, 2015. 
  6. ^ Peter Paltridge (July 11, 2015). "SDCC2015: Highlights From The Cartoon Network Panel". Toonzone.net. Retrieved August 15, 2015. 
  7. ^ a b "NYCC 2015: 'Regular Show' Press Interviews". Bubbleblabber. Retrieved May 12, 2016. 
  8. ^ Gorman, Sean (November 1, 2015). "Can't wait for the #regularshow movie. ...". Sean Gorman Twitter page. Retrieved November 20, 2015. 
  9. ^ "Regular Show: The Movie (2015)". October 18, 2015. Retrieved January 6, 2016. 
  10. ^ Porter, Rick (November 30, 2015). "Wednesday cable ratings: 'Alaskan Bush People' tops Thanksgiving Eve". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved December 2, 2015. 
  11. ^ Tapley, Kristopher (November 5, 2015). "16 Animated Feature Films Submitted for 2015 Oscar Race". Variety. Retrieved April 28, 2016. 
  12. ^ a b c "2015 BTVA Voice Acting Awards". Retrieved October 1, 2016. 

External links[edit]