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Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder

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Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder
Directed byPeter Avanzino
Written byTeleplay:
Ken Keeler
Story:
Ken Keeler
David X. Cohen
(Parts One and Four)
Produced byLee Supercinski
Claudia Katz
StarringBilly West
Katey Sagal
John DiMaggio
Tress MacNeille
Maurice LaMarche
Phil LaMarr
Lauren Tom
David Herman
Edited byPaul D. Calder
Music byChristopher Tyng
Distributed by20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Release dates
United Kingdom:
February 23, 2009

United States:
February 24, 2009

Australia:
March 4, 2009[1]
Running time
89 minutes
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder is the last of a series of four straight-to-DVD Futurama movies.[2] The movie was written by Ken Keeler, based on a story by Keeler and David X. Cohen, and directed by Peter Avanzino. Guest stars include Phil Hendrie, Penn Jillette (credited with Teller), Snoop Dogg and Seth MacFarlane, who sings the theme song.[3] In the movie, Leela becomes an outlaw when she and a group of ecologically-minded feminists attempt to save an asteroid of primitive life forms from being destroyed, while Fry joins a secret society and attempts to stop a mysterious species known as the "Dark Ones" from destroying all life in the universe.

The DVD and Blu-Ray were released by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment on February 23, 2009, while the film itself premiered on February 6, 2009 at New York Comic Con.[4] It made its broadcast premiere on Comedy Central on August 30, 2009.[5] The film and its predecessors together comprise season five of Futurama, with each film being separated into four episodes of the broadcast season.[6] Twentieth Century Fox and Comedy Central cited sales of Into The Wild Green Yonder and the other Futurama direct-to-DVD movies as one reason Comedy Central decided to renew the Futurama television series in 2009.[7] [8]

Plot

The Planet Express crew visits Amy's parents, Leo and Inez, who are destroying the "old" Mars Vegas and constructing a more extravagant one. A group of eco-feminists, led by Frida Waterfall, protest the resulting destruction of the environment, leading to an accident where a piece of Frida's jewelry lodges inside Fry's brain. The destruction upsets Leela, but Leo asserts that he has received environmental clearance—from a bribed Professor Farnsworth. Unconvinced, Leela saves a Martian muck leech, the last of its species, from the site (despite its constant attempts to bite her).

Fry's injury gives him telepathic powers, as he learns from a transient telepath named Hutch. Hutch advises Fry to wear a tinfoil hat to keep other people's thoughts out of his head and admonishes Fry never to reveal his powers and to beware the "Dark Ones". Meanwhile, Bender conducts a brief affair with the Donbot's wife.

While golfing with the crew, Leo reveals his plan to destroy part of the galaxy and build the universe's largest miniature golf course. Farnsworth and the crew survey the site and discover an asteroid in a violet dwarf star system, teeming with primordial life forms. Over Leela and Fry's objections, Farnsworth approves the project. After a botched protest leads to the accidental death of Vice-President Spiro Agnew's headless body and forces Leela and the eco-feminists into hiding, Leela convinces them to sabotage Leo's projects. Leela returns to Planet Express to retrieve her leech and runs into Fry, who offers his blessing; the two share a tearful goodbye.

The asteroid in the violet dwarf system.

Hutch introduces Fry to the "Legion of Mad Fellows", a secret society of tinfoil-wearing telepaths led by the No. 9 man. Fry learns that the violet dwarf is the only surviving egg of the Encyclopods, a now-extinct species which evolved to preserve the DNA of all endangered life forms and recreate extinct species. Meanwhile, the Dark Ones evolved to pursue the destruction of all life. Due to a resurgence in the life-giving force called "Chi", the Encyclopod will soon be reborn; as Fry is immune to the Dark Ones' psionic powers, he alone can save the star. To conceal their knowledge and existence from the Dark Ones, the Legion swear Fry to secrecy. After their initial meeting, Fry infiltrates Leo's empire as a security guard.

Leo enlists Zapp Brannigan and Kif Kroker to capture the eco-feminists; jealous of Leela's criminal record, Bender joins them. At the golf course, Bender bugs Fry's cell phone. Fry later runs into Frida and has her take a discreet message of support to Leela, but an unseen Dark One learns of the message at the eco-feminists' hideout and psionically murders Frida. Farnsworth, Zoidberg and Hermes attempt to deliver a fence to Leo, but are intercepted by the eco-feminists (now joined by Amy, LaBarbara Conrad and others), who commandeer the Planet Express ship. At their hideout (conveniently located next door to the hideout of the Legion), the eco-feminists discover Frida's corpse. Amy suspects foul play by Fry, so Leela calls him to clarify things. Fry and Leela arrange a rendezvous which is ambushed by the eavesdropping Zapp in the Nimbus. Leela escapes in the Planet Express ship and abducts Fry, convinced that he is a traitor. Zapp captures them, and the eco-feminists are sent to prison.

At a Legion meeting, No. 9 explains that Fry must not only stop the implosion of the violet dwarf, but also identify and thwart the Dark One who is sure to be present. Though no one knows the current form of the Dark One, its mind cannot be read, allowing Fry to identify it. No. 9 gives Fry the Omega device, which can disable the Dark One at close range.

In prison, the voice of a Dark One urges Leela to escape. Bender arrives to free the eco-feminists, revealing that he had always planned to do so, as his criminal record would sky rocket beyond Leela's due to his breaking out of the feminists. Hermes, Zoidberg, Scruffy and a repentant Farnsworth arrive in the Planet Express ship and whisk Bender, Leela, Amy and LaBarbara off to stop the implosion ceremony.

At the ceremony, Leo gives Fry the honor of imploding the violet dwarf. Unable to locate an unreadable mind in the massive audience, Fry concludes that he himself is the Dark One. Before Fry can press the plunger, the Planet Express crew disrupts the ceremony, and Leela takes the detonator. Still unable to explain his intentions, Fry implores Leela to return the detonator; after a moment of reflection, Leela does so. Having covertly wired the detonator to the Omega device, Fry presses the plunger and attempts to destroy himself. The device activates, enveloping Leela and Fry in a flash but leaving them unharmed; Leela's leech reveals itself to be the lone surviving Dark One before collapsing. The violet dwarf system forms a giant sperm and flies into the star, creating an Encyclopod embryo which quickly reaches adult form. The Encyclopod reveals an ecosystem full of formerly extinct species in its pouch. As Hutch is about to explain the events, the Dark One recovers and fatally wounds him. Just before he dies, he pulls Frida's necklace out of Fry's forehead (which he claims belonged to his long-lost sister), causing Fry to lose his telepathy. The Encyclopod avenges Hutch Waterfall and incinerates the Dark One. Before it can decide whether to preserve the Dark One's DNA, Zoidberg consumes the remains. After harvesting a sample of Hutch's DNA, the Encyclopod departs.

Unmoved by what just occurred, Zapp attempts to arrest the Planet Express fugitives, but they and Kif escape. Fry and Leela profess their love for each other as the Nimbus chases the Planet Express ship toward a wormhole which the Professor says could take them trillions of lightyears away without any way of knowing if they could ever return. Everyone unanimously agrees to go for it. Fry and Leela kiss as the ship enters the wormhole in a flash of blue lights similar to the show's opening sequence.

Cast

Actor Character
Billy West Philip J. Fry
Professor Farnsworth
Dr. Zoidberg
Zapp Brannigan
Leo Wong
Additional voices
Katey Sagal Turanga Leela
John DiMaggio Bender
Joey Mousepad
Additional voices
Tress MacNeille Fanny
Additional voices
Maurice LaMarche Kif Kroker
Donbot
Clamps
Additional voices
Phil LaMarr Hermes Conrad
Additional voices
Lauren Tom Amy Wong
Inez Wong
Additional Voices
David Herman Number 9 Man
Additional voices
Dawnn Lewis LaBarbara Conrad
Prison Warden
Snoop Dogg Himself
Phil Hendrie Frida Waterfall
Hutch Waterfall
The Encyclopod
Seth MacFarlane Mars Vegas singer
Penn & Teller Themselves

Continuity

The movie draws upon several major and minor running themes of the Futurama series. As in previous environmentally-minded episodes such as "The Problem with Popplers", "A Taste Of Freedom" and "The Birdbot of Ice-Catraz", the Waterfall family makes an appearance, with Frida Waterfall reappearing along with a new member, Hutch (identifying himself as Frida's brother by removing her jewelry from Fry's head as Hutch dies), and in keeping with tradition both Frida and Hutch Waterfall meet an untimely end.[3] The Encyclopod's decision to preserve Hutch's DNA defines it as Hutch's successor and serves as a warning about the fragility of the existence of the human species.[3] With dark matter now useless as fuel[9] the Planet Express ship has been modified to run on whale oil, an alternative introduced in "Bendin' in the Wind".[3]

Fry was originally frozen and brought to the future by Nibbler[10] because a Nibblonian prophecy foresaw that he and his unique, Delta-wave-deficient mind (a consequence of him being his own grandfather[11]) would be required to save the universe.[12] In Yonder Fry is once again appointed for such a task (though by the Legion of Mad Fellows instead of the Nibblonians), due to his immunity from the Dark Ones' psionic attacks.[3]

The No. 9 man, a recurring background character throughout the series, is given a significant role in the movie, though quite different from the role in the series for which he was originally conceived.[13]

File:Into-the-wild-green-yonder-audience.JPG
This screenshot shows approximately 250 minor characters from the Futurama series.

As a fan service, the climactic scene of the film features a scene with up to 250 characters on screen at once; most minor characters from Futurama's history can be seen (Unit 2013 appearing twice) with the exception of the children (like Dwight and Cubert), who were removed when the production team realized that Morbo mentions that there are no children present. In the DVD commentary, producer David X. Cohen notes that Rough Draft Korea, Futurama's overseas animation studio, charged a significant premium because of the difficulty of animating this scene.[3]

In the final scene of the movie, Amy and Kif are reunited after being estranged.[14] After years of Fry trying to win her over, Leela finally returns Fry's love in full; Cohen notes that there was considerable debate among the Futurama writers about how to end the movie, and that Futurama creator Matt Groening himself pushed for the actual conclusion.[3]

The movie was initially intended to end the series. After Futurama was renewed, its creators were unsure if the storylines in the film would be continued. Groening stated that he wanted to ignore the film's ending and move on with the show. Cohen felt differently, stating that the revelations at the end should be resolved, even if the resolutions were brief.[15]

Production

The Futurama staff began working on the movie in 2006, and at two different points labor issues affected the production process. According to producer Lee Supercinski, the Futurama studio realized that they were going to receive the animatic of the movie from Rough Draft Studios two weeks before the deadline for the 2007-2008 Writers Guild of America strike. As a result, the writers were forced to make revisions to the script without having completely reviewed the animatic; no writing was done during the strike.[16] The Futurama studio then received the colored film in June 2008, weeks before a proposed Screen Actors Guild strike deadline, again forcing the writers to revise the script without completely reviewing the picture.[16]

Aware that Into the Wild Green Yonder could have been the final Futurama episode at the time of writing, the writers inserted numerous references to that fact. The title screen displays the message "The Humans Shall Not Defeat Us" in Alien Language 1; according to Cohen, the message is a defiant statement regarding the possible end of the series.[17] Midway through the movie, a shot of the exterior of the Planet Express building draped with a banner reading "Going Out Of Business Forever! Again!" is shown, a reference to the original series' previous cancellation in 2003.[3] The scene where Professor Farnsworth removes Zoidberg's and Hermes's career chips and the countdown scene at the violet dwarf implosion ceremony both reference events from the pilot episode, "Space Pilot 3000" and also "The Cryonic Woman".[3] The cliffhanger nature of the final scene in the movie was devised so that it could conclude the series on an emotional note but also provide a point of departure for a series renewal, according to Cohen.[18]

The script contains several detailed scientific references, such as the Keeler Gap in the rings of Saturn, the asteroid 2261 Keeler and the Keeler crater on Mars, all named after astronomer James Edward Keeler.[3] In addition, the Martian muck leech is given the scientific name Cyprinodon martius. Writer Ken Keeler adapted the name from Cyprinodon salinus, the scientific name of the Death Valley pupfish, which like the Martian muck leech lives in the desert and is nearly extinct.[3]

The opening musical theme is a Frank Sinatra-style number sung by Family Guy and American Dad! creator Seth MacFarlane as the Planet Express ship flies around the casinos of Mars Vegas.[3]

Reception

Overall the film has received mixed reviews. Alynda Wheat of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a grade of B, saying that it catered to established fans.[19] Scott Collura of IGN rated the movie itself 5/10, praising the use of both major and minor characters from the series and the science-fiction content, but criticizing the movie for being disjointed and for its "underwhelming climax" and concluding that it "never fully captures the greatness of the original series." Collura rated the DVD 7/10, noting the high quality of the video transfer, the image detail and depth, and the use of surround sound and low-frequency effects.[20] Martin Liebman of Blu-ray.com rated the movie 2.5/5 and the Blu-ray release 3.5/5 overall. Liebman praised the film for its development of the primary characters in a way that would appeal to longtime fans and new viewers, but criticized the messy plot and haphazard pacing of the movie. Liebman lauded the Blu-ray release for its crisp images, resolution of detail in the animation, lossless soundtrack and use of surround sound.[21] Bruce Kirkland of the Edmonton Sun wrote that the movie was "just as good as Bender's Big Score", praising its send-ups of Las Vegas and science fiction themes and writing that it "nicely handles its environmental message with trenchant wit". [22] Jeffrey Kauffman of DVD Talk rated the movie four stars out of five, calling it a "a fun and frenetic windup to a perhaps undervalued television gem".[23]

According to the-numbers.com, the DVD sold approximately 83,000 units for a total of $1.6 million during its initial week of release, placing it 20th in sales across the USA. As of April 19, 2009, estimated DVD sales in the USA stand at approximately 159,000 units for a total of $3.03 million.[24] Comedy Central cited sales of the DVD as one reason it decided to renew the Futurama television series.[25]

References

  1. ^ http://tvshowsondvd.com/news/Futurama-Into-the-Wild-Green-Yonder/10754
  2. ^ Fritz, Steve (2007-11-29). "Animated Shorts: David X. Cohen on Futurama, 2". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-11-30.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cohen, David X (2009). Futurama: Into The Wild Green Yonder commentary (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  4. ^ Seijas, Casey (2009-02-06). "Live from New York Comic Con! Fans Treated To Futurama World Premiere". ugo.com. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  5. ^ Mitovich, Matt (2009-06-10). "The Futurama Looks Bright as Comedy Central Revives 'Toon". TV Guide. Retrieved 2009-06-10.
  6. ^ "Rhymes With Raining". Craveonline.com. 2007-02-26. Retrieved 2009-03-08.
  7. ^ "'Futurama' returns with new episodes". Variety. 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  8. ^ "Comedy Central resurrects 'Futurama'". The Hollywood Reporter. 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  9. ^ Bender's Game
  10. ^ "The Day the Earth Stood Stupid" and "The Why of Fry"
  11. ^ "Roswell That Ends Well"
  12. ^ Cohen, David X (2003). Futurama season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "The Why of Fry" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  13. ^ Groening, Matt (2009). Futurama: Into The Wild Green Yonder commentary (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  14. ^ Futurama: The Beast With A Billion Backs
  15. ^ http://tv.ign.com/articles/100/1007511p1.html IGN: SDCC 09: The Future of Futurama
  16. ^ a b Supercinski, Lee (2009). Futurama: Into The Wild Green Yonder commentary (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  17. ^ White, James (2009-02-20). "Film features: 9 Odd Things We Now Know About Futurama". Totalfilm.com. Retrieved 2009-02-28.
  18. ^ Kolan, Patrick (2009-03-03). "'Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder' interview". IGN.com. Retrieved 2009-03-08.
  19. ^ Wheat, Alynda (2009-02-18). "Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder DVD Review". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  20. ^ Collura, Scott (2009-02-08). "Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder Review". ign.com. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  21. ^ Liebman, Martin (2009-02-25). "Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder Blu-ray Review". blu-ray.com. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  22. ^ Kirkland, Bruce (2009-02-27). "MovieNews - Bender and pals deliver the goods". Edmonton Sun. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  23. ^ Kauffman, Jeffrey (2009-03-01). "Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder (Blu-ray)". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  24. ^ "Futurama - Into the Wild Green Yonder - DVD Sales". the-numbers.com. 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-04-10.
  25. ^ ""FUTURAMA" RETURNS TO PRODUCTION WITH AN INITIAL ORDER OF 26 NEW EPISODES TO PREMIERE MID 2010". Comedy Central. 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2009-06-09.
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