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Un gallo con muchos huevos

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Wikipedia article




'Un gallo con muchos huevos' (Spanish: 'A Rooster with Many Eggs'), released in the United States as 'Huevos: Little Rooster's Egg-cellent Adventure', is a 3D Mexican-American computer animated film produced by Huevocartoon Producciones. The third film in the 'Huevos' film franchise, as well as being the first CG film, it is written, produced, and directed by Huevocartoon alumni Gabriel Riva Palacio Alatriste and Rodolfo Riva Palacio Alatriste.

The original Spanish version features the voices of Bruno Bichir, Maite Perroni, Omar Chaparro, Ninel Conde, Carlos Espejel, Sergio Sendel, and television host Facundo.

The film was released on 20 August 2015 in Mexico in 2D and 3D theaters, where it became a major commercial success and grossed $167.8 million pesos during its theatrical run in the country. The film is the highest-grossing animated film produced in Mexico, and the eleventh in the industry of all time.

Pantelion Films released this film in the United States on 4 September 2015 in the original Spanish-language format with English subtitles, where it was a surprise box-office success. The film received mostly mixed reviews upon its release.

Plot



Confi tells a story of Toto's rescuing of his egg friends, Willy, Bibi, and Confi himself, and Tocino the bacon, before he hatched into a chicken and then grew to be a rooster. Later that night, Toto spends time with Di, trying to confess his love when her father, Don Poncho, interrupts them. Soon after, Toto listens to a boxing-style rooster fighting match on the radio, with champion Bankivoide claiming victory.

The next morning, Toto is called to crow and wake up the entire "Granjas el Pollon" farm, but only shows his poor skills. The group find out that their home is at risk of being taken by the bank due to a lack of payments left by Abuelita's deceased husband. Don Poncho, revealing his past fighting career, prompts the entire crew to go to a village, named Tepizcoeloyo, to make a bet on their farm and that he fight against Bankivoide. Meanwhile, a duo of opossums, Tlacua and Cuache, have been constantly passed by motorcycles while seeing chickens, and trying to take them for food.

The El Padrino egg initially denies due to Poncho having lost his bet. As Toto and Di explore the Palenque arena, he gets attracted to Chiquis, a celebrity peacock, and tries to show off his boxing skills. This soon backfires as she is revealed to be Bankivoide's girlfriend. After some persuading, El Padrino finally accepts the betting offer under a set of conditions, one being that Toto must fight instead of Don Poncho, to which he refuses at first. Ultimately, however, Toto summons the courage and decides to fight against Bankivoide, fully agreeing with the conditions. Later, Bankivoide's owner, Matas "El Oscuro" Jimnez, receives a bet for "Granjas el Pollon" to his surprise, which he accepts.

The crew go on a trip to a forest where Don Poncho tells a story of his last boxing match: he fought and lost to a fast-moving rooster, revealed to be a duck in disguise, which caused El Padrino to lose his bet money and forced Poncho to retire, humiliated. This takes the crew to a duck pond where Don Poncho has Toto enter a "fight", which turns out to be a rapping contest with Snoop Duck. However, after losing this match, Poncho requests that Toto actually fight a duck, attracting the attention of Patn Patn. In the fight with a karate duck, Toto dodges and thinks he defeats him at first, but the duck punches Toto, throwing him into the air, and he lands unconscious.

Later, as Toto regains consciousness, Patn Patn, a duck egg, shows up and reveals that Don Poncho's duck opponent was his dad, who retired and "explored" a crocodile's stomach. Eventually, seeing Toto's low strength, Pally sgreed to train him.

Back at the "Granjas", the discouraged Toto has a conversation with Tocino when Patn Patn encourages Toto with hype. Two days later, Toto begins his training with Patn and shows improvement in his fighting skills. That afternoon, Patn tells Toto that he needs to learn non-fighting moves, which include swimming, running, and flying, with training taking during place the following days. Burnt out, Toto rests and his friends show concern. The next morning, Don Poncho teaches him his "signature move" which involves crowing before delivering a knock-out punch. Training resumes and Toto improves in the non-fighting area overtime as well. Meanwhile, Abuelita receives a notice from her grandson about the upcoming rooster fight which she doesn't remember agreeing to.

Later, near rocky mountains, Toto is trained by the ducks from earlier on how to dodge mid-air, catching the attention of a vulture sent by Chiquis, to the suspicion of Bibi. At night, Toto is encouraged and left alone to discover his "voice". However, after having a nightmare of fighting Bankivoide, Toto loses his courage and remains behind as Abuelita takes Don Poncho instead. In a moment of remorse, Toto lashes out at Patn Patn when an army of vultures invades the "Granjas el Pollon" ranch. Toto and his egg friends fight back and get help from the ducks, leading the vultures into the rocky mountains and defeat them by flying through a narrow gap. Afterwards, Toto regains courage and the group flies off to the Palenque arena at Tepizcoeloyo.

As Don Poncho is training, Toto arrives to take his place and then enters the stage for his match against Bankivoide. The match begins with a rocky start as Toto is knocked into the wall, leaving him almost unconscious, and then runs off before being knocked back again. Then, the fight proceeds normally and Toto uses much of the methods from his training. For 11 rounds, Toto has been improving on his fighting skills as he goes, even dodging Bankivoide's knock-out dunk move. On the 12th round, just when Bankivoide is tiring out, Toto use# his "signature" punch, which isn't enough to knock down Bankivoide. As time runs out, with much encouragement from his friends, Toto goes all out on Bankivoide and shows much more improvement in dodging as he fights. Finally, after remembering the love and support of his family and friends including Di, Toto knocks out Bankivoide with a perfect rooster crow, claiming victory.

In the aftermath, Bankivoide congratulates Toto, Matas "El Oscuro" Jimnez is arrested after showing to have counterfeit documents, and El Padrino wins the bet placed on Toto. In discussing the vulture invasion, Bibi reveals that Chiquis sent the army in attempt to ensure Toto's loss, much to Bankiviode's shock and disappointment, and he sents her away.

Back at the "Granjas", the entire barn celebrates with a party, and it's revealed the ranch has been paid in full. Toto ends the film with his perfect crow.

In the mid-credits, Tlacua and Cuache are seen trying to stop a motorcycle with a rope, attempting to capture a chicken. They are launched as a group of motorcycle gangs drive by. In the post-credits, as Toto thanks Patn Patn for the help, Patn's father appears, revealing he managed to escape the crocodile. The two then go off, talking about their journeys.

Cast



Spanish

* Bruno Bichir as Toto, the main protagonist who is now a timid rooster. He dreams of becoming a champion boxer like Bankivoide until his points-of-view changes when he officially decides to fight him.

* Anglica Vale as Bibi, a beautiful chicken egg and Willy's girlfriend.

* Omar Chaparro as Patn Patn, a hyped goofball, but smooth duck egg who trains Toto to becoming a boxer by teaching him fighting and non-fighting moves such as flying and swimming.

* Maite Perroni as Di, a beautiful hen and Toto's girlfriend.

* Sergio Sendel as Bankivoide, the championship boxer rooster.

* Ninel Conde as Chiquis, a feminine peacock and Bankivoide's girlfriend. She secretly hatches a plan to launch vultures at the farm home to distract Toto.

* Carlos Espejel as Willy, a chicken egg and ex-sergeant who is Toto's best friend and Bibi's boyfriend.

* Facundo as Snoop Duck, a professional rapping duck. He is a spoof of American rapper Snoop Dogg.

* Jos Lavat as Don Poncho, a rooster who is an ex-boxer and Di's father who tries to help Toto "find his voice".

* Rubn Moya as Matas "El Oscuro" Jimnez, a cowboy man and Bankivoide's former owner who made and won many bets from the chicken fights.

* Maria Alice Delgado as Abuela

* Humberto Vlez as El Padrino

* Gabriel Riva Palacio as Confi, a Cascarn egg. Gabriel also voices Fabin.

* Rodolfo Riva Palacio as Cuache / Cclope

* Fernando Meza as Tlacua / Pato Anfitrin

* Lourdes Morn as Mam Gallina, a loving hen and Toto's mother.

* Kintaro Mori as Pato Cool J

English dub

* Zachary Gordon as Rolo (Toto)

* Amber Montana as Dee (Di)

* Jon Heder as Mickey Mallard (Patn Patn)

* Alyson Stoner as Sweet Pea (Chiquis)

* Jason Mewes as Carney (Confi)

* Mark Silverman as Talons of Thunder (Bankivoide)

* Talon Reid as Announcer

* Anna Brisbin as Grandma (Abuela)

* Garrett Clayton as Willie (Willy)

* Keith David as Don Alfonso (Don Poncho)

* Travis Randall Clark as Duck MC

* Meredith O'Connor as Mama Hen (Mam Gallina)

* Leon Thomas III as Soup Duck

* Olivia Grace as Bibi

* Dan ODay McClellan as Shady Slim (Matas "El Oscuro" Jimnez)

Production



Animation

The film was animated entirely in computer animation with stereoscopic 3D, in contrast to past entries which were 2D animated. It was made under the working title, 'Una pelcula con mas huevos y un gallo' ("A film with more eggs and a rooster"). Portable Document Format file. Published in May 2019. Producer Ignacio Casares said the film was made with the use of Autodesk software, including and Shotgun and Maya, for the majority of the film's production. Autodesk was our first choice from the beginning, [as] they offered us the right tools, at the right price. Maya is considered the most popular animation program in the industry, said Casares. Updated: 20 June 2017.

The transition to the CG format was an entirely new approach back then, as there were no animated films of the format produced in the Mexican cinema industry at the time of development. This was proven to be a challenge, to which the filmmakers called it "very difficult" and "a path of trial and error". Fellow co-director and writer Gabriel Riva Palacio Alatriste, Rodolfo's brother, stated that the film was designed for an "international" outreach. During development, Gabriel spoke with a DreamWorks Animation representative who was visiting Mexico at the time, and later brought him to the Huevocartoon studio. Gabriel has mentioned about the representative's doubtfulness of the film's intended quality, considering its country's quality.

According to an interview with Proceso, development for the film began after Gabriel suggested to Rodolfo of making the film in full CG animation, leading to the recruiting of new artists inexperienced in the format and over seven months of training. Gabriel and Rodolfo were among those novice in the CG field. "When working in 3D, you need to go through a process called 'render'," they said. "[Once] you illuminate, you put cameras, that now everything is three-dimensional, you must send it to be rendered, it is as if you need at least a thousand or 1,500 computers to go through that process, which is simply a process of computing so that come out the final picture. And that investment put the company at risk because that technology does not exist in Mexico[...]" The filmmakers then went to DEL Animacin to convince the company for investment, to which it agreed. "We are in debt for about three years, they left us[... ] to be able to pay them and then we are paying for the render farm, hoping that this will be a success so that the company [Huevocartoon] does not go bankrupt." The filmmakers mainly sought investment from United States-based companies due to limited amount in Mexico, and due to the former's large CG market, but still relied on those of the latter including Fidecine, Eficine, and Televisa. They also explained that the reason behind the decision for CG is for a wider marketing potential. "This is our first film to start competing in the international market, but to keep up with DreamWorks and Pixar we still need a lot more money, talent, time, training and studies," said Gabriel. The film's cockfighting theme was initially resisted due to its controversial existence, but after considering Toto's rooster character, the filmmakers have gone along with the idea while portraying it as a boxing-style sport.

Casting

, who voiced Patn Patn, has complemented the film's development strategy and national impact, calling it "worthy of admiration and applause".

For the original Spanish version, the film featured the voices of many famous Mexican actors. The entire main voice cast from the past two 'Huevos' films have returned, much of which have reprised their respective roles; this included Bruno Bichir, Anglica Vale, Carlos Espejel, Humberto Vlez, and the Huevocartoon alumni including headers Gabriel and Rodolfo Riva Palacio Alatriste. They were joined by newcomers Maite Perroni, Sergio Sendel, Ninel Conde, Facundo, and Omar Chaparro. "We repeat with Bruno Bichir, Anglica Vale and Carlos Espegel, who have lent their voices since the first Huevocartoon film. We are already old acquaintances!," said Gabriel.

Many cast members have made their voice-acting debuts. For Ninel Conde, the voice of Chiquis, she expressed that "there was a lot of learning and [...] had to use our imagination a lot because the [chicken character...] did not yet exist."

Omar Chaparro, the voice of Patn Patn, had prior voice-acting experience in Spanish dubs of films such as 'The Incredibles' and the 'Kung Fu Panda' films. 'Un gallo' was the first time the actor voiced in an animated film in its original language. Chaparro has praised the film for its developmental strategy and national impact, citing its "beautiful story [... ]with very well[-]structured characters", and added that "Rodolfo and Gabriel Riva Palacio (directors) did a great job." In explaining the differences of dubbing and voice-acting, he said, the films were completely finished, with the voices and the drawings, and I had to adapt my words to the movements of the lips of the characters that touched me, which [had] a good degree of difficulty; But now, I started from scratch, only with the script and a pencil sketch that later changed, because the character was created from my work. Chaparro further explained that his work allowed him "much more freedom, but also more responsibility" due to the dependency of his words and actions, and adding that he "ended up giving a lot of energy and a lot of madness". Chaparro called the film "something very particular" and "completely original", understanding that the film was produced in Mexico over "big studios or anything before it". While calling it "a challenge to transfer this humor to the time of dubbing", he said it "made me very proud". As for his character, Chaparro expressed enjoyment, noting the similarities of his own personality and "qualities". I had a lot of space to put my jokes on him and improvise," he added.

During an interview, in explaining his lead role as Toto, Bruno Bichir has said that he "[felt] totally identified with [the] character." When ask what he learned from his role, he added that "The great theme is that together[,] we can realize our dreams and fight for good [...] without hurting others but defending who we are, the most just and unprotected causes."

The English-dubbed version, renamed 'Huevos: Little Rooster's Egg-cellent Adventure', was released two weeks after its original Spanish version, which featured the voices of Zachary Gordon, Amber Montana, Alyson Stoner, Jason Mewes, and Jon Heder.

Music

Spanish musician Zacaras M. de la Riva has composed the film's soundtrack, replacing Huevocartoon co-founder Carlos Zepeda. The film's orchestra performance was done in Bulgaria. "'Un gallo' is at its core a story about overcoming our fears with humility and hard work and also about the value of friendship, so the music had to reflect those elements," said the composer. Zacaras explained about his challenges of music compositions in animated films, saying that "'Un gallo' was no different", but added that "it was a lot of fun!"

Soundtrack



The film's score soundtrack album was released by MovieScore Media digitally on September 5, 2015, with a physical version later being released on October 16 that year.

Release



The film was released in theaters in the United States on 4 September 2015 by Pantelion Films in 395 theaters across the country.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLgA_MOA_tVcs5h29rESMOvgoDv154x2EY&v=_rf8BshVm7s Un Gallo Con Muchos Huevos- Trailer Oficial] It expanded to 616 theaters the following week, making it the first time a Mexican animated feature had received a wide release in the United States. "We're very pleased about the quality we achieved," Gabriel Riva said in an interview. He also stated that being able to debut the film in the U.S. "is a dream come true".

Box office

In Mexico, the film spent three weeks at the number one position. In its first week it earning around $56,904,145 pesos (US$3,380,642) from 2,462 screens. It dropped by -40% in its second week to end the weekend with $1,712,867, and by 30 percent to end the weekend with $1,198,137. Its cumulative total after three weeks is $7,613,968.

In the United States, the film opened at #9 earning around $3.4 million.[http://www.boxofficemojo.com/weekend/chart/?yr=2015&wknd=36a&p=.htm 4-7 September 2015 - Box Office Mojo] In its second weekend it increased to 616 screens, seeing a decline of 41 percent to $2,024,134. Its cumulative total after two weeks was $6,791,486.

As of April 18, 2016, the film has grossed $9,080,818 at North American theaters and $16,161,585 from international markets, giving it a worldwide total of $25,242,403.

Critical reception

The film received mostly mixed reviews from critics in which they praised it for being an improvement over its processors and its overall entertainment value, while some are divided over its adult humor which they called it "racy", hence its PG-13 rating, and expressing uncertainty as to whether it is family-oriented. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 65% based on 17 reviews, with an average rating of 5.8/10. Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a rare grade of "A+" on an A+ to F scale.

Sequels



The fourth film, titled 'Un rescate de huevitos' (formerly 'Huevitos en fuga'), focuses on protagonists Toto and Di which they must rescue their inexperienced but cute egg children after being taken from a collector and being sold in Africa for food. Originally slated for release in 2019 and then August 2020, the film has been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic until it was finally released in August 2021. Upload date: July 23, 2021.

The fifth film, titled 'Un gallo congelado', will feature a new antagonist, a pirate, who hates Toto and wants to do anything to stop his life. Miguel Rodarte, in which the film is his first voice-acting role, and Arath de la Torre have joined the film's voice cast. It will be released in 2022.

See also



* 'Una pelcula de huevos'

* 'Otra pelcula de huevos y un pollo'

* 'Marcianos vs. Mexicanos'

References




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