Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe (2020)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

When Phineas and Ferb ended in 2015, after eight years of airing on the Disney Channel across four seasons and one movie, the creators and the fans felt satisfied that this chapter was over, and they could all move on.

Just kidding! This is Disney; if something works, you work it hard, so naturally, the final episode of Phineas and Ferb, “Last Day of Summer”, which premiered on Disney Channel on 12th June 2015, was never really the end, although fans had to wait a few years before anything else happened with these beloved characters.

They would have to wait five years in fact for a second movie to be released. This second movie was called Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, and would not premiere on Disney Channel. Instead, it debuted on Disney+, Disney’s streaming app, which launched in the US on 12th November 2019.

In that time, the world had changed quite a lot, not only from the point that Phineas and Ferb finished, but also from the time that Candace Against the Universe was in development. This movie debuted in August 2020, so we all know what that means: it debuted over the pandemic, as so many other movies did. Luckily, with Disney+ slowly being released to other countries outside of the US, and with Disney Channel not being quite as popular as it used to be, this meant Candace Against the Universe was going to be able to reach its target audience perfectly, and extend its reach to other Disney+ users who perhaps were not familiar with Phineas and Ferb already, or who might not have been huge fans of it.

To be honest, though, I hadn’t heard of this film until last year when I was compiling a list of Disney Channel Original Movies to review. It had completely missed me, but I wasn’t a big fan of Phineas and Ferb, as I talked about in my review of their first movie, Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension (2011), so that might not be a surprise. My sister was the Phineas and Ferb fan, and since I didn’t live with her anymore, I didn’t find out about it from her, and didn’t watch it with her either.

I watched Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe for the first time this week. I’m sorry to all Phineas and Ferb die-hard fans, but I didn’t like it all that much. It’s not that the movie was bad; it’s not that it wasn’t funny; it just seemed to be missing something that Across the 2nd Dimension did have. Maybe I was disconnected from the series, since I hadn’t watched it in so long, and didn’t have the privilege of watching it with someone who truly loved the series, as I had with Across the 2nd Dimension.

I don’t know, but the music wasn’t as good as I would’ve expected, and despite being a big fan of Candace, it seemed like making a whole movie about her meant sacrificing a lot of Phineas and Ferb’s screen time, so the usual format was slightly off-balance. But like I said, I didn’t say it was bad, and I still found myself chuckling at certain jokes that are just so Phineas and Ferb.

PLOT

The movie starts with Candace riding her bike home, trying not to think about what crazy things Phineas and Ferb might be doing. Sadly, this resolve doesn’t last long when Candace sees a giant robot clown in her back garden. She calls her mother to quickly come and see it – but at the same time, their pet platypus, Perry, also a secret agent, is battling his nemesis Dr. Doofenshmirtz, and stopping his latest invention, the Power-Vacuum-inator, which turns objects into lint and then vacuums it up. As per usual, Candace’s attempt has failed as the Power-Vacuum-inator is accidentally directed at the giant robot clown. It is turned to lint and vacuumed up, like it never even existed. Candace is distraught; she was so close.

Phineas and Ferb, seeing that their sister is upset, decide they should make her a gift, as it turns out she hasn’t been having as great a summer as they have been. Candace later vents her frustrations to Vanessa, Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s daughter, saying how the universe is against her and won’t let her bust her brothers. Vanessa tells Candace that maybe she isn’t actually upset by her brothers’ inventions and instead feels jealous of their success. At this point, Candace sees a new object in their front garden. Assuming it must be a Phineas and Ferb creation, she angrily hits it, but her and Vanessa are sucked in. Phineas and Ferb see this object take off into space and notice Candace is stuck inside it; they have to rescue her. Perry also gets notified by his boss, Major Monogram, that Candace has been abducted by aliens and he must save her – without blowing his cover that he’s an agent to the boys, or that he’s a pet to Dr. Doofenshmirtz. That could be tricky…

Using a photograph taken of this supposed space shuttle by Ferb, they read its license plate and discover it is from the planet Feebla-Oot in the Vroblok Cluster. They know they have to create a portal to this planet, so with help from Baljeet, Isabella, and Buford, their friends, they successfully do this. All of them proceed through the portal but they don’t end up in Feebla-Oot, but at Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s headquarters – they haven’t even left Danville! Dr. Doofenshmirtz tells the kids that he is also trying to get to that planet, to save his daughter, Vanessa, who the kids also know. He had built his own portal to the same planet, but neither portal can get there because Feebla-Oot is surrounded by ion barrier so they can’t teleport there. They need a space shuttle.

Luckily, Dr. Doofenshmirtz happens to have a space shuttle, except it is called a Galactic-Travel-inator,– but it is basically the same thing. The group board the spaceship – sorry, Galactic-Travel-inator – with random items they might need, like a canoe and a Chicken-Replace-inator. Perry sneaks in too, just before take-off. The take-off sets Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s headquarters on fire, but Candace and Vanessa are more important.

In space, Candace and Vanessa’s shuttle has connected to the mother ship, where they see a map of the area, via the ship’s voice assistant which handily speaks English. The two find that a ladder should lead them down to the escape pods. As they make their descent, the girls are thrown off the ladder by some intense turbulence, falling down into a room full of escape pods, but they’ve been spotted. Candace tells Vanessa to get into a pod and she’ll be right behind her, but the escape pods all launch at once before Candace has the chance to get in. She is captured by the aliens.

The gang on the Galactic-Travel-inator hit an asteroid field on the way to Feebla-Oot and believe they won’t make it out alive. However, Perry goes out in a spacesuit and knocks all the asteroids out of the way, allowing them to get through unharmed. The ship later approaches an ion barrier, but with no shield, again, they think all looks lost. Baljeet is then inspired by an episode of his favourite space travel show, Space Adventure, where they once got through an ion barrier by spinning their ship. Although they get through the ion barrier, the ship spins out of control and crash-lands on Feebla-Oot. At least they got there! Meanwhile, Vanessa’s escape pod has also crash-landed on the planet, being pre-programmed to navigate to its planet. She sees the mothership land by a fortress and Candace being escorted inside by aliens. The gang, on another part of the planet to Vanessa, also notice the alien fortress and head straight for it.

Inside the fortress, Candace is introduced to the alien leader, Super Super Big Doctor. Despite Candace’s name being the same sound that these aliens make when they explode from the waist up – random, right? – Super Super Big Doctor welcomes Candace to her planet, saying she is The Chosen One, as she radiates something called Remarkalonium. Candace is treated like a queen and bonds with Super Super Big Doctor over their annoying brothers and their desire to be special.

Dr. Doofenshmirtz and the kids head towards the fortress, but Doofenshmirtz doesn’t want Isabella in charge as he’s older. They argue who should be the one in charge and Dr. Doofenshmirtz wins even though he doesn’t have a clue where he’s going. But at one point, he does save them from a flying dragon by using, of all things, the Chicken-Replace-inator, which swaps the dragon with the nearest chicken. The nearest chicken was at a farmer’s new theme park, called Dragon Land, which had no dragons. Well, it does now!

Candace and Super Super Big Doctor go on the planet’s daytime talk show. Their appearance is rudely interrupted by Phineas, Ferb, and the gang who have found their way to the fortress, finally. Candace doesn’t want them here as she’s finally found a place where she belongs. Super Super Big Doctor offers to take care of them for her, and she does – by taking them to a nice suite, before dropping them through a trapdoor into the back of a van, headed towards their prison! Inside the van are lots of other aliens, who look really scared.

Perry didn’t fall for this trick and takes control of the van, despite being told by Major Monogram not to harm the creatures of this planet or damage its environment – oops… But the prisoners are free and Phineas, Ferb, and the others are taken to the aliens’ sanctuary, Cowardalia. They learn that Super Super Big Doctor came to Feebla-Oot and enslaved all of them using a special plant that emitted mind-controlling spores. The plant has been dying and has stopped releasing spores, meaning that the aliens are slowly becoming free of her and fleeing. Candace is the one who will help the plant regain its strength.

Back at the fortress, Candace is coming to the realisation that she is being used for something, and comes to a room where this plant is being held. Super Super Big Doctor explains that her evil plant needs Remarkalonian to survive and reveals that this element is called carbon dioxide on Earth. Candace reveals that all humans release carbon dioxide, giving Super Super Big Doctor a new plan. She needs to conquer Earth! Candace is strapped to a treadmill and prepared to load back on the spaceship. She feels betrayed by her new “sister”, who it turns out has also imprisoned her brothers.

Meanwhile, Phineas and the others have managed to convince the aliens of Cowardalia to battle Super Super Big Doctor, despite their cowardly nature. They manage to get into the alien fortress, but see Candace being loaded onto the ship. Super Super Big Doctor and her minions follow suit. Phineas and the gang quickly board too. Dr. Doofenshmirtz decides to stay as he still hasn’t found Vanessa, with her social media profile revealing she never got back to Earth like Candace thought, but is still on this planet.

Dr. Doofenshmirtz searches for Vanessa and almost gets himself killed. Again, Perry is here to save the day, but as both of them are about to fall to their deaths, they are saved by Vanessa who is riding on the back of one of the planet’s dragons. Dr. Doofenshmirtz is pleased to be reunited with Vanessa, however, they have no idea how to get back to Earth. Doofenshmirtz wants to use his Chicken-Replace-inator again, however, the chicken that was teleported to Feebla-Oot earlier is still here so they don’t move far. Doofenshmirtz wants to kill the chicken but Vanessa says they can’t. They think some more.

The gang on the ship try to get the spaceship to stop before it reaches Earth, but they end up falling out of the ship. They use Buford’s canoe and some random debris to build a boat, which also transforms into a glider, getting them home. The spaceship lands in Danville Stadium, destroying a new statue of the Tri-State Area founder, John P. Trystate, upsetting all the on-lookers, but there’s no time for tears as Super Super Big Doctor is about to enslave them all. Phineas, Ferb, and the others try to stop her by using robots of themselves but they are destroyed easily by thermal cannons. Phineas and Ferb get Isabella, Buford, and Baljeet to distract Super Super Big Doctor and her minions, while they get Candace. They find her on the treadmill and manage to free her, but Candace runs away in tears. The brothers follow her, where Candace reveals she feels bad for spending her whole summer trying to bust them. Phineas and Ferb don’t care and finally get a chance to give their gift to her. It’s a mug with World’s Best Sister written on it. But that’s not the best part; it projects holograms of all the fun moments they’ve had all together this summer. Candace is touched but now they have to fight back against Super Super Big Doctor.

Candace sees that they were giving away free t-shirts at Danville Stadium today and grabs the t-shirt cannon. If she can fire it at the aliens, then they’ll become so excited by the freebie, that they’ll explode from the waist up. It works, however, they soon run out of free t-shirts. The plant is now at full strength and begins to emit its spores once again. Phineas and the others put on gas masks to stop themselves being controlled. They are still captured though, leaving only Candace to face Super Super Big Doctor. Candace tells her that perhaps all of desires to control people come from the fact she is jealous of her brothers and has low self-esteem. This gives the leader a breakthrough but before she can mend her ways, the plant eats Super Super Big Doctor…It then goes after the others who run.

They are soon saved by Vanessa, Perry, and Dr. Doofenshmirtz on the flying dragon. They got back to Earth by changing the setting on the Chicken-Replace-inator to be the furthest chicken instead of the nearest. Who knew it had so many settings? The plant then battles with the dragon, but it’s not enough. Candace gets the idea of shooting the plant with the Chicken-Replace-inator, using the furthest setting, and sends it back to Feebla-Oot. On Feebla-Oot, the plant shrivels and dies, spitting out Super Super Big Doctor in the process who is arrested by the cowardly aliens.

Back in Danville, the mind-controlling spores dissipate. Candace then realises her mother is nearby and she could bust her brothers now at last, since all of Danville is in chaos. Candace runs over to her mother, but just as we think she’s about to bust Phineas and Ferb, she instead tells her mother to go out and get pizza, so she doesn’t see any of it. As they celebrate, they hear Perry get a call from Major Monogram, congratulating him on his mission. Perry quickly muffles the call as Phineas, Ferb, and Candace look confused!

In a mid-credits scene, Ferb’s father stumbles upon the portal to Feebla-Oot in the garden. He walks through it and ends up in Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s headquarters which is still on fire. He runs back home and the portal self-destructs.

CHARACTERS & CAST

In Candace Against the Universe, Phineas and Ferb are not the main attraction, and spend most of their time working with their friends to save Candace. This movie feels quite different to a typical Phineas and Ferb episode where they are front-and-centre and the whole plot is about them and what they are doing. Still, they have a big role to play in Candace Against the Universe, not just by saving their sister, but also by building up her self-esteem and showing that the brothers love her.

Phineas was voiced by Vincent Martella. Martella is also known for his role as Greg Wuliger in Everybody Hates Chris (2005-09), for which he was nominated for a Teen Choice Award and two Young Artists Awards. Although Thomas Brodie-Sangster voiced Ferb in the main series and in the first movie, he was replaced on this movie, reportedly due to scheduling conflicts. Ferb is instead voiced by David Errigo Jr., who has voiced characters in series such as Ridley Jones (2021-23) and Tiny Toons Looniversity (2023-present) in recent years. Although Ferb sounded a bit different here, I didn’t notice the voice actor had changed; I’d just assumed that the fact it had been five years since the series ended meant some of the actors’ voices were a bit different. 

At the start of Candace Against the Universe, Vanessa tries to tell Candace that she might be feeling a bit inferior to her brothers and that just busting them won’t really make her happy in her life because she’s not happy in herself. Candace doesn’t really listen and later relates to Super Super Big Doctor and feels wanted on this planet. Everything is going fine until Candace realises that she is being used to strengthen a mind-controlling plant and that the element she thought was unique to her is actually just carbon dioxide, meaning any human could’ve been The Chosen One, which makes Candace feeling even worse about herself, not to mention the fact she was mean to her brothers when they tried to save her. Thankfully, Phineas and Ferb don’t mind Candace’s outbursts because she’s their sister and they love her, no matter what, and they show her that whenever they can.

Candace was voiced by Ashley Tisdale, best known for her role as Sharpay Evans in the High School Musical franchise, at least amongst Disney fans, reprising her role in the movie Sharpay’s Fabulous Adventure (2011). Also for Disney, Tisdale starred as Maddie Fitzpatrick in the series The Suite Life of Zack & Cody (2005-08). In more recent years, she was cast as Kayla in the Netflix series Merry Happy Whatever (2019), and was a panellist on The Masked Dancer (2020-21). Tisdale was nominated for an Annie Award for Outstanding Achievement in Voice Acting for her role in Candace Against the Universe.

Candace Against the Universe begins quite normally for Perry the platypus, who stops Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s latest scheme and latest invention, the Power-Vacuum-inator. He then takes the rest of the day off, but is interrupted by the alert that Candace has been abducted by aliens and he must save her. Through his clever spy skills, he manages to follow the group undetected to Feebla-Oot and saves them from numerous difficulties without being spotted by Phineas, Ferb, or Candace, keeping his cover safe – unlike in Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension. Perry is always there at just the right time, ready to save anyone that needs it. He really is an unsung hero in this movie.

Perry is “voiced” by Dee Bradley Baker, who has had a long career in voice acting. He has voiced characters in series such as Johnny Bravo (1997-2004); Dexter’s Laboratory (1997-2003); The Powerpuff Girls (1999-2005); SpongeBob SquarePants (1999-present); and The Fairly OddParents (2001-17), all non-Disney projects. For Disney, he has voiced the character of Turner for Handy Manny (2006-13), and Tick-Tock the Crocodile in Jake and the Never Land Pirates (2011-16), as well as various characters for animated Star Wars series. 

Although he doesn’t have quite as much screen-time in Candace Against the Universe as normal, my favourite character continues to be Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz. Dr. Doofenshmirtz has to forget his plans to conquer the Tri-State Area in this movie, knowing that his daughter is more important than anything else. They’ve had a bit of a difficult relationship since Dr. Doofenshmirtz and Vanessa’s mother divorced, but he cares about Vanessa a lot. His funniest moments in Candace Against the Universe are when he is talking about “adulting”, arguing with Isabella about why he should be leading them all to the alien fortress, solely because of his age and not because of skill or intellect, and when he is using the Chicken-Replace-inator. The Chicken-Replace-inator is quite a typical Dr. Doofenshmirtz invention, so when he decides to take it to Feebla-Oot, that seems like a nice little Phineas and Ferb joke to make you laugh a little. But then it becomes part of the plot and a way of transporting themselves, which is even more random and very Phineas and Ferb! Dr. Doofenshmirtz was voiced by the other creator of Phineas and Ferb, Dan Povenmire.

Outside of these main characters, there are numerous others that appear in Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe. These include Isabella, Baljeet, and Buford. Isabella takes much of the leader of their quest to the alien fortress on Feebla-Oot, citing her various Fireside Girls badges as evidence of her experience, and Baljeet uses his knowledge of Space Adventure and physics to make sure their journey to the planet is successful. Buford doesn’t do much, but he brings a canoe! Isabella was voiced by Alyson Stoner, who was cast as Caitlyn in Camp Rock (2008) and Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam (2010), after appearing as Max in The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, and as Sarah Baker in Cheaper by the Dozen (2003) and its 2005 sequel. Buford was voiced by Bobby Gaylor, who was one of the story writers on the show; and Baljeet was voiced by Maulik Pancholy. Pancholy had previously appeared as Jonathan in the comedy series 30 Rock (2006-13).

Then there is Vanessa, Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s daughter. After failing to appear in the final edit of Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension, only showing up in two deleted scenes, she makes quite a return in Candace Against the Universe. As well as Candace being abducted by aliens, Vanessa is taken along for the ride. Though she has a slightly easier time of it, not being held captive by the alien leader, she doesn’t avoid all the troubles. She thinks she’s headed back to Earth in an escape pod, only to find she’s just ended up at the same planet she was trying to get away from, and then she finds herself face-to-face with a big, scary dragon. Because Vanessa is calm, cool, and collected, she manages to turn this dragon into a pet of some sorts, and instead of being the “damsel in distress”, she saves both her father and Perry the platypus. She also helps the group finally defeat the mind-controlling plant, with her pet dragon, Vlorkel, as their protector.

Olivia Olson returned to voice Vanessa in this movie. Olson is known for her role as Joanna in the movie, Love Actually (2003), with this character being the love interest of Sam, played by Thomas Brodie-Sangster, the original voice of Ferb. Around the time of the Phineas and Ferb series, Olson also voiced the character of Marceline the Vampire Queen for the series Adventure Time (2010-18). As well as acting, Olson is also known for her singing talents, having released the album Nowhere Land in 2018. Shortly after, she competed in The X Factor: Celebrity in 2019.

The villain of this movie is Super Super Big Doctor, the alien leader of Feebla-Oot. She came to this planet looking to rule over it and its people, using a mind-controlling plant to do so. Super Super Big Doctor is not as kind and caring as she seems early on, when she is manipulating Candace into believing that she is special and should remain on this planet; it was all a ruse so she could continue to be a dictator. Though Candace and Super Super Big Doctor bonded over their shared experiences having two brothers, Candace would never do the things Super Super Big Doctor is capable of, liking forcing the alien group, the Cowards, to work for her and wait on her; anyone not willing to do that is sent to prison. Super Super Big Doctor almost has an epiphany about her evil ways towards the end of the movie, but she’s eaten by her plant too quickly for the message to fully absorb. I’m sure she’d learnt her lesson by the time she was spat out by her plant and captured!

Stand-up comedian, writer, and actor Ali Wong was cast as Super Super Big Doctor. She wrote and starred in the 2019 movie Always Be My Maybe, and was cast as Doris in American Housewife (2016-21) prior to Candace Against the Universe. She has also voiced characters in other animated movies, such as Betty Bird in The Angry Birds Movie (2016); Felony in Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018); and Gore in Onward (2020). Most recently, Wong starred as Amy Lau in the hit Netflix series Beef (2023), winning numerous awards for her role, including a Critics’ Choice Award, a Golden Globe award, and an Emmy award.

Then there are Gamoz and Borthos, two of the Coward aliens. Gamoz was voiced by Thomas Middleditch, who had previously starred in the series Silicon Valley (2014-19) as Richard Hendricks, and went on to star as Drew Dunbar in the sitcom B Positive (2020-22). Diedrich Bader voiced alien Borthos. He was known at the time for his role as Greg Otto in American Housewife (2016-21), but had also voiced characters in Rapunzel’s Tangled Adventure (2017-20); and Harley Quinn (2019-present).

Other voice actors credited in Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe include Wayne Brady, best known for being a regular cast member on improv show Whose Line Is It Anyway? (1998-present) as Stapler-Fist, one of Super Super Big Doctors’ minions, and Tiffany Haddish is even credited as “The Sound Someone Makes When They Explode from the Waist Up”. Haddish was apparently a fan of the show and happy to be involved in the movie; she just wanted some Phineas and Ferb t-shirts with Perry on them[1]!

A few other characters make their usual appearances in Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, however, they do not feature much. Two are Candace’s best friend Stacy, and her boyfriend, Jeremy. They only appear in the movie at Danville Stadium and Stacy discovers that Jeremy is involved in Live Action Role Play, or LARPing, which she finds very funny. Jeremy was voiced by Mitchell Musso, known for his role as Oliver in Hannah Montana (2006-11), and as King Brady in Pair of Kings (2010-13). Stacy was voiced by Kelly Hu. Hu had previously been cast in Martial Law (1998-2000), as Detective Grace Chen, and as China White in Arrow (2012-20). She also voiced the role of Adira in Rapunzel’s Tangled Adventure (2017-2020).

Phineas, Ferb, and Candace’s parents also make brief appearances here. Phineas and Candace’s mother, Linda, is voiced by Caroline Rhea, well-known for her role as Hilda Spellman in Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996-2003). Richard O’Brien voiced Ferb’s father, Lawrence. O’Brien is best known for writing the musical, The Rocky Horror Show, before starring in the 1975 film adaptation. For UK viewers, he is also known as the original host of the game show The Crystal Maze (1990-2020). Lawrence is only seen in the mid-credits scene, and Linda is seen at the start and end of the film.

PRODUCTION

Phineas and Ferb quickly became one of Disney Channel’s most popular series, gaining millions of viewers in the years since its first broadcast. It was created by Jeff “Swampy” Marsh and Dan Povenmire.  

After working on different animated series, Marsh and Povenmire had started working on an idea for a new series together around 1993. The idea for Phineas and Ferb was developed after noticing that kids didn’t seem to go out and do anything anymore, this becoming the whole premise of the show. Disney agreed to move forward with the series around 2006[2]. The series debuted its first episode on 17th August 2007, with its first season finishing in February 2009. It was then followed immediately after by a second season, which aired from February 2009 to February 2011. A third season began in March 2011, ending in November 2012, with Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension premiering partway through this season in August 2011.  

Shortly after the release of Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension, there was talk about a new Phineas and Ferb movie being developed that would be theatrically released sometime around Summer 2013, however, this movie was quietly removed from Disney’s production schedule[3]. But that’s fine, because Phineas and Ferb Season 4 was still airing. It began in December 2012 and ended with a one-hour finale episode titled “Last Day of Summer” on 12th June 2015 to wrap up the entire show.

Four years after Phineas and Ferb had finished airing on Disney Channel, Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, was announced in 2019. It was not going to be a theatrically released movie though but I’m sure that was not a concern for fans.

However, one thing that many questioned was when would Candace Against the Universe be set amidst the events of the series. Although Phineas and Ferb had four seasons’ worth of episodes, all of those episodes are set in one summer so this made fans question whether this movie would be taking place in that summer, a different summer, or not even during summer at all – though that last one would be unlikely. It was soon confirmed that Candace Against the Universe is set within the same summer of the whole series, meaning it takes place at some point before the Season 4 finale episode.

It was confirmed that Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe was in production during the D23 Expo in 2019 with a premiere date scheduled for some time in 2020. A brief description of the movie was given, with most of the voice cast announced to be reprising their roles from the series. The new voice actor for Ferb was also confirmed at this time[4].

In 2020, it was reported that the movie would premiere on Disney+ on 28th August 2020. In preparation for the movie’s release, to build excitement and anticipation for fans, Disney XD aired all episodes of the series as well as Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension from 25th August up to the premiere date[5].

The creators, director of the movie Bob Bowen, Ashley Tisdale, Vincent Martella, Dee Bradley Baker, and Maulik Pancholy, then announced a few behind-the-scenes details about the new movie at their virtual panel for San Diego Comic Con on 25th July 2020. One of these was that the cast had to finish recording their dialogue and songs at home because of the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns in many countries[6]. After five years away, everyone seemed happy to be back in the world of Phineas and Ferb.

Within the movie, as usual for a Phineas and Ferb project, there are plenty of running gags and Easter eggs. The usual gags, like the jingles for Dr. Doofenshmirtz and Perry the platypus, as well as the conversation about where Perry is, remain in Candace Against the Universe. Given this is a science-fiction-themed movie, there are also plenty of space-themed Easter eggs. For example, Space Adventure, the show that Baljeet is a big fan of and gets much of his space travel information from, is a spoof on the popular, long-running franchise Star Trek. There is also a quick reference to Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), when Isabella is talking about bypassing the compressor system in Doofenshmirtz’s “Galactic-Travel-inator”; this is something Rey said in that movie. There is also a parody of Amazon Alexa in the alien mothership, which Candace engages with. As we all know, voice assistants are far from perfect when it comes to communication and understanding!

There were other references to modern day elements that did not exist in the Phineas and Ferb series since the world of technology and pop culture moves very fast these days. There is a song about “adulting” for example, a very annoying phrase that took off in the late-2010s by millennials who apparently need praise for doing basic “grown-up” tasks, like managing your finances, doing laundry, and cooking food… I don’t like this term so it was nice to have it poked fun at in Phineas and Ferb! Social media also makes an appearance, with Vanessa’s posts being a way of Dr. Doofenshmirtz figuring out she’s stuck on Feebla-Oot. Again, this is something that is seen all over social media, like “Help, I’m stuck in a terrifying place and don’t know what to do, but here’s a selfie to show just how terrified I really am!”. Not a good use of time if you really are lost or trapped somewhere. Put your phone away and use your brain – or just call someone. Flossing, as in the dance move, not the dental kind, shows up in this movie too.

Another detail that I found very clever is seen when the gang are travelling at twice the speed of light whilst stowed away on the mothership. Baljeet says he read a theory that says if you exceed the speed of light, your whole existence starts to break down. At this point, we see these animated characters turn into line drawings, then storyboards, and then we see Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh explaining this scene, breaking down the whole animation procedure to the audience. I really liked this small part of the movie.

MUSIC

Original music once again features prominently in Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, as it did in the Phineas and Ferb series, as well as in their first movie, Across the 2nd Dimension. The soundtrack for Candace Against the Universe was released on 28th August 2020 to accompany the movie’s premiere. It consists of eleven original songs.

The opening song in Candace Against the Universe is “Such a Beautiful Day”, performed by Candace as she rides her bike home and tries to forget about what her brothers might be doing with their day, though she has limited success with her thoughts. Although this is the first song to feature in the movie, it was actually the last to be written, to replace an original opening scene of Candace busting her brothers as she normally does. It was felt that this would be too harsh an opening scene for non-fans of the show as the audience would need to be on Candace’s side to appreciate the story that was to come. This song was performed by Ashley Tisdale who said it was her favourite song in the film. “Such a Beautiful Day” was written by Dan Povenmire, co-creator of Phineas and Ferb, and screenwriter Karey Kirkpatrick, who was a writer on Disney’s The Rescuers Down Under (1990) and Aardman Animations’ two Chicken Run movies, just to name a few credits.

This song was my favourite in the movie – I liked how it was all happy and positive one moment, and then angry the next – and one of few that I actually remembered the next day, because to be completely honest, I was not a fan of this whole soundtrack. “Such a Beautiful Day” was nominated for a Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Original Song.

Another song I liked was “Unsung Hero”, performed by Olivia Olson. It plays as Perry is pushing all the asteroids away from the group in their spaceship so they don’t die. It was quite funny, particularly when the song refers to the fact Perry isn’t really an unsung hero anymore because he has a song about him that’s being sung right now! This song was written by both creators of Phineas and Ferb, Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh.

Following on from that, I didn’t mind the song “Adulting” because it was making fun of a phrase that I really don’t like. It was performed by Povenmire, as Dr. Doofenshmirtz, and Alyson Stoner, as Isabella, as they argue about who should lead the group to the alien fortress: Doofenshmirtz because he’s older, or Isabella because she has the skills and knowledge. This song was written by Povenmire and longtime Phineas and Ferb songwriters Martin Olson and Michael Culross Jr.

Outside of that, I wasn’t really bothered by the other songs in Candace Against the Universe. They were kind of amusing at the time, but I didn’t remember much of them afterwards. So, let’s start with “Meet Our Leader”, performed by the aliens as Candace arrives at the fortress to meet with Super Super Big Doctor. This was going to be a scary moment for Candace, but then she is greeted with a mini-Broadway-style production and this planet suddenly doesn’t seem so bad anymore! It was performed by Phineas and Ferb songwriter Danny Jacob, and frequent singer on Phineas and Ferb Laura Dickinson. It was written by Povenmire, Olson, and comedian Kate Micucci.

Another song performed with the aliens is “Girls Day Out”, when Candace spends the day with Super Super Big Doctor. It was sung by pop singer Sarah Hudson, and written by Povenmire and songwriter and producer Emanuel Kiriakou, who has collaborated with the likes of Demi Lovato, Selena Gomez, and Jason Derulo. Then there is “This is Our Battle Song”, which is a song performed by the cast as they trick Super Super Big Doctor into getting into the fortress to save Candace. It was written by Povenmire and Phineas and Ferb writers Joshua Pruett and Robert F. Hughes.

There are two songs that reference the universe here too, which is quite apt given the title of the movie. The first is “The Universe is Against Me”, which Candace sings briefly in the movie when Vanessa is talking to Candace, as she feels so annoyed that she can’t bust her brothers successfully. It later appears as the second song in the End Credits. It was performed by Tisdale and written by Povenmire. It’s an angry rock song. In contrast, “Us Against the Universe” is the big finale number, as everyone comes together to celebrate their victory against the aliens. It’s an upbeat number and a fitting ending to the movie. It is performed by the whole cast and was written by Povenmire and Marsh.

Finally, there are two other End Credits song. The first is called “Silhouettes” and was performed by Robbie Wyckoff, a regular singer of Phineas and Ferb songs, written by Povenmire and Jacob. It is a rock ‘n’ roll song that didn’t appeal to me, much like how “Kick It Up a Notch” didn’t either in the End Credits of Across the 2nd Dimension. The third End Credits song is “We’re Back”, which seems to have also been used as the promo song for this movie too. It was quite a fun song, and works very well as a marketing tool. It was performed by Tisdale as Candace, Vincent Martella as Phineas, and Povenmire as Doofenshmirtz and was written by Povenmire and Marsh.

So, that’s it for full songs heard in the movie, however, there are three other songs to mention. The first is the theme song to Baljeet’s favourite show, “Space Adventure”, which is played whenever Baljeet mentions events from the show. It’s a nice little tune, and clearly makes references to other space-set television series. The second is “Chop Away at My Heart”, originally written for Milo Murphy’s Law, and is meant to be a parody of typical boyband songs. It does sound quite like One Direction. In the movie, it is heard when the spaceship’s voice assistant mishears Candace saying “chop” not “stop” and plays the song for her. Both of these songs were performed by Danny Jacob. 

Finally, there was one deleted song entitled “Step into the Great Unknown”. It was meant to take place in the movie at the time that Baljeet explains to the others just what scenario might be waiting for them on the other side of their portal to Feebla-Oot. This song was meant to be Phineas’ way of encouraging the others to help him and Ferb save Candace. It was performed by Phineas, Isabella, Baljeet, and Buford’s voice actors, written by Povenmire and Olson. I don’t think I needed this song in the movie so I’m glad it was cut.

This song still features on the movie soundtrack though. The soundtrack reached No. 22 on the US Billboard Kids Albums, and No. 18 on US Billboard Soundtrack Albums, which is quite a bit lower than the No. 3 and No. 4 reached on these charts by the soundtrack for Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension.

RECEPTION

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe was released on Disney+ on 28th August 2020. Being able to release this movie on the streaming platform meant it could reach viewers in multiple countries on the same day for a change. Candace Against the Universe was also the first animated Disney+ Original film.

I’ve used the term Disney+ Original film here, and not Disney Channel Original Movie. This is the factually correct term for Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, however, since its predecessor, Across the 2nd Dimension was a Disney Channel Original Movie and because Candace Against the Universe was still produced by Disney Channel, and based on a Disney Channel series, it would’ve been unfair to miss it from my list of DCOM reviews. It is part of the same category as other movies such as Secret Society of Second-Born Royals (2020) which debuted on Disney+ on 25th September 2020, but later debuted separately on Disney Channel. Candace Against the Universe premiered on Disney Channel much later than its Disney+ premiere, on 8th April 2023.

Like Across the 2nd Dimension, Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe received 100% on Rotten Tomatoes from official critics’ reviews. Audience reviews were a bit more mixed, however, fans of the series were likely to enjoy it.

Many fans would have been disappointed about the series ending, but having even a standalone movie to recapture the nostalgic feeling of seeing Phineas and Ferb again would have been a welcomed treat for them. The positive reviews also said they liked that it was more adventurous with its sci-fi elements and that it had more an emotional, heartfelt message to it, like Candace realising she’s not been a good sister and her reunion with Phineas and Ferb when they finally save her from the aliens. Yet the same specific humour from the series remained, even with new characters and new storylines.

However, others said that Candace Against the Universe was not as good as Across the 2nd Dimension, which I do agree with; I definitely laughed less at Candace Against the Universe. Some didn’t like that Phineas and Ferb, as well as Perry the platypus, weren’t in this story as much. If you didn’t like Candace, her being the centre of the movie would’ve made watching the movie less enjoyable. Some also picked up on the fact that the storyline here felt similar to Season 1 episode “Unfair Science Fair Redux (Another Story)” where Candace goes through a portal and ends up on Mars, becoming beloved by the Martians and dubbed their queen. There was a mixed reaction to the music in Candace Against the Universe, with some loving the music and others not. I didn’t find much of the music particularly memorable so it failed in that respect for me.

This movie may also have been a victim of pandemic boredom, where people were watching anything and everything that was new on streaming, whether they normally would’ve watched it or not, and had time to pick apart all the reasons they didn’t like it. There’s not a problem with doing this – everyone is entitled to their opinions – but I do think some movies unnecessarily suffered in their reviews because of these types of behaviours.

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe did, however, still win a Daytime Emmy award for Outstanding Writing Team for a Daytime Animated Program on this movie. It was also nominated at the Kids’ Choice Awards for Favorite Animated Movie, but lost out to Pixar’s Soul (2020).

LEGACY

Despite having some breaks from being on our screens, Phineas and Ferb refuses to go away completely, having spin-off series and even Disney Parks appearances.

As well as the first movie, Across the 2nd Dimension, there was also a series called Take Two with Phineas and Ferb, this being a spin-off short-form series which debuted in December 2010, running until November 2011, where Phineas and Ferb interviewed live-action celebrities. This series only lasted for one season. There were also two crossover episodes of the show which as part of Season 4, with these being called “Phineas and Ferb: Mission Marvel”, airing on 16th August 2013, and “Phineas and Ferb: Star Wars”, airing on 26th July 2014. These capitalised on the popularity of Phineas and Ferb, as well as Disney’s 2009 acquisition of Marvel, and their 2012 purchase of Star Wars, which led to a new movie in 2015: Episode VII: The Force Awakens

After the conclusion of Phineas and Ferb, Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh went on to create the series Milo Murphy’s Law (2016-19) for Disney Channel, which saw “Weird Al” Yankovic and Sabrina Carpenter lead the voice cast. Vincent Martella and Alyson Stoner, voices of Phineas and Isabella respectively, also voiced characters in this series, and some of the Phineas and Ferb characters made appearances in this series too in a crossover episode.

Moving away from TV, Phineas and Ferb even had a US live tour, entitled Phineas and Ferb: The Best LIVE Tour Ever. The original tour took place from August 2011 to April 2012, however, due to its popularity, a second tour began in August 2012, running until April 2013. The live shows featured some of the most loved musical numbers from the show with all the characters from the series, live on stage[7].

At Walt Disney World, there were a few Phineas and Ferb experiences. In Epcot, there used to be Agent P’s World Showcase Adventure, which was an interactive game where gamers could complete challenges in many of the World Showcase country’s pavilions. Agent P’s World Showcase Adventure ran from 2012 until 2020. The game was later rethemed to be DuckTales World Showcase Adventure, beginning in December 2022.

For meet-and-greets, there was one at the Once Upon a Toy store in Disney Springs. Phineas and Ferb, and Agent P met guests here from around 2010. This likely closed when a permanent meet-and-greet experience at Disney’s Hollywood Studios with Phineas and Ferb began in May 2011.. This meet-and-greet closed in January 2016 to make way for construction work to build Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge. Phineas and Ferb were also spotted at Disney California Adventure Park at Disneyland; they could be seen during Phineas and Ferb’s Rockin’ Rollin’ Dance Party from 2011 to 2014.

In more recent years, Phineas and Ferb have been seen again, this time at Disney Hollywood Studios’ festive event Jollywood Nights both in its debut year in 2023, and in 2024. Also at Disney World, at Typhoon Lagoon, the two returned to the H20 Glow Nights event in Summer 2024, having been spotted at this after-hours event the year before.

There was also a Phineas and Ferb Dance Party at Disney Channel Nite at Disneyland Resort in March 2024. At Disneyland, but this time at Disney California Adventure Park, Dr. Doofenshmirtz made his debut at the Oogie Boogie Bash, Disneyland’s Halloween event. Dr. Doofenshmirtz was situated on a treat trail in a recreation of his headquarters. He appeared as a face character with lots of prosthetics, which made him look a bit disturbing to be honest…Finally, Phineas and Ferb seemed to have been at a special Passholder Night event at Disneyland Paris in 2024.

The most exciting news for Phineas and Ferb fans came in 2023, when new episodes of Phineas and Ferb were announced, 40 in total, to be split across two seasons. It will take place in a new “104 days of summer vacation”, presumably just the year after the events of Season 4. Further details have since been released throughout 2024. At New York Comic Con in October 2024, the voice cast for this new season was announced. It would consist of the same names as the series, and David Errigo Jr. was confirmed to be the permanent new voice of Ferb. It was also confirmed that it would premiere in 2025 on both Disney+ and Disney Channel, although a specific premiere date is still yet to be disclosed[8].

As Phineas and Ferb will be making a comeback very soon, it is likely these two characters, as well as possibly others from the series, will continue to make appearances at the Disney Parks. Those involved with the show would even like a theme park attraction based on the show to be created[9]. Only time will tell if that comes true.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Because of the popularity of Phineas and Ferb as a series, in 2011 a first feature-length movie was made, to include all the best moments and elements of the show and to give their viewers a whole new story, and even a new dimension to experience.

Thanks to the success of Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension, the series continued to air for another four years, before ending in 2015. But that was not the end of the story, as Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe came to Disney+ in 2020, giving fans yet another feature-length movie to watch, to see their favourite characters once more, five years after the series had ended. And still, that was not all because in 2024, it was announced that Phineas and Ferb would be returning to our screens in 2025.

For whatever reason, Phineas and Ferb has been a favourite Disney series for many for years, with the love for the show continuing from childhood into adulthood. Judging by the reaction to the revival of the show, it’s quite clear that the mania surrounding this show is not going away any time soon.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Anna Menta, ‘Yes, Tiffany Haddish Voices “The Sounds Someone Makes When They Explode” In the ‘Phineas and Ferb Movie’, Decider.com, 30th August 2020.

[2] Credit: Stuart Dredge, ‘Phineas and Ferb co-creator: ‘children are much more intelligent than people give them credit for’, The Guardian.com, 4th July 2013.

[3] Credit: Steven Zeitchik, ‘‘Phineas and Ferb’ gets the ‘Toy Story’ treatment’, LATimes.com, 27th October 2011.

[4] Credit: Jessica Figueroa, ‘”Phineas and Ferb The Movie: Candace Against The Universe” Currently In Production for Disney+’, WDWNT.com, 25th August 2019.

[5] Credit: Michael Schneider, ‘‘Phineas and Ferb The Movie: Candace Against the Universe’ Lands Premiere Date on Disney Plus’, Variety.com, 2nd July 2020.

[6] Credit: Alex Reif, ‘Comic-Con@Home: What We Learned from Disney’s “Phineas and Ferb The Movie: Candace Against the Universe” Panel’, LaughingPlace.com, 25th July 2020.

[7] Credit: Madeline Roth, ‘Disney’s Phineas And Ferb Live: The Best Live Tour Ever!’ To Adventure To Columbus’, TheLantern.com, 23rd October 2012.

[8] Credit: Author Unknown, ‘Disney’s ‘Phineas and Ferb’ Cast Announced at New York Comic Con’, TheWaltDisneyCompany.com, 17th October 2024.

[9] Credit: Eva Miller, ‘D23 Reveals Ambitious Plans for ‘Phineas and Ferb’ Theme Park Attraction’, InsidetheMagic.net, 10th August 2024.

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension (2011)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

In amongst all the typical comedy series that air on Disney Channel, there are also a number of animated series that have debuted on the channel.

Some of these animated series are directly based on a Disney animated movie, such as Lilo & Stitch: The Series (2003-06), or The Emperor’s New School (2006-08). Other series that premiered on Disney Channel were based on original ideas such as Kim Possible (2002-07) and Phineas and Ferb (2007-15).

I have never been a huge fan of animated television series for some reason. I don’t really understand why as I love animated movies; I think it might have something to do with how silly animated cartoons can be. I liked a few though, don’t get me wrong, especially when I was little. I used to watch Cartoon Network so early in the morning that my parents had to put a parental lock on the TV to stop me waking them up! But as I started watching Disney Channel, the only animated series I enjoyed watching was Recess (1997-2003), which wasn’t a Disney Channel original, choosing instead to watch their live-action shows.

My sister was the one who liked Disney Channel’s animated programming: Kim Possible, Lilo & Stitch: The Series, and American Dragon: Jake Long (2005-07). When Phineas and Ferb came out, she loved that show too. If I was being a nice little sister, I’d sit and watch these shows with her without complaining. Though I really didn’t like American Dragon, I was fine watching the other three shows I’ve mentioned.

There were elements of Phineas and Ferb that I liked. I liked Candace, the big sister character, but I think that was purely because she was voiced by Ashley Tisdale, a.k.a. Sharpay Evans in the High School Musical franchise, my favourite character in those films. I also found Dr. Doofenshmirtz very funny, and the songs were pretty good, so it wasn’t too much of a chore to sit through episodes when my sister wanted to watch.

When we found out that Phineas and Ferb’s first movie, Across the 2nd Dimension, was going to be released, I knew I’d have to let my sister watch it whenever she wanted to, and I did; we watched it together, and although it wasn’t my thing, I did quite like it. There were some moments where I laughed out loud, and again, I quite liked the music.

It’s a good movie, though fans of the show will appreciate it more. Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension was only Disney Channel’s third animated original movie, after Kim Possible Movie: So the Drama (2005) and The Proud Family Movie (2005).

PLOT

Across the 2nd Dimension begins with a flashforward, as we see Phineas, Ferb, Candace, and Dr. Doofenshmirtz in chains, being led towards a huge, fluffy monster. As Phineas says “everything started out so well this morning”, we go back in time to that morning.

Half-brothers Phineas and Ferb are woken up by the sun and the noise of their pet platypus, Perry. It turns out this day is exactly five years since they both got Perry from a pet store, liking the fact that the cross-eyed platypus could look at both Phineas and Ferb at the same time, with the boys seeing this as some sort of sign! The plan was to call him Barthlomew, but in the end, the platypus was renamed to Perry.

Meanwhile, their sister Candace is figuring out what to do with her day and calls up her boyfriend Jeremy. Jeremy is busy, going with his dad to look at colleges, which reminds Candace that Jeremy is a whole year older than her and will be heading off to college soon. This motivates Candace to get rid of all her childish junk and finally act like a grown-up.

Phineas and Ferb have decided to create a huge game of badminton with their friends, Isabella, Buford, and Baljeet, creating two massive Perry-like catapults that will send a shuttlecock from the boys’ back garden over to the park. As they are about to try it out for the first time, they notice Perry has vanished, a normal occurrence, nothing to worry about.

Perry is actually a secret agent, known as Agent P. He is congratulated on his five years with the boys, as he was never just a normal platypus in a pet store but was assigned to this family. Agent P’s boss, Major Monogram, warns him that should his cover ever be blown, he will have to be reassigned. Agent P loves Phineas and Ferb so tries very hard to keep his secret, whilst also saving the world from the evil scientist, Dr. Doofenshmirtz, who has grand schemes but is incapable of achieving them. Agent P is told to stop Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s latest invention, some sort of alternate reality device, and is given gadgets to help him on his mission. He is given a magnetic watch that can communicate with Major Monogram, although he is warned not to contact him between 3:30pm and 4:00pm as that is when he takes his shower… Oh yeah, and this watch can give people instant brain freeze!

Back home, Candace is told to look after the boys as her parents are going to see a movie. This gives Candace the opportunity to act like a grown-up and bust her brothers herself, something she has spent all summer trying to do, but at the moment she goes to show her mother the boys’ creations, they always disappear and the boys are never punished. Candace catches a glimpse of the huge “platypult” in the garden, but by the time she gets out there, the boys have been catapulted into the air on a huge shuttlecock and the platypult has vanished, giving Candace evidence that this “mysterious force” that always takes away the boys’ inventions now sees her as the adult, not just her mother.

Phineas and Ferb, on the shuttlecock, accidentally crash into Agent P in his hovercraft, though they don’t realise, and are knocked off course, crashing into Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s lair and into his “Other-Dimension-inator”, the exact thing Agent P was meant to be stopping. As the boys feel bad for breaking this guy’s machine, and don’t know he’s evil, they decide to help fix it, noticing issues with his wiring and his self-destruct button which would have stopped it from working properly. Agent P then arrives soon after, but quickly reverts back to normal Perry the platypus mode when he sees Phineas and Ferb there. Realising that the boys are making this invention work, Perry tries everything he can to stop them, including peeing on Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s sofa – nice… It doesn’t work though and the machine is used to show another dimension.

Phineas, Ferb, Perry, and Dr. Doofenshmirtz step into this alternate dimension and see that the Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz is ruler of this alternate Tri-State Area, something that normal Dr. Doofenshmirtz has always tried to do. Dr. Doofenshmirtz heads over alone to meet his alternate dimension self. Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz reveals that he turned the Alternate Agent P into a cyborg, who now works as one of his minions, along with his army of Norm Bots, something Dr. Doofenshmirtz has, but his Norm Bot has never shown much capacity for being evil… The boys soon arrive with Perry. Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz instantly recognises Perry as being Agent P, however, Dr. Doofenshmirtz cannot see it, as the platypus isn’t standing on two legs or wearing his secret agent hat. Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz shows he’s right by having his platypus cyborg attack the boys. Sure enough, Agent P reveals himself to everyone to save Phineas and Ferb. They are attacked by the Alternate Norm Bots and the cyborg, with Agent P having to get the boys to safety. Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz then decides to take over the other Tri-State Area.

Phineas is furious with Perry for his deceit and his double life, struggling to move past it. He uses the remote for the Other-Dimension-inator, which he luckily kept with him, but the portal does not show their dimension. They decide to enlist the help of their alternate selves to get home. But Alternate Phineas and Alternate Ferb are not the creative geniuses they are in the “real world”. Instead, thanks to Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s iron-fisted rule, the boys live in a grey world full of fear and anxiety. They aren’t going to be much help… A television announcement then plays telling Agent P to hand himself in to save Phineas and Ferb from any further harm. As he is about to secretly leave, Phineas sees him and accuses him of ditching them. Phineas angrily tells Perry/Agent P to go, and he sadly does.

Phineas then says they need to find Alternate Isabella, who the boys in this dimension have never met, but luckily, she only lives next door. As they head over there, a Norm Bot spots them and tries to attack. Alternate Buford saves them, and takes them over to the Resistance, which consists of alternate versions of all their friends, and is led by none other than Alternate Candace! They are told by Alternate Baljeet to picture dimensions as moving in a clockwise direction, with the remote showing the next dimension along from where they are. It is easier to travel in this direction, although the number of dimensions they would need to get through to get home is unknown. The Resistance can redirect the power to open up the portal to their home, however, it is unsteady. As the boys learn that Perry needs saving from Alternate Doofenshmirtz, who now needs the boys to fix his own version of the “Other-Dimension-inator” in order to conquer their Tri-State area, they decide not to go through. Alternate Baljeet says he’ll try to keep it open but it may not last too long. Suddenly, Candace jumps through into this alternate dimension, causing the portal to close. Candace believed this was the “mysterious force” – it wasn’t…

The Resistance then take Phineas, Ferb, and Candace to Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s headquarters via mine carts in the underground tunnels so they can save Perry. However, when they arrive there, it is revealed that they have walked into a trap. Using some quick-thinking, Perry/Agent P realises it is between 3:30pm and 4:00pm and uses his watch to call Major Monogram, who, sure enough, is in the shower. This holographic image makes both Dr. Doofenshmirtzs avert their eyes, letting the others escape. They are pursued by Norm Bots. A fire begins on one of the mine carts, slowing down the train. Alternate Candace makes the decision to cut lose Phineas, Ferb, and Candace’s end of the train so she can save her own brothers. They are captured.

Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz orders Phineas to fix the “Other-Dimension-inator”. Phineas refuses, even when faced with a hand puppet, which Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz believes should have managed to convince him! Dr. Doofenshmirtz then remembers what the boys told him back home about the wiring and the self-destruct button. Making some changes, the machine now works. As there is no use for the boys, Candace, Agent P, or Dr. Doofenshmirtz anymore, they are sent to their doom. This “doom” consists of being fed to a huge, fluffy monster, as per the opening sequence. Suddenly, Alternate Candace arrives, flying across the room on a giant gnome statue, throwing Phineas the remote that he left back at Resistance Headquarters. He uses the remote just as the group are about to fall, all chained together, and they disappear into another dimension, with the monster following them – though much of its body doesn’t make it through the small portal so it gets freaked out and runs off! They unlock themselves from their chains, however, some of the Norm Bots have followed them through the portal, whilst others have captured Alternate Candace.

The group, chased by Norm Bots, run through multiple dimensions, finally making it home, however, Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz is already here and has sent his Norm Bots to attack their city of Danville, to make the people conform to his new world order. Agent P runs off to save the day, giving Phineas and Ferb his pet collar first. They go off home, believing there is nothing more they can do. Dr. Doofenshmirtz, meanwhile, tries to get into his penthouse where Alternate Doofenshmirtz is enacting his plan.  

At home, Phineas and Ferb begin to hear noises coming from the collar. They follow the noises and are led to a tunnel in the wall, which takes them to Agent P’s secret lair. They are instructed to open up the collar’s locket and uses it as a key to the supercomputer. After doing this, they then see that all their inventions from the summer are being 3D-printed. Phineas and Ferb enlist all their friends to use these inventions to fight the Norm Bots. Other animal secrets agents, of which Agent P is just one, also get in on the battle. Candace decides she has to show her mother what is going on, as she knows the “mysterious force” will remove all trace of the battle if she does.

Agent P takes Phineas up to battle Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz and close the portal. Agent P fights the cyborg, and Phineas fights Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz, but nothing seems to be working. The cyborg is electrified and immobilised, but the portal is still open. Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz then gets hold of Phineas’ baseball glove invention, and shoots a baseball right at Phineas. Agent P throws him a bat, and Phineas manages to hit the baseball right into the portal, breaking it and closing it. The Norm Bots fall from the sky and Ferb shows up. But Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz has one more trick up his sleeve, revealing a huge robot version of himself, where he controls it…from the sleeve. As Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz is about to throw a punch, Dr. Doofenshmirtz comes in and shows Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz a toy train. Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz lost his as a child and this turned him evil. As Dr. Doofenshmirtz hands over his own toy train, Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s backstory is finally resolved. He self-destructs all the Norm Bots and goes back home.

Back in his dimension, Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz is promptly arrested by the Resistance, with Alternate Candace being freed from prison by her brothers and Alternate Jeremy, who she’d never met before. Then, Alternate Candace, Phineas, and Ferb come through to thank everyone for their help, and they also take home the cyborg, who was their pet, and has since reverted back to normal platypus mode. Candace also encourages Alternate Candace to date Alternate Jeremy, something she says she’ll think about.

Major Monogram arrives to say Agent P must be reassigned as his cover was blown today. The boys are devastated over this and wish there was another way. Major Monogram and his assistant, Carl, then remember Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s “Amnesia-inator”, which they can use to wipe their memories of the day. Everything goes back to normal, with only Agent P having fond memories of it, uploading photos of their adventure onto his supercomputer.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Phineas and Ferb are half-brothers who are very close, almost inseparable. They aren’t the type of kids who want to spend their summer staying inside, watching TV, or playing on video games. They want to get outside, be creative, and have some fun. The two are used to creating huge-scale inventions with their friends, but going to an alternate dimension, finding out their pet platypus is a secret agent, and being chased around by weird robots is a little out of even their comfort zone! They tackle this situation with their usual intelligence, loyalty, and quick-thinking and get out of it unharmed, along with all their friends and their favourite sister, Candace. Although Phineas and Ferb are similar in many ways, one big difference between them is the amount that the brothers talk. Ferb rarely says much outside of the occasional clever one-liner, whereas Phineas is the chatty one.

Phineas was voiced by Vincent Martella. Martella is also known for his role as Greg Wuliger in Everybody Hates Chris (2005-09), for which he was nominated for a Teen Choice Award and two Young Artists Awards. Thomas Brodie-Sangster voiced Ferb. As a child actor, Brodie-Sangster was cast as Sam in Love Actually (2003), and then as Simon in Nanny McPhee (2005). In more recent years, he is known for his roles as Rafe Sadler in the BBC series Wolf Hall (2015-present); as Jack Dawkins / Dodger in The Artful Dodger (2023-present); and as Newt in The Maze Runner movie trilogy.

Candace is Phineas and Ferb’s sister whose main aim in life is to bust her brothers and get them in trouble for all the things they do during the summer. This has never worked before, because every time Candace manages to drag her mother away from whatever she’s doing to come and see what the boys are doing, the invention magically disappears and everything seems normal. In Across the 2nd Dimension, Candace has decided to be an adult, wanting to bust her brothers herself, but when she tries to, she finds that this “mysterious force” that hides all the boys’ creations has taken it away before even she can see it, leading her to believe that she is actually an adult. But because of her obsession with this force, Candace then jumps through the portal into the next dimension and is stuck in the middle of a battle between good and evil with her brothers – not exactly what she expected! But by working with her brothers, instead of against them, they manage to get home and defeat Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz.

Candace was voiced by Ashley Tisdale, best known for her role as Sharpay Evans in the High School Musical franchise, at least amongst Disney fans, reprising her role in the movie Sharpay’s Fabulous Adventure (2011). Also for Disney, Tisdale starred as Maddie Fitzpatrick in the series The Suite Life of Zack & Cody (2005-08). In more recent years, she was cast as Kayla in the Netflix series Merry Happy Whatever (2019), and was a panellist on The Masked Dancer (2020-21). Tisdale has been an executive producer on some Disney projects, such as the DCOM Cloud 9 (2014) and the ABC series Young & Hungry (2014-18).

Perry the platypus is Phineas and Ferb’s pet, however, he is actually a secret agent, Agent P, something that the audience already knows, but until this movie, the boys had no idea; they just thought Perry wandered off for a nap every day. What Perry, or Agent P, has actually been doing is stopping Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s evil schemes to take over the Tri-State Area. If Phineas and Ferb hadn’t accidentally ended up at Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s headquarters, then they wouldn’t have gotten involved in Agent P’s mission and he would never have had to reveal his secret agent status to them in order to save their lives. It’s quite sad how annoyed Phineas is with Perry for the “deceit” and it clearly hurts Perry quite a lot. Agent P does successfully complete his mission, with Phineas and Ferb beside him, and, ironically, one of Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s inventions actually help them stay together, as it wipes all their memories of that day, so Perry can still be part of the family.

Perry is “voiced” by Dee Bradley Baker, who has had a long career in voice acting. He has voiced characters in series such as Johnny Bravo (1997-2004); Dexter’s Laboratory (1997-2003); The Powerpuff Girls (1999-2005); SpongeBob SquarePants (1999-present); and The Fairly OddParents (2001-17), all non-Disney projects. For Disney, he has voiced the character of Turner for Handy Manny (2006-13), and Tick-Tock the Crocodile in Jake and the Never Land Pirates (2011-16), as well as various characters for animated Star Wars series. 

Agent P’s boss is Major Monogram, who is quite formal and serious, but seems to be pleased with Agent P’s work as a secret agent. Major Monogram can make jokes when he wants to, but in Across the 2nd Dimension, the joke is mostly on him, especially when Agent P uses a hologram of Major Monogram in the shower to distract the two Dr. Doofenshmirtzs despite being told not to call him at that time, as that is his shower time. We also see Major Monogram’s unpaid intern, Carl, here, who tries his best to do a good job for Major Monogram, but he is hard to please! Major Monogram was voiced by Jeff “Swampy” Marsh, one of the creators of Phineas and Ferb. Carl was voiced by Tyler Alexander Mann.

Now for the best character in the whole show: Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz. Dr. Doofenshmirtz has some great ideas for how to conquer the Tri-State Area, but due to his ineptness and incompetence, his inventions and various “-inators” rarely work and even when they do, Agent P is a very efficient secret agent, so he manages to foil all of Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s plans before they really get off the ground. Dr. Doofenshmirtz is much too funny and lovable to be an evil ruler anyway, so it’s probably for the best! Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz, however, is the opposite and has managed to rule his Tri-State Area, with big robots and a cyborg platypus, which makes the real Dr. Doofenshmirtz feel a bit lesser. He is mocked by his alternate self for not recognising Agent P unless he has his secret agent hat on, and is found to be quite annoying by his alternate self, which must really destroy your self-confidence… Dr. Doofenshmirtz normally has some of the best lines in Phineas and Ferb, with my favourite one in this film being: “If I had a nickel for every time I was doomed by a puppet, I’d have two nickels, which isn’t a lot, but it’s weird that it happened twice, right?” That line always makes me laugh; it’s just so random! Dr. Doofenshmirtz was voiced by the other creator of Phineas and Ferb, Dan Povenmire, who was nominated for an Emmy Award for his voice performance in this movie in 2012.

Outside of these main characters, there are numerous others that appear in Phineas and Ferb and Across the 2nd Dimension. These include Isabella, who has a crush on Phineas and is the leader of a girl scout troop in the real world, and part of the Resistance in the Alternate Dimension, and Jeremy, who is Candace’s boyfriend in their dimension, and a Resistance leader in the 2nd Dimension. Isabella was voiced by Alyson Stoner, who was cast as Caitlyn in Camp Rock (2008) and Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam (2010), after appearing as Max in The Suite Life of Zack & Cody, and as Sarah Baker in Cheaper by the Dozen (2003) and its 2005 sequel. Jeremy was voiced by Mitchell Musso, known for his role as Oliver in Hannah Montana (2006-11), and as King Brady in Pair of Kings (2010-13).

Two more of Phineas and Ferb’s friends are Baljeet and Buford. Baljeet is intelligent and polite, however this makes him a target for Buford, who is a bit of a bully at times, but sometimes isn’t. Sometimes, he wants to help and be part of the group. In Across the 2nd Dimension, he is much less of a bully and more of a friend, although Alternate Buford is resisting the Resistance group, so he’s not all that helpful. Alternate Baljeet is though, as he figures out two methods for the boys to get back home. Buford was voiced by Bobby Gaylor, who is one of the story writers on the show; and Baljeet was voiced by Maulik Pancholy. Pancholy had previously appeared as Jonathan in the comedy series 30 Rock (2006-13).

Finally, I just want to briefly mention the voice actors of Phineas, Ferb, and Candace’s parents. Phineas and Candace’s mother, Linda, is voiced by Caroline Rhea, well-known for her role as Hilda Spellman in Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996-2003). Richard O’Brien voiced Ferb’s father, Lawrence. O’Brien is best known for writing the musical, The Rocky Horror Show, before starring in the 1975 film adaptation. For UK viewers, he is also known as the original host of the game show The Crystal Maze (1990-2020).

All the voice actors here reprised their roles from the main series, and the Alternate Dimension versions of these characters use the same voice actors. Although there is one big name still to mention who only has a small cameo in Across the 2nd Dimension. That is Doris Roberts, best known for her role as Marie Barone in Everybody Loves Raymond (1996-05). Roberts voiced Mrs. Thompson, Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s elderly neighbour in this movie.

PRODUCTION

The first episode of Phineas and Ferb debuted on 17th August 2007 on Disney Channel, and a second episode was aired on 28th September 2007. The full first season then officially premiered on 1st February 2008, running until February 2009. A second season aired straight after, finishing in February 2011. It was closely followed by a third season which began airing in March 2011, and ended in November 2012.

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension premiered on 5th August 2011, partway through Season 3, between Episode 17 “Road Trip” and Episode 18 “Tour de Ferb”. The show does not have a major overarching storyline though, so there is no real need to watch it at this specific point in the season.

Phineas and Ferb quickly became one of Disney Channel’s most popular series, gaining millions of viewers in the years since its first broadcast. Although there was a rumour that spread online a few years ago, saying that the idea behind Phineas and Ferb was based on a true story about a mentally ill girl in Russia, this is not the true story of how Phineas and Ferb came to be.

At the Children’s Media Conference in Sheffield in 2013, co-creator of the show, Jeff “Swampy” Marsh spoke about the origins of the animated series. Marsh said that he first got interested in working in animation around his late-20s, becoming a background artist on The Simpsons (1989-present) in the early 1990s. He then went on to work on other series, such as Rocko’s Modern Life (1993-96), moving into writing and directing. This is where Marsh and Dan Povenmire started discussing their plans for a new animated series. Dan Povenmire later worked as a director on Family Guy (1999-present), whilst Marsh moved over to work on King of the Hill (1997-2009).

Around 1993, Marsh and Povenmire had already developed the idea for Phineas and Ferb, after noticing that kids didn’t seem to go out and do anything anymore, this becoming the whole premise of the show. I’m sure the irony of creating a television show for kids, to be watched inside, to encourage them to go outside and do things hasn’t been lost on the creators! The idea was later pitched to numerous networks, including Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network, and Fox Kids, before Disney agreed to move forward with it around 2006[1]. As well as using their experience of working on prior animated series, it has been said that the creators were inspired by British children’s shows such as Danger Mouse (1981-92) and Tiswas (1974-82), as well as American ones, like Sesame Street (1969-present) and The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle (1959-64).

As Disney Channel doesn’t have many animated series, unlike other networks such as Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon, it was felt that Phineas and Ferb would be able to compete with them now. The creators wanted the show to be bright and colourful, and created their characters based on geometric shapes, something they learnt from Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons, to make them easy to draw. They also loved music, so wanted to put their own songs into the show. These have remained popular with viewers, even outside of the show. I still remember many of them and I didn’t even watch the show all that much! It was also decided that the series should not be set in a school, as so many other animated children’s shows have been[2].

Phineas and Ferb successfully managed to attract major stars to come and voice characters in the show, including Selena Gomez, chef Jamie Oliver, presenter Jonathan Ross, and even Jeremy Clarkson, James May, and Richard Hammond from Top Gear, who voiced racing commentators in one episode.

The series won a Daytime Emmy in 2010 for Outstanding Writing in Animation, and three Primetime Emmy Awards to Jill Daniels and Brian Woods for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation. It has also been nominated for numerous other awards, including for its music and its voice performances.

It has been stated that this movie was first announced by Jeff “Swampy” Marsh in a January 2010 interview, however, I have been unable to find that interview to confirm that this is when Across the 2nd Dimension was first confirmed to be in development. Regardless, Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension was a natural way of extending the reach of the already popular show, something that Disney Channel are used to doing with other DCOMs based on series, and gave more opportunity for the visual gags, music, Easter eggs, and clever writing that the show is loved for.

Some of these are running gags that appear in both the series and the movie. For example, in the film, the usual “Hey, where’s Perry?”, and “Oh, there you are, Perry” lines from Phineas, as well as Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s evil jingle, will be familiar to fans of the series, along with the inventions used during the battle with the Norm Bots, which appeared in previous episodes of the show. There are references to elements of pop culture too, such as the musical scenes parodying other bands such as The Beatles, and Phineas lifting Perry up like Rafiki does to Simba in The Lion King (1994) in the opening musical song.

MUSIC

Since original music is a unique addition to Phineas and Ferb as a series, it only makes sense for Across the 2nd Dimension to feature even more original songs. This movie does in fact feature nine original songs, plus one deleted song.

This deleted song is called “Mysterious Force”, sung by Ashley Tisdale as Candace, where she talks about how she has always failed to bust her brothers, supposedly because this force takes all of her brothers’ inventions away at exactly the wrong – or right – moment[3]. No song in this movie is bad, including this one, but it’s not my favourite.

My favourite song is “Brand New Best Friend” which Dan Povenmire as Dr. Doofenshmirtz sings alongside his alternate dimension self, talking about all their similarities. It all seems to be going well, but Alternate Doofenshmirtz ends up getting annoyed with Dr. Doofenshmirtz and their friendship goes downhill fairly quickly…It’s a funny song, as it should be, since it features the funniest character in the whole show.

I also like “Summer (Where Do We Begin?)”, which Phineas sings to their alternate selves, as they have never had a summer in this alternate dimension, thanks to Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s rule over the Tri-State Area. Phineas and Ferb are telling them all about how great summer is and all the things you can do. They also start singing part of the series’ theme song, “Today Is Gonna Be a Great Day”, during this song. It’s very catchy and parts of it get stuck in my head randomly.

Of the other songs on the soundtrack and in the film, I don’t like them as much but they’re still fine to listen to and add to the story. One of these is “Robot Riot” sung by the in-series rock band Love Händel, but actually by Dan Povenmire and Jaret Reddick from band Bowling for Soup, during the battle against the Norm Bots. Following on from the successful battle and defeat of Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz, just before the End Credits, the song “Takin’ Care of Things” is briefly heard as Agent P uploads his photos from the day. It’s a nice, upbeat song to finish the film. It is performed by Dan Povenmire and Danny Jacob.  The End Credits song is “Kick It Up a Notch” sung by Phineas and Guns ‘N’ Roses guitarist Slash.

Two more songs in the movie are “Everything’s Better with Perry” and “Brand New Reality”. “Everything’s Better with Perry” is the opening song for the movie, which is performed by Robbie Wyckoff. It plays as Phineas and Ferb look forward to another summer’s day with their best friend Perry. It’s very upbeat and positive, as we should all aim to feel at the start of a new day but rarely manage to! “Brand New Reality” is also performed by Robbie Wyckoff and it plays as the gang race through multiple dimensions to get home as they are chased by Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s Norm Bots.

There are two other songs in this movie that I did like but don’t make it on the soundtrack, probably because they are both only heard briefly. The first is “Baljeet Explanation”, performed by Alternate Baljeet, as he explains how Phineas and Ferb can travel back or forward through dimensions. It’s not a song at all, really, but I still like it – it’s funny and so random. Alternate Baljeet is quite right though – it did need a chorus! The other is “I Walk Away”, performed by Olivia Olson. It’s a sad song to match Perry’s sadness as he hands himself over to Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz after basically being told by Phineas to get lost and leave them alone. It would’ve been nice to have a full version of this song.

Most of the songs in Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension are included in the soundtrack Phineas and Ferb: Across the 1st and 2nd Dimensions, alongside songs from the series. This soundtrack was released on 4th August 2011, a day before the premiere of the movie. “Mysterious Force” is included on the soundtrack, despite being cut from the movie. The soundtrack peaked at No. 4 on the US Billboard Soundtrack Albums chart; at No. 3 on the US Billboard Kid Albums; and at No. 57 on the US Billboard 200 chart.

All of the songs here were written by Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh, the creators of the series, at least in part. The two were joined by Slash to write “Kick It Up a Notch”, with composer Danny Jacob also credited. Bowling for Soup’s lead vocalist, Jaret Reddick, whose band perform the Phineas and Ferb theme song, is credited as co-writing “Robot Riot” alongside the creators and Martin Olson, comedy writer and composer. Other co-writers of songs within this movie include Aliki Theofilopoulos, who was a storyboard artist and writer on Phineas and Ferb, as well as an animator on Disney movies such as Hercules (1997) and Tarzan (1999), who co-wrote “Everything’s Better with Perry” with Antoine Guilbaub; Jon Colton Barry and Robert Forrest Hughes are credited on “Summer (Where Do We Begin?)”; and James Bernstein on “Brand New Reality”. Many of these songwriters and composers had worked on previous songs for the series.

RECEPTION

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension was promoted in various ways, prior to its premiere date.

One of these was through a promotional tour, which featured Perry the Platy-bus. The tour kicked off in New York City’s Times Square on 11th July 2011, stopping off at cities on its journey to San Diego Comic Con, which took place from 21st to 24th July 2011. At the San Diego Comic Con, the creators and some of the voice cast were on hand to discuss the new movie and even show a sneak preview of it.

The official premiere of Across the 2nd Dimension took place on 4th August 2011 at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles, with a small parade and characters of Phineas, Ferb, and Agent P being around to have pictures taken with all the cast and other attendees.

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension finally premiered on Disney Channel on 5th August 2011. It then aired a week later on Disney XD, and then on 20th August on ABC, before the movie was rolled out to other countries between August and November 2011[4]. Apparently, this movie was theatrically released in Spain.

Across the 2nd Dimension received some very positive reviews, including receiving 100% on Rotten Tomatoes from official critics’ reviews. Fans of the show were pleased to find that this feature-length episode was full of all the elements from the series that they loved, such as songs, spoofs, Easter eggs, and inside jokes and running gags. Others found the movie to be highly quotable – as I do – and liked the vibrant animation. It was seen to be a very funny family-friendly film.

There were a few negative comments about the movie, though nothing major, but some that I agree with in part. One of these was that Phineas was incredibly hostile to Perry at times during the movie, which is quite out of character for the usually calm, upbeat Phineas. It was strange to see Phineas so angry with Perry for hiding his identity. Has this kid not seen spy films? It’s imperative that spies keep their identities hidden, so I would’ve expected Phineas to have understood that, and be surprised to find out his beloved pet was a secret agent, but not have been so hard on him. Another was that the ending was seen to be a “cop out”, as handily, all the characters’ memories of the day could be wiped away in a second, meaning that nothing had to change. It was quite an easy way to end the movie, but I do understand that more of the series was going to be aired afterwards, so they couldn’t do much in terms of altering the events of the series.

Others also said they were disappointed to find that the character of Vanessa, Dr. Doofenshmirtz’s daughter, did not make an appearance in Across the 2nd Dimension. I always liked Vanessa, so I can see why this would be disappointing. Vanessa was included in two different scenes that were dropped from the final cut of the film. Vanessa was going to be teasing Dr. Doofenshmirtz for “playing with his doll”, when she walks in on him explaining his new plan to a stand-in Perry the platypus “doll”, before going home to her mother. Alternate Vanessa would have also made an appearance in a separate scene, arguing with Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz about how he has banished yet another of her boyfriends, before saying she is also going back home to her mother[5].

I think these parallel scenes would have been an appreciated addition to the movie, but for whatever reason, they were not included. Fun fact for anyone that isn’t already aware: the voice of Vanessa is provided by Olivia Olson, who played Joanna, the girl in Love Actually that Thomas Brodie-Sangster’s character, Sam, has a crush on and runs through Heathrow Airport for. Vanessa and Ferb also become a couple as seen in Season Four episode “Act Your Age”, set ten years in the future. This could be disturbing, given their age gap during the main series’ events, or cute, depending on who you talk to!

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension was watched by 7.6 million viewers on its premiere date, and later became cable’s No.1 movie of 2011. It currently stands at No. 10 in the Top 10 most-watched DCOM premieres ever.

LEGACY

Phineas and Ferb has continued to be relevant in the entertainment and media industry, with spin-offs or sequels from both the movie and the series having been released.

The series Take Two with Phineas and Ferb was a spin-off short-form series which debuted in December 2010, running until November 2011, where Phineas and Ferb interviewed live-action celebrities, with guests including Miss Piggy, David Beckham, Taylor Swift, and Jack Black. This series only lasted for one season. 

As well as a video game based on the movie, a further direct spin-off from Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension was created in the form of the Season Four episode “Tales from the Resistance: Back to the 2nd Dimension”. This episode is set two months after the events of Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension. With Alternate Dr. Doofenshmirtz in prison, Alternate Candace and the Resistance face a new threat in the city of Danville and must work to stop it.

Two crossover episodes of the show were also aired as part of Season 4, with these being called “Phineas and Ferb: Mission Marvel”, airing on 16th August 2013, and “Phineas and Ferb: Star Wars”, airing on 26th July 2014. These capitalised on the popularity of Phineas and Ferb, as well as Disney’s 2009 acquisition of Marvel, and their 2012 purchase of Star Wars, which led to a new movie in 2015: Episode VII: The Force Awakens.

As mentioned, these were all episodes from Season 4, which aired from December 2012 to June 2015, with this being the show’s final season. The whole series concluded with an hour-long episode entitled “Last Day of Summer” on 12th June 2015.

After the conclusion of Phineas and Ferb, Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh went on to create the series Milo Murphy’s Law (2016-19) for Disney Channel, which saw “Weird Al” Yankovic and Sabrina Carpenter lead the voice cast. Vincent Martella and Alyson Stoner, voices of Phineas and Isabella respectively, also voiced characters in this series, and some of the Phineas and Ferb characters made appearances in this series too, in a crossover episode.

Moving away from TV, Phineas and Ferb even had a US live tour, entitled Phineas and Ferb: The Best LIVE Tour Ever. The original tour took place from August 2011 to April 2012, however, due to its popularity, a second tour began in August 2012, running until April 2013. The live shows featured some of the most loved musical numbers from the show with all the characters from the series, live on stage[6].

Phineas and Ferb has also been one of the few Disney Channel properties to have any references at the Disney Parks, outside of a few pieces of merchandise.

At Walt Disney World, in Epcot, there used to be Agent P’s World Showcase Adventure, which was an interactive game where gamers could complete challenges in many of the World Showcase country’s pavilions to help Agent P, and it used actual mobile phone devices originally. This is because the original name of this game was Kim Possible World Showcase Adventure, and one of the main features of that show was the “Kimmunicator” flip-phone. The 2000s and early 2010s were not exactly high-tech, but I liked holding the phone and having to secretly place it in a box at the end of the mission so that it could be used by another “agent”. Anyway, Agent P’s World Showcase Adventure later became playable on guests’ own smartphones around 2016, and then was played through the official Play Disney Parks app. The Kim Possible-themed game began in 2009 and ran until 2012, when it was replaced with the Agent P theming. Agent P’s World Showcase Adventure ran until 2020. The game was later rethemed to be DuckTales World Showcase Adventure, beginning in December 2022.

At the Once Upon a Toy store in what was then called Downtown Disney but is now called Disney Springs, Phineas and Ferb, and Agent P met guests here from around 2010. This likely closed when a permanent meet-and-greet experience at Disney’s Hollywood Studios with Phineas and Ferb began in May 2011. The premise was that the boys were spending their time at the park filming a movie, so there were props like blow-up guitars and clapper boards that guests could use in their photos with the characters. It was situated behind the Muppet*Vision 3D exit and near to Mama Melrose’s Ristorante Italiano. Agent P was also spotted here in August 2011 to promote Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension. This meet-and-greet closed in January 2016 to make way for construction work to build Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge.

Also, from September to December 2012, there was an augmented reality attraction based on Phineas and Ferb at then-Downtown Disney. It allowed guests to have random short encounters and photographs with some of the Phineas and Ferb characters. It was called Phineas and Ferb and You: A Brand New Reality.

Phineas and Ferb were also spotted at Magic Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort for Mickey and Minnie’s Surprise Celebration in 2019. At Disney California Adventure Park at Disneyland, they could be seen during Phineas and Ferb’s Rockin’ Rollin’ Dance Party from 2011 to 2014. This was a short parade and dance party, and was the same parade that was performed at the Across the 2nd Dimension official movie premiere.

There was even a Phineas and Ferb segment during the Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade in 2011, which saw Phineas and Ferb, and the Fireside Girls dance to their song “Gitchee Gitchee Goo”, with Agent P along for the ride too.  

In 2011, shortly after the release of Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension, there was talk about a new Phineas and Ferb movie being developed that would be theatrically released sometime around Summer 2013. One of the writers of Toy Story 3 (2010), Michael Arndt, was supposedly attached to the film and it was said that the movie would mix live-action and animation[7]. This movie was quietly removed from Disney’s production schedule. It wasn’t until a new movie, Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe, was announced in 2019 that it was confirmed that this theatrical film was cancelled. At least announcing a new movie would have softened the blow for fans!

FINAL THOUGHTS

Phineas and Ferb was developed to teach children how to be creative over their summer break, and to make the most of their time away from school. Not by watching television, or playing video games, but by getting outside, making up your own games, and just generally having a great time with friends.

Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension was a success amongst fans of the Phineas and Ferb series, probably because it felt very much like an extended episode of the show, just with a more expansive storyline, taking the gang away from their usual setting of Danville, or just the boys’ backyard, and moving them into a whole other dimension, where they encountered alternate versions of themselves.

Although kids can’t go making themselves portals to go to other dimensions in real-life, the movie showed how getting outside your comfort zone can be a fun experience. With Candace’s journey in the movie, another message was also taught: that you don’t get much time to be a kid, so enjoy it while you can. Don’t be in a hurry to grow up, or you’ll miss out on all the fun.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Stuart Dredge, ‘Phineas and Ferb co-creator: ‘children are much more intelligent than people give them credit for’, The Guardian.com, 4th July 2013.

[2] Credit: Brian Boone, ‘The Untold Truth Of Phineas and Ferb’, Looper.com, 31st January 2023.

[3] Credit: Disney, “Phineas and Ferb: Across The 2nd Dimension 2011 DVD Overview”, Diamond Boy’s Disney DVD Overviews YouTube Channel, 19th February 2024.

[4] Credit: Jon Weisman, ‘First look: ‘Phineas and Ferb: Across the 2nd Dimension’, Variety.com, 6th June 2011.

[5] Credit: Disney, “Phineas and Ferb: Across The 2nd Dimension 2011 DVD Overview”, Diamond Boy’s Disney DVD Overviews YouTube Channel, 19th February 2024.

[6] Credit: Madeline Roth, ‘Disney’s Phineas And Ferb Live: The Best Live Tour Ever!’ To Adventure To Columbus’, TheLantern.com, 23rd October 2012.

[7] Credit: Steven Zeitchik, ‘‘Phineas and Ferb’ gets the ‘Toy Story’ treatment’, LATimes.com, 27th October 2011.

Cloud 9 (2014)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. MUSIC
  5. PRODUCTION
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

Disney Channel used to make a lot of great sports movies back in the late 90s and 2000s.

I didn’t watch most of them, probably because I don’t really like sport, but I remember some of them being advertised on the Disney Channel. I’m talking about movies like Johnny Tsunami (1999), Motocrossed (2001), and Going to the Mat (2004).

I did watch Go Figure in 2005 though and it remains one of my favourite Disney Channel Original Movies, strangely enough, even though I had no knowledge of figure skating or ice hockey. For some reason, I just liked it. Maybe I just like winter sports. Except I don’t. Winter means cold, and snow, and ice. Not really my thing.

There was quite a long period of time when Disney Channel did not make any sports movies, instead focusing on musicals or just the challenges of being in high school. But in 2014, they were about to get back to their early 2000s days, by making a new DCOM all about the sport of snowboarding.

I wasn’t watching Disney Channel at this point, and only really cared about the most-anticipated new DCOMs, so I hadn’t seen anything about Cloud 9. At some point, many years later, I must have been trawling Disney+, looking for something to watch and stumbled upon Cloud 9. Dove Cameron was in it, and I’d seen her in Descendants (2015) a bit before then, so I thought it must be alright.  

I did like Cloud 9. I didn’t know what to expect when I first watched it, just a typical DCOM, I guess, and that’s what I got, with the added bonus of watching real snowboarding tricks. Sadly, it was not the first movie I watched about snowboarding.

That was Chalet Girl (2011), which starred Felicity Jones, who has gone on to become a huge star in the acting world. Other big names in that film include Nicholas Braun, from Succession (2018-23), Brooke Shields, Bill Nighy, and British comedian Bill Bailey, just to name a few. It wasn’t a blockbuster, but it was a British comedy that instantly drew me in. It had lots of snowboarding stunts, a message around coping with grief, and it was just generally very funny and sweet to watch. After watching Cloud 9, I knew it didn’t and just couldn’t compete with Chalet Girl in my mind. 

Cloud 9 likely would have appealed to me more if I’d watched it when I was younger. It just found me too late. 

PLOT

The story begins at the Summit Valley Ski Resort, with Kayla Morgan. Her father, Richard, owns the resort so naturally, she lives here permanently, having to go to a regular high school in the day. She is also a part of a snowboarding competition team, the Swift Team, where Kayla is the star women’s boarder, and her boyfriend, Nick, is the star men’s boarder. Nick’s dad, Sebastian, happens to be the team coach.

Whilst life is great for pampered princess Kayla, there are other people making a living at the resort. One of these is Will Cloud and his mother, who run a dog kennel here. It is a struggling new business but they are doing everything they can to make it work, with Will even going so far as to take some of the dogs, who become depressed from spending too much time indoors, out on a sled ride in the snow. Will used to be the best snowboarder around, however, a traumatic accident at a competition stopped him competing again. He is constantly tormented by members of the Swift Team for his “epic fail” wipeout on that day. Will’s friends just want him to get back to boarding, but he won’t.

At a party to celebrate recent Swift Team success, and to hype everyone up for the upcoming Fire and Ice competition, Kayla overhears Nick talking to his dad. Nick’s dad hasn’t been happy with his progress recently and keeps saying something about what Nick needs to do to be a winner. Kayla and Nick go outside to talk, where Nick states that he’ll be learning Will Cloud’s Cloud 9 move, the one that he injured himself doing, for the new competition, knowing that he’ll have to watch the YouTube video of Will’s wipeout in order to learn it, as only Will knows it and no-one has ever managed to do it properly.

Nick is then called over by the rest of the Swift Team to look at Will’s dog sled, which has just been left outside. Nick convinces Kayla to go on it with him. Reluctantly, she does, but soon, they find themselves careening down the slopes with no way of stopping. Nick, being the gentleman he is, bails and leaves Kayla to cope with this runaway sled alone. Sadly, the only way the sled stops is by flying through the iconic, hand-crafted Summit Valley Ski Resort sign, which then crashes to the ground. Kayla is picked up by Security and taken home. At home, her father, being the owner of the resort, is able to calm everything down, and says he’ll get the sign fixed, but he is furious with Kayla, and Will is angry about the damage done to his sled. Kayla’s father tells Kayla she’ll be paying for the sled by working at the kennel every day after school.

On Kayla’s first day working at the kennels, the Hot Doggers Dog Kennel, she is late and not at all happy to be working there. Kayla is then left with her first task, to fill up the dogs’ food bowls, but she gets distracted by a voicemail message. It’s Nick’s dad, telling her she has been kicked off the Swift Team because her little sled ride broke the Swift Code of Conduct. Kayla runs out of the kennel to go and talk to Nick, but it turns out he already knew and won’t help her try and get back on the team by saying the sled ride was his idea. To really kick her while she’s down, Nick also tells her that she has never been a good snowboarder, and the only reason she’s won competitions is because her father convinced his father to rig the competitions, having her compete against lower-ranked boarders.

The next day at the kennel, Will’s friends come in to get some snowboarding advice from Will and he leaves Kayla alone to go to the slopes with them. This should’ve been ok, but one of the most mischievous dogs in the world is currently at the kennel, a little dog called Donald, who decides to get out of his cage and unlock all the others. All of the dogs run riot through the kennels and then out into the resort. Kayla rushes after them, looking stressed, passing Nick and the Swift Team. She stops to talk to Nick, wanting to move past this team issue, but instead, Nick breaks up with her. Kayla is just not winning at life right now! She eventually gets back to the kennel with all the dogs, and proceeds to blub to Will’s mum about how awful the Swift Team are, and how much Donald seems to be out to get her. Will’s mum then tells Will he should never have left Kayla alone with the dogs.

Kayla’s friends later try to cheer her up and they start talking about Will Cloud. They put on the video of his accident and feel sorry for him, as it looks like a very bad wipeout. At school, Kayla then thinks she’s run over Donald on her drive home, but Will comes over to her and says Donald just likes to play dead when he’s bored sometimes. Kayla says they should redecorate the kennels, to make the dogs a bit happier, and that maybe she could help – in exchange for some snowboard coaching from Will. He says he doesn’t want to snowboard again, but thinks about helping Kayla, who wants to enter a new team into Fire and Ice, potentially with Will’s friends, Dink and Sam, to beat the Swifts.

Kayla later sees that she has been replaced on the Swift Team by a real pro boarder, Skye Saylor. Kayla knows she’s in trouble here, so Will encourages her to practise instead of wasting her energy trash-talking with Skye. The coaching begins, as does the renovation of the kennel. After a lot of practice, Kayla gets much better at her snowboarding, and Will and his mother are both impressed with her interior design skills at the kennel, now called The Hot Doggers Dog Spa. Will’s mother thanks Kayla for all her help, not just with the dogs, but with Will, who looks much happier than he has done in months. Will’s mother then sends the two out for ice-cream.

Outside, they talk about whether Will thinks Kayla has a shot at beating Skye at Fire and Ice, before talking about an infamous part of the mountain called Tyson’s Peak. It’s almost impossible to get to, needing a helicopter to get there, and it’s deemed impossible to get down, as nobody seems to have ever done it before. Kayla then tries again to convince Will to join their team for Fire and Ice, but he refuses.

The next day, Kayla overhears her father saying she won’t be able to win against the Swift Team, no matter how hard she practises. Ouch, what a great dad… Kayla asks Will to teach her the Cloud 9, seeing that as her best chance at beating Skye and the Swift Team. He says Kayla isn’t fearless enough for that move, but really, I think he just doesn’t want to relive the bad memories he has of it. Kayla gets really frustrated that all these people don’t believe in her, so she does something a bit reckless. She uses her dad’s helicopter to take her to Tyson’s Peak. Even the pilot isn’t sure about it, but he does as he’s told. Kayla is filmed from the helicopter, to document Kayla’s descent down the mountain, without her knowledge. This is broadcast live on the news. Though it looks difficult and energy-zapping, Kayla boards down the mountain, but when she stops at the end of a ledge, ready to go down again, there is an avalanche right behind her. Kayla tries to outrun it, but, obviously, she can’t. Luckily, Will is watching the news and races over to the spot where she was buried under snow. Using Donald to find her, Will digs Kayla out of the snow. Oh, good, she’s not dead. Phew – that could’ve been really bad. And not very Disney…

Because of Kayla’s stupidity – I mean, fearlessness – Will then decides he will teach her the Cloud 9. Will also finally gets back on his board too, choosing to join their team for Fire and Ice. He crashes out on his first attempt on the half-pipe but he’s ok and knows he needs to trust himself now. Teaching Kayla the Cloud 9 proves to be a difficult task as she continues to wipeout every time, not mastering much of it. As she heads off for a break, Nick comes up to Will and tells him he should stop making her do this before Kayla gets hurt too. This could all be mind games, since Nick is in a relationship with Skye all of a sudden, or maybe he does care about Kayla. Either way, it gives Will something to think about. Nick’s dad has also seen Kayla practising the Cloud 9 and starts to think she could beat Skye.

After Kayla falls trying the Cloud 9 once again, Will says he won’t teach her it anymore because she can’t get it right and there isn’t enough time. The two argue – and then kiss. Not the most romantic of settings for a first kiss, but oh well!  Nick’s dad speaks to Kayla as she heads home and apologises to her, saying she should be on their team tomorrow, inviting her to rejoin Swift for Fire and Ice.

At Fire and Ice, Kayla is late, and Will starts to worry. She soon arrives – but she’s wearing a Swift jacket, much to Sebastian’s delight. As he is about to rub it in Will’s face that their snowboarder has rejoined the “dark side”, Kayla takes off her jacket, saying she forgot to return her gear when she was first kicked off and has no intention of rejoining Swift. Will’s mother then comes over with their new team jackets, their name being the Hot Doggers, sponsored by the kennel, of course. The men get to go first, with Will putting out an impressive first run, not matched by Nick. Nick’s second run is much better and he wins the men’s competition. Now, for the women. Kayla is ahead of Skye after the first run, but Skye brings it back in her second run. No pressure now, Kayla!

Just as Kayla is about to do her second run, her father comes over to her and apologises for underestimating her. Nick’s dad laughs at this, thinking this is no way to keep a clear head before a competition. This angers Nick because he wishes his dad was supportive like that, not even caring that he just won the men’s competition here. Nick tells Kayla, in front of everyone, that the incident with the sled was no accident. It was a deliberate attempt to get her kicked off the team because Sebastian never thought she was good enough and didn’t want her there anymore. This gives Kayla some great motivation to win now and show everyone what she’s made of.

Kayla goes out for her second run, successfully completing the Cloud 9 and giving her a perfect score. This is enough to win both the women’s competition and for The Hotdoggers to become the overall team winner of Fire and Ice. Kayla, Will, Sam, and Dink celebrate their victory along with their families. Even Sebastian has to admit that Kayla is a very worthy winner and is now full of regret that because of his arrogance, coldness, and obsession with winning, his team lost a great snowboarder. That’s karma for you.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Kayla Morgan starts off thinking she’s wonderful and amazing. Her dad owns the resort; she lives in a huge lodge in a beautiful ski resort; she gets to buy what she wants whenever she wants; she has a cute boyfriend; and to top it all off, she’s supposedly the best women’s snowboarder around. Everything is rosy for Kayla, until a stupid stunt-gone-wrong spoils it all. She learns that her father, her boyfriend, and her coach never believed she was a good snowboarder; she has to work in a kennel after school; her boyfriend breaks up with her, and then she is replaced on the team by someone much better than her. Kayla doesn’t think much of Will Cloud initially, but the more time they spend together, at the kennels and on the slopes, the closer they become. Kayla becomes a better snowboarder and a less selfish person because of Will. Let’s face it; she was quite self-absorbed at the start of Cloud 9!

Dove Cameron was cast as Kayla. She was performing the dual role of both Liv Rooney and Maddie Rooney in the Disney Channel series Liv and Maddie (2013-17) at the time of filming on Cloud 9. She then starred as Mal in the Descendants trilogy from 2015 to 2019. Since Descendants, Dove Cameron has continued to act on screen, for example in the musical comedy series Schmigadoon! (2021-23), and having a voice role in the animated series Big Nate (2022-present). She released her debut album Alchemical: Volume 1 in December 2023 and her song “Boyfriend” was a viral sensation in 2022.

Will Cloud used to be a great snowboarder, even better than any of the members of the Swift Team. After his accident, which left him scared to ever snowboard again, he pretends that he isn’t bothered by it, despite his friends asking him for advice and being mocked by the Swift Team. Instead, Will throws himself into helping with his mother’s dog kennel, bonding with the dogs, especially Donald, and wanting to make this business a success for his mum. Thanks to Kayla, Will learns that he needs to continue with snowboarding, despite his fear of wiping out again, because he loves it. It’s a shame he didn’t manage to land his Cloud 9 trick himself, but after Fire and Ice, I’m sure Will planned on finally landing it, and banishing those bad memories from his mind forever.

Will Cloud was played by Luke Benward, who had already starred in the films How to Eat Fried Worms (2006) as Billy Forrester; the DCOM Minutemen (2008) as Charlie; Dear John (2010) as Alan Wheddon; and the DCOM Girl vs. Monster (2012) as Ryan, prior to his role in Cloud 9. Benward had also appeared as Beau, Teddy’s boyfriend, in the final season of Good Luck Charlie (2010-14) and as Dillon Sanders in the short-lived Pretty Little Liars spin-off series Ravenswood (2013-14) around the time of Cloud 9’s release. In 2018, Benward was cast as Bo Larson in the Netflix movie Dumplin’.

Nick Swift is the son of the Swift Team coach, so you might automatically assume he gets special treatment and thinks he’s the best snowboarder ever. This is not the case, and that is because Nick’s father, Sebastian, is incredibly hard on him and doesn’t believe in giving praise to his own son, no matter how much Nick works on his snowboarding. Their relationship is quite strained, but Nick constantly fights for his father’s approval, by going along with his plan to kick Kayla off the team with the sled incident, despite him knowing that was not the right way to go about, and by winning the Fire and Ice Men’s Competition. Sebastian still doesn’t seem proud of his son even after all that, instead spending too much time stressing about whether Kayla might beat his new star female boarder, Skye. Though I can’t tell if Nick actually did care about Kayla in a girlfriend-capacity, he clearly cared about her well-being, and didn’t want her to injure himself trying to do a trick just to impress other people, and feels guilty for the part he played in getting her kicked off the team.

Nick was played by Mike C. Manning, who was cast as Caleb McKinnon in the web series The Bay (2010-present) which won numerous Daytime Emmy Awards. Manning himself won a Daytime Emmy for his role here. Manning also went on to appear in the web series Youthful Daze (2012-16), and in Season 6 of This Is Us (2016-22) as The Manny.

Skye Saylor is an amazing female snowboarder, even being somewhat of a celebrity figure when she arrives at Summit Valley to join the Swift Team. She knows all about Kayla Morgan and how she’s never worked hard to be a good snowboarder, just having wins handed to her on a plate by only going up against girls worse than her. Skye doesn’t fear Kayla as a competitor at Fire and Ice at all, actually finding it quite comical that Kayla thinks she would even have a chance against her. Skye then goes out with Nick, Kayla’s boyfriend, probably more as a means to mess with Kayla psychologically before the competition instead of this being a genuine relationship. It’s not until Skye sees Kayla getting down Tyson’s Peak in one piece, barely, and then practising the Cloud 9 with Will that she starts to see Kayla as a threat at snowboarding. Skye tries her best at Fire and Ice, but once Kayla lands the Cloud 9, Skye knows she won’t win – and honestly, I think she’s ok with that. I don’t think Skye wanted to be involved in Sebastian’s plots and schemes to humiliate Kayla any more than Nick did, but they have to listen to their coach, even if he is jerk.

Kiersey Clemons was cast as Skye, having appeared as Kira Starr in the Disney series Austin & Ally (2011-16) prior to her role in Cloud 9. Clemons went on to be cast as Cassandra in the movie Dope (2015), and Beth in Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising (2016). More recently, she starred as Darling in Disney’s live-action remake Lady and the Tramp (2019), and then as Iris West in Zack Snyder’s Justice League (2021) and The Flash (2023). She currently stars as May in Monarch: Legacy of Monsters (2023-present).

Some of the actors who played Kayla and Will’s friends were no stranger to Disney at the time of working on Cloud 9 either. Will’s friends are Sam and Dink. They both like to snowboard, but they aren’t as naturally gifted as Will. Sam is constantly getting injured, for example even seeing double at one point after a bad practice session. Dink spends a lot of time talking about the weather, I guess so he knows the best time to snowboard, but it might be a potential career path for him if the snowboarding doesn’t work out! Dink was played by Carlon Jeffery, who played Cameron Parks, Chyna’s older brother, in the Disney Channel series A.N.T. Farm (2011-14). Sam was played by Andrew Caldwell, who I instantly recognised from his role as Thor in Hannah Montana (2006-11). Caldwell has since gone on to appear as Jude in the movie The Matrix Resurrections (2021), and as Harley Johns in Season 3 of iZombie (2015-19). Kayla’s friend Pia was played by Victoria Moroles, who played Andie in Liv and Maddie (2013-17) alongside Dove Cameron. Moroles was also cast as Hayden Romero in Teen Wolf (2011-17) around this time.

Finally, I’ll talk about the dads in Cloud 9. The dads here are much less supportive than the mothers. We’ve got Sebastian, Nick’s father, who cares too much about winning to be a caring and encouraging coach for his snowboarders. He pressures them to do well and seems to be teaching them that it’s fine to play dirty as long as you win, which is the complete opposite of what good sportsmanship should be. Sebastian has no business being a coach for any type of sports team, at least not when children and teenagers are involved! Jeffrey Nordling was cast as Sebastian. He had previously played Coach Orion in D3: The Mighty Ducks (1996) and Richard Mackey in TRON: Legacy (2010). On television, he appeared as Nick Bolen in Desperate Housewives (2004-12), and in the recurring role of Gus Easton in So Help Me Todd (2022-24) most recently.

I’d like to say Kayla’s dad, Richard, is a better dad than Sebastian, but he’s really not. Richard has encouraged Sebastian to rig all these snowboarding competitions that Kayla has competed in because neither of them want the team to lose. I think Richard does this, not so Kayla isn’t embarrassed by a loss because losing is a part of life, but so that he is not embarrassed by her, since he is the owner of the ski resort. Richard then tells his wife that despite Kayla practising, she’ll never be able to win against the Swift Team, which is an awful thing to say. If you don’t have your parents in your corner at that age, then who else have you got? Richard isn’t all bad though, as he does apologise to Kayla for underestimating her, and encourages her to smash her second run at Fire and Ice, believing finally that she can win. This is more than Sebastian does for his own child.

Richard Morgan was played by Patrick Fabian. Fabian is perhaps best known for his role as Howard Hamlin in the Breaking Bad spin-off Better Call Saul (2015-22), but he also has a bit of history with Disney, having been cast as Thantos in the DCOM Twitches Too (2007). Fabian was also cast as Matt MacLaren in The Other Zoey (2023) recently. But if you’re “cool” like me, you’ll know him as Professor Lasky from Saved by the Bell: The College Years (1993-94). You know, the guy who broke up Zack and Kelly, and then broke Kelly’s heart. I remember hating Professor Lasky when I was younger, watching this series when it was re-run on Nickelodeon in the 2000s, but I got to watch it back this year, and he was actually a great character. I can totally see the appeal now…

MUSIC

Despite featuring the talents of Dove Cameron and Luke Benward, who had both sung for previous Disney Channel projects, Cloud 9 is not a musical. That’s perhaps a good thing because singing when snowboarding is probably not an easy, or even safe, thing to do!

There was an original song written for the movie, and it was performed by Cameron and Benward, having been written by Dan Book and Alexei Misoul. This song is called “Cloud 9”, which isn’t a very original title, but it is quite a good song if you like catchy pop tunes. I do, so I quite like it. This song plays during the montage of Will training Kayla and the dog kennel being renovated. It is also the End Credits song, playing alongside a few outtakes. “Cloud 9” was released as a single just before the movie’s release, and it is also a track on the compilation album Disney Channel Play It Loud.

There are also a number of other songs used within Cloud 9 for background music and to accompany the various snowboarding scenes.

During the opening sequence, the song “Fly High” by The DNC is used. Soon after, Nick and Kayla are casually snowboarding as the song “Champion of the World” by Menya is heard. At the party for the Swift Team early on in Cloud 9, the song “Across the Sky”, by Photronique feat. Don Benjamin plays. The song “Wotever Dude” by Robbie Nevil is playing as Kayla begins her second day of work at the kennels. Just before Kayla “hits” Donald the dog with her car, the song “I’m Feeling Good” by Deanna seems to be playing on the radio.

Now to the snowboarding scenes. As Kayla performs for the first time in the movie, in one of those rigged competitions, “Zoom, Zoom, Zoom” by Cut One and Meg Cottone is played. Later, Kayla sees Skye training for the first time and “Cross the Line” by Superchick plays. “Never Too Late” by The PCH Crew feat. Mayru is used for when Will first gets back on his board. When Kayla is practising her snowboarding and the Cloud 9, the song “Feisty” by Shoshana Bean is playing, and later, “Nothing’s Gonna Stop Me Now” by Michele Vise Maslin can be heard. At Fire and Ice, during the men’s run, “I Want It All” by Krankheadz is heard. For the women’s run, “One Girl Revolution” by Superchick plays. This is such a great song, and for Disney Channel movie fans, you can also hear it in Cadet Kelly (2002).

I could not find the song that is playing as the Swift Team and friends arrive at the party, despite using Shazam to help and the lyrics being clearly audible. This was the same problem I had with the music playing as Kayla sees Skye training for the second time.

PRODUCTION

Cloud 9 was filmed at ski resorts in Utah, with one of those being Park City Mountain Resort. Dove Cameron and Luke Benward were spotted filming the scene of them eating ice cream and walking down the sidewalk in February 2013, this street being Park Avenue. They also filmed at Park City High School in the area. The news report also stated that snowboarding champion and three-time Olympic gold medallist Shaun White was one of the producers on this new Disney movie[1].

Apparently, during filming, the temperature got to as low as -50F, so cold that post-production was used to edit out clouds of breath from the actors. Facial hair was also freezing, and kissing scenes were made difficult by the freezing temperatures!

Filming went on at the ski resort for around two months. There was supposedly a strange rule that the cast and crew had to follow, around toasting marshmallows. They said in an interview that they were only allowed to do this on Wednesdays, and kept getting caught doing this on other days in the week. They claimed they ended up making s’mores for the security guards to get around the restrictions. Random[2].

Since there is a lot of snowboarding in the movie – duh – the cast were given two weeks of snowboarding training with instructors, where they worked on turns, stopping, going down slopes etc., to make them look like natural boarders. They even got to go on the steep half-pipe that is seen in the film, which was scary, even to those who had snowboarded before[3]. I don’t know exactly how many of the cast had snowboarded prior to Cloud 9, but they all looked quite comfortable on their boards, so I’m thinking many of them had already had some experience of it. As I am not a snowboarder, I cannot comment on how difficult the snowboarding in the movie actually is. For the stunts and tricks, these were completed by a team of experienced boarders.

Cloud 9 was directed by Paul Hoen. Hoen began his over two-decade career with Disney Channel by directing The Luck of the Irish (1999) back when Disney Channel were experimenting with their new way of making television movies. After this, Hoen went on to direct many more musical and non-musical DCOMs, including Eddie’s Million Dollar Cook-Off (2003), Jump In! (2007), and all of the ZOMBIES movies[4].

As well as the movie being produced by Disney Channel, Ashley Tisdale is also credited as an executive producer, through her company Blondie Girl Productions, which she set up around 2010. Tisdale liked the mass appeal of the story and thought the message about believing in yourself was important to the usual Disney Channel audience[5]. Tisdale is well-known to Disney fans as the actor who played Sharpay Evans in the incredibly popular High School Musical franchise.

RECEPTION

Cloud 9 premiered on Disney Channel in the US on 17th January 2014. It then went out to other countries between February and June. It’s winter in Australia in June, don’t forget!

The US premiere date meant that Cloud 9 was released just a couple of weeks before the start of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, which, no doubt, was not coincidental in the slightest. It was also a part of the “JaNEWary” event on Disney Channel that seemed to be an annual event at some point, where Disney Channel aired new movie premieres, new series, and new episodes of their popular series[6]. On the day that Cloud 9 premiered, for example, it was followed by the first episode of the new Disney Channel series I Didn’t Do It (2014-15), which starred Olivia Holt, who was cast alongside Luke Benward two years earlier for the DCOM Girl vs. Monster (2012).

Cloud 9 was the day’s most watched cable program on its premiere date, with just under 5 million viewers tuning in to watch the new movie. It became the No. 2 telecast on any network during the winter season, sitting behind Disney Channel’s “Good Luck Jessie: NYC Christmas” episode which aired in November 2013[7].

In terms of reviews, these are usually always mixed for Disney Channel Original Movies. Starting with the more negative reviews, some found the movie to be predictable and plain, following the usual storyline of a sports film, i.e., the main character doesn’t think they are any good and must learn to be great for a competition that they’ll go on to win. Others also said the characters were quite clichéd with the jerk boyfriend and his overbearing father, and the mean girl replacement. I can understand this comment to some extent, but I do think all of those characters have some character development and growth in Cloud 9, as Skye was never really the mean girl, and Nick has a complicated relationship with his father which takes a step to being healthier by the end of Cloud 9.

For positive reviews, there were comments around the great chemistry between the two lead actors of Dove Cameron and Luke Benward, and the acting was deemed pretty good overall. The catchy main song “Cloud 9” was also a pleasant addition to the movie for many, who found it to be generally enjoyable with a good message about believing in yourself and overcoming fear. Others also liked the nice scenery of a snowy ski resort. I was one of those people. Although I don’t want to go out in the snow, I’m quite happy looking at it, preferably through the window of a cosy, warm building.

LEGACY

Cloud 9 did not receive a sequel, which was not unexpected. The movie has a complete plot and there is little room to push the story any further.

Although Cloud 9 went no further, Dove Cameron did go on to become a major star for Disney Channel. Alongside her role as Liv and Maddie Rooney in the popular Disney Channel series, Cameron went on to star as Mal in the DCOM Descendants (2015), going on to work on two further movies for the Disney franchise, alongside other spin-offs. This propelled her into global stardom, as both an actor and a singer.

Sadly, the much-loved DCOM sports movies that were so popular in the 2000s did not continue to be made much after Cloud 9. It had been the first movie of this type since 2007, when Jump In! and Johnny Kapahala: Back on Board aired on Disney Channel. Den Brother (2010) involves ice hockey, but I’d disagree that it is the primary theme of the film.

Since Cloud 9, few DCOMs have involved sports. One that does is The Swap (2016), featuring both ice hockey and rhythmic gymnastics, but again, this is not the main purpose of the story. Back of the Net (2019) seems to be the most recent sports movie from Disney Channel, following a teenager who accidentally ends up at a football (soccer) academy. 

FINAL THOUGHTS

Sports movies have been around for decades, whether based on a true story, perhaps of an individual or team wanting to compete at the Olympics, or a fictional story about real sports.

These types of movies remain a good source of inspiration for people who might want to try out a new sport, or could motivate someone to go after the highest possible achievements in their specific discipline.

With Cloud 9 being released around the time of the 2014 Winter Olympics, this timing might have got more young people interested in the global event, which can sometimes be dwarfed by the warmer, more far-reaching Summer Olympics, at least in some countries.

Having a movie like Cloud 9 on Disney Channel would have surely encouraged children and teenagers to try out snowboarding, on vacation or at a local snowdome. Snowboarding is, after all, still considered quite a cool sport.

Personally, I’d be too scared about breaking all my bones, or even my neck, to try it out – but that’s just me. I’m fine just being a spectator to others’ sporting successes.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Jay Hamburger, ‘Park City becomes Disney land for movie shoot’, ParkRecord.com, 22nd February 2013.

[2] Credit: Alex Abel, ‘5 Behind-The-Scenes Secrets From Disney’s New Movie Cloud 9’, Seventeen.com, 17th January 2014.

[3] Credit: Disney, ‘Cloud 9 – Behind The Scenes – Part 3’, Disney Channel UK  YouTube Channel, 21st February 2014.

[4] Credit: DCOMers!, ‘A Conversation with the Disney Channel’s Paul Hoen’, Medium.com, 24th July 2020.

[5] Credit: Jake Perlman, ‘‘Cloud 9’ hits the slopes in the world of competitive snowboarding’, EW.com, 18th December 2013.

[6] Credit: Jake Perlman, ‘Watch Dove Cameron and Luke Benward in Disney Channel’s ‘Cloud 9’’, EW.com, 13th January 2014.

[7] Credit: Rick Kissell, ‘Disney Channel Takes Gold With ‘Cloud 9’ Movie, New Comedy’, Variety.com, 21st January 2014.

#19 Coco (2017)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. MUSIC
  5. PRODUCTION
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

After Disney acquired Pixar in 2006, though Pixar continued to exceed expectations by releasing hit-after-hit for many years, there was a surprising focus on sequels and the need to push their most popular movie franchises to the brink of overexposure.   

I’m not here to moan about Disney or Pixar’s sequels, because some of them I actually like more than the originals; this is purely for context. Strangely enough, of the eleven movies that Pixar released in the 2010s, Pixar created seven sequels or prequels that span off from some of their earliest movies. This might suggest a lack of creative freedom, a massive marketing and synergy opportunity for various other areas of The Walt Disney Company, or even a “money grab” to the more cynical amongst us. There were also a few Pixar movies that missed the mark with audiences during this decade.

Luckily, Coco proved that Pixar were still capable of making a movie based on an original idea that had no link to any prior hit. It was also new to Pixar because it was their first movie to be set in Mexico, and set against the traditional holiday of Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead in English. This was no easy feat, for an American filmmaking studio to do justice to a whole culture and sacred tradition. Many didn’t think they could do it.

Thanks to multiple research trips, visits to Mexican families, input from the Latino and Hispanic filmmakers at Pixar, as well as input from cultural specialists, and an all-Latino cast, a global blockbuster was made, becoming one of the most popular movies ever in Mexico. It has fans all over the world, and with its message about the importance of family and remembering our loved ones, it successfully struck a chord with everyone. Coco is a real tearjerker, and a movie full of heart and soul.

I watched Coco at the cinema when it first came out. I remember not thinking much of the trailer and generally being uncertain about the film. To be honest, I still go in to watching many Disney and Pixar movies not knowing what to expect because their trailers don’t like to give too much of the story away.

With Coco, I was moved to tears on multiple occasions throughout the film and I was very impressed. It was colourful, full of music, without being a Disney-type of musical, and very powerful. To know the amount of effort that went into the creation of this movie gives me an even greater level of appreciation of what an incredible movie Coco really is.

PLOT

The story of Coco begins in the small town of Santa Cecilia, with a twelve-year-old boy called Miguel. He is part of a large extended family, the Riveras, who are well-known for their shoemaking. Miguel tells us how this came to be. His great-great-grandmother was left to raise her young daughter, Coco, because her husband went off to be a musician and never returned home. Instead of wallowing in self-pity, the woman knew she’d have to make a living for herself and her child, deciding to go into shoemaking. This craft was passed down from generation to generation, and music in any form was forever banned by the family.

Only, Miguel really loves music and hates shoemaking. Miguel wants to play the guitar just like famed musician Ernesto de la Cruz, who was crushed to death by a bell during a performance of his famous song “Remember Me” back in 1942, so he has become a town hero, since he is also from Santa Cecilia. Miguel loves Ernesto de la Cruz so much that he even has a hidden room where he has built a sort of shrine to him, where he plays some of Ernesto’s most popular movies so Miguel can play along with the songs.

On Día de los Muertos, the Mexican holiday where families welcome back the souls of their loved ones, Miguel is in the town plaza, talking about his love of music to a mariachi. The mariachi tells him that if he is a real musician, then he needs to play in front of a crowd and suggests he enters that evening’s talent contest. Miguel’s grandmother, Abuelita, arrives and drags Miguel away from the plaza, telling the mariachi to leave her grandson alone and to stop poisoning his mind with nonsense abut music.

That evening, Miguel is about to head to the competition, with street dog Dante in tow, when he is stopped by Abuelita. She shows him the family ofrenda, where families leave photographs of their loved ones, as well as offerings of food and flowers. Abuelita tells Miguel that family is the most important thing in the world. Miguel’s parents then tell him the best news: that they are going to teach him the shoemaking trade so he can become a part of the family business. This doesn’t please Miguel. The family walk away, but Dante, who has been hiding under the ofrenda, starts trying to eat some of the offerings. Miguel then bumps into the ofrenda and knocks the photo of his great-great-grandmother, Mamá Imelda, his grandmother, Coco, and his great-great-grandfather, whose identity is unknown as his head has been ripped off the photo, off the ofrenda. The frame shatters on the floor. Miguel picks up the photo, and notices part of it has been bent over. As Miguel reveals this hidden side, he sees that Ernesto de la Cruz’s famous guitar is in the photo; this must be his great-great-grandfather! Amazed by this news, Miguel announces this revelation to his family, and says he wants to be a musician too, showing his own guitar to the family. Abuelita is horrified to learn that he has been playing music in secret and breaks the guitar. Miguel runs away, saying he doesn’t want to be a part of this family anymore.

Miguel gets to the plaza but no-one will lend him a guitar so that he can play in the competition. Losing hope that he’ll find one, Miguel goes to the cemetery, and sees Ernesto de la Cruz’s mausoleum with his famous guitar hanging on the wall. Miguel picks it up, just wanting to borrow it, and strums the strings just once. But something strange happens. Miguel hears policemen outside the mausoleum. As he is about to say he wasn’t stealing the guitar, only wanting to borrow it, Miguel realises that the policemen can’t hear him or see him; they simply put the guitar back on the wall. Confused, he runs outside and asks for help from the townspeople but they can’t see him either. Miguel then falls into a grave and is helped out by a woman. At last, someone who can see him! This is no ordinary woman though. She is in fact a skeleton. Miguel freaks out again and runs through the cemetery some more, eventually coming across his own dead relatives. They realise something is wrong, and take him back to the Land of the Dead for assistance. Dog Dante follows.

Walking across a huge bridge made of bright orange marigold petals, they arrive at the Land of the Dead. Miguel and his family are taken to the Department of Family Reunions, where they discover Mamá Imelda there, arguing with an office worker, who can’t let her leave the Land of the Dead as her photo is not on anyone’s ofrenda. Mamá Imelda believes this to be a mistake, but Miguel says he is carrying the photo, as he broke the frame. Mamá Imelda is shocked to see Miguel, a living boy, here and the family ask what has happened. They are told that Miguel stole from the dead and has now been cursed. The only way to lift the curse is to get his family’s blessing to return to the Land of the Living before sunrise. Since the family are here, this is an easy solution. Mamá Imelda picks up a marigold petal and says she gives Miguel her blessing to return, with the condition that he forget all about his dreams of being a musician. Miguel complains that’s not fair, but as its Mamá Imelda’s blessing, she can add any condition to it. Miguel relents and is returned.

In the Land of the Living, Miguel finds himself back in Ernesto de la Cruz’s mausoleum and simply picks up the guitar again. He is promptly returned to the Department of Family Reunions in the Land of the Dead. Miguel refuses to abandon music forever and runs from security, vowing to get a blessing from his great-great-grandfather, Ernesto de la Cruz, instead. As he is hiding, he spots a man from earlier who was trying to leave the Land of the Dead, disguised as Frida Kahlo. He cannot leave as his photo is not on an ofrenda. Miguel overhears this guy trying to bribe the official with tickets to Ernesto de la Cruz’s annual Sunrise Spectacular. Miguel figures this guy can take him to Ernesto de la Cruz.

Miguel confronts the man, who is surprised to find a living boy in front of him. The man is called Héctor and agrees to help him, if Miguel promises to put a photo of him on his family’s ofrenda by the end of the night so he can visit his daughter in the Land of the Living. Miguel agrees, and after disguising Miguel as a skeleton, they head to the Sunrise Spectacular rehearsal space. Miguel meets the real Frida Kahlo here, which is nice, but him and Héctor learn that Ernesto de la Cruz doesn’t show up to rehearsals, revealing that Héctor doesn’t actually know him at all. Instead, they learn that the winner of the night’s talent competition gets to play at his exclusive party. That’s the aim now.

In Héctor’s living space, living alongside others whose photos are not on any ofrendas, the two talk to his friend Chicharrón, to borrow his guitar. Chicharrón is not in a good state, believing that he is about to be forgotten in the Land of the Living. He asks Héctor to play something for him and then he can take the guitar away with him. Héctor does as he’s told but by the end of the song, Chicharrón has vanished, having been forgotten forever. Héctor fears this will be his fate soon, as he can feel his daughter forgetting him.

At the talent competition, Miguel becomes nervous at the thought of playing in front of a crowd for the first time. Héctor helps him deal with his stage fright and they are a huge hit. However, Miguel’s family, along with Mamá Imelda’s alebrije and spirit guide, Pepita, a huge panther-like creature with wings, has tracked Miguel to this location, causing Miguel and Héctor to flee before the winner can be announced. Héctor was led to believe that Miguel’s only family here was Ernesto de la Cruz and is upset at being lied to. He wants to take Miguel back to his family now so Héctor can get out of the Land of the Dead quicker. Miguel doesn’t want that so runs from him too. Mamá Imelda catches up to him at one point and sings to him, to show she once loved music too, but that it ruined her family, hoping Miguel will understand why she banned it. Miguel doesn’t understand and keeps running.

He sneaks into Ernesto de la Cruz’s party in the tuba of the band that actually did win the talent competition. Once there, he sees Ernesto de la Cruz and sings one of his most popular songs to him. He gets Ernesto’s attention – and then falls in the swimming pool! This causes all of his skeleton make-up to come off, and he is helped out by Ernesto, who realises this is the living boy that everyone has heard made it into the Land of the Dead. Miguel announces himself as Ernesto de la Cruz’s great-great-grandson. Ernesto de la Cruz is excited by this and introduces him to all of his important guests.

Soon, they realise Miguel has to get back home as he is starting to turn into a skeleton. Ernesto picks up a marigold petal and says the blessing, however, it doesn’t work. Héctor then arrives, having snuck into the party dressed as Frida Kahlo. He accuses Ernesto de la Cruz of stealing his songs and getting famous off of his back. Ernesto says this is all lies, but Miguel starts to feel wary of him. A video clip of one of Ernesto de la Cruz’s films is playing in the background and Miguel realises, as the two adults argue, that Héctor’s death sounds a lot like this movie, but in the film, the man was poisoned. Héctor and Miguel learn that Ernesto de la Cruz poisoned Héctor as Héctor wanted to go home, back to his family, meaning that their duo was going to be broken up. Ernesto de la Cruz then stole Héctor’s songs and his guitar. Angered by the reveal, Ernesto orders Héctor be thrown into a pit, taking his photo that Miguel was going to put on his ofrenda. Miguel tries to leave, but knowing Miguel’s knowledge is a threat to his legacy, Miguel is thrown into the same pit.

Whilst in the pit, both losing hope, Miguel realises that Héctor is actually his great-great-grandfather as Héctor talks about the lullaby he wrote for his daughter, Coco. Luckily, Dante arrives and signals to Mamá Imelda and Pepita that Miguel is in there. The two are rescued, however, the reconciliation between Mamá Imelda and Héctor, her long-lost husband, isn’t exactly amicable. As Mamá Imelda plans to return Miguel, she learns that Héctor is about to be forgotten by their daughter – but Ernesto de la Cruz has his photo. The whole family sneak into the Sunrise Spectacular to retrieve it.

After disguising themselves as dancers, struggling against the security guards, Mamá Imelda comes face-to-face with Ernesto de la Cruz and smacks him in the face, telling him that he killed “the love of my life”. She takes the photo but is then lifted up onto the stage. Mamá Imelda begins to sing “La Llorona” to the crowd, with Héctor providing guitar accompaniment backstage. Ernesto de la Cruz also comes onto the stage and tries to get Héctor’s photo back, but it doesn’t work. As Mamá Imelda is about to return Miguel home, Ernesto de la Cruz grabs Miguel and threatens to throw him off the roof. Some of Miguel’s family turn the cameras to this incident so the crowd can know what their hero is really like.

Ernesto de la Cruz confirms that he did kill Héctor and stole his songs, so Miguel cannot ever return to the Land of the Living as he knows too much. He lets go and Miguel falls. As all looks lost for Miguel, Pepita flies down and retrieves him at the last moment, though Héctor’s photo is lost. Ernesto de la Cruz goes back on stage but is booed by the audience. Pepita throws him into the bell tower, where he is once again crushed by a bell.

As Héctor starts to fade away, Mamá Imelda quickly gives Miguel her blessing – with no conditions. Miguel finds himself back in the Land of the Living and runs home. He begs Coco to remember her father, but Coco’s memory is going. As the family confront Miguel for upsetting his great-grandmother, Miguel sings “Remember Me” to her, her father’s lullaby. Coco starts to sing along, remembering him. She reveals the torn-off head from the ofrenda photo and starts to tell stories about her father to the family so they can remember him.

The next year on Día de los Muertos, a lot has changed. Coco has sadly passed away; however, she has been reunited with her father and mother in the Land of the Dead. They also find that Héctor can finally return with them to the Land of the Living as his torn-off head has been reattached to the ofrenda photo! Miguel has a new baby sister, and is free to play his music as much as he wants. Coco’s letters from her father have also shown Ernesto de la Cruz’s theft of Héctor’s work and a museum has been set up to remember Héctor. Like in the Land of the Dead, Ernesto de la Cruz is now a disgraced figure in the Land of the Living. On Día de los Muertos, the whole Rivera family, both living and not, are reunited for a night of song and dance, finally together once again.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Miguel is a music-loving kid, who cannot understand why his family would want to ban something like that forever. He is the odd one out in his family, not wanting to become a shoemaker like everyone else, finding this to be a boring way to make a living. Though he knows the story of Mamá Imelda and her musician husband, I guess Miguel thinks it was so long ago, the family should have gotten over it by now! Although not a fun tradition, it is still a tradition that has been passed down faithfully from generation to generation. Luckily, Miguel’s stubbornness allows all of the Riveras to finally learn the truth about Héctor, and that music was not the reason he didn’t come home, but was in fact the jealousy of Ernesto de la Cruz that took him away from them; music was never to blame. Miguel just wants to do what he loves in life. In a way, he is similar to Ariel in The Little Mermaid (1989). Both of their families fear what they love the most – in Miguel’s case it’s music; for Ariel, it’s humans – and they have to teach them why their loves aren’t bad.

Emilio Fuentes was initially the voice actor for the character of Miguel, however, production on Coco took so long that Fuentes’ voice had started to change, so Anthony Gonzalez was brought in as a temporary replacement[1]. Gonzalez was so impressive though, with both his acting and singing abilities, that Pixar ultimately gave him the part. Gonzalez won an Annie Award and a Teen Choice Award for his performance as Miguel. He went on to be cast as Santiago in the US series Shameless (2011-21) and Jordan in Grand-Daddy Day Care (2019), a direct-to-video sequel of the Daddy Day Care film series. More recently, Gonzalez provided motion capture and voice for Diego in the game Far Cry 6 (2021).

Héctor is Miguel’s great-great-grandfather, though neither of them learns of this until late into the film. Héctor seems to be quite a suave, charming trickster, who lets life – and death – roll off his back, but, that’s not true at all. Despite his stoic nature, Héctor is actually very fearful of his future. He is scared that he will never get to see his daughter in the Land of the Living. Because his photo has never been on an ofrenda, and because she is the only one alive who remembers him, should she pass away, then Héctor will forever be gone from the Land of the Dead, meaning a reconciliation is not possible. Because of this, he perhaps isn’t as kind and empathetic to Miguel’s plight to become a musician as he could’ve been, but it is desperation to see his family again that leads him to make the choices he does. Ultimately, everything does end happily for him: he gets to meet his great-great-grandson; does reunite with his daughter in the Land of the Dead; and even reunites with his wife who thought he’d left her.

Héctor was voiced by Gael García Bernal, who had previously been cast as Victor in Letters to Juliet (2010), alongside Amanda Seyfried, and as Hector in the Netflix film The Mother (2023), alongside Jennifer Lopez. In the world of television, he starred as Rodrigo De Souza in the series Mozart in the Jungle (2014-18) winning the Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Television Series in 2016 for his performance. Recently, he starred as Jack Russell in Werewolf by Night (2022) for Disney+ and the Marvel Cinematic Universal. Gael García Bernal got his start by acting in multiple Spanish-language films, with two of these being Alfonso Cuarón’s Y tu mama también (2001) as Julio Zapata, and Pedro Almodóvar’s Bad Education (2004). He also dubbed Héctor’s voice in the Spanish-language version of Coco.

Ernesto de la Cruz seems to be a typical famous musician. He’s talented but also quite arrogant and thinks the whole world adores him. He lives in a huge mansion, has parties with major celebrities, and gets his own show, the Sunrise Spectacular, every year on Día de los Muertos. His fame probably only increased because of his death; being crushed by a bell is not a pleasant way to go, I don’t imagine! All Ernesto de la Cruz’s bravado just hides a figure who is desperate for fame, and will go to any lengths to preserve it, such as poisoning his best friend and stealing his work, and then trying to kill a child just so news doesn’t get back to the Land of the Living that he’s a fraudster and a monster. Ernesto de la Cruz turned out to be a brilliant surprise villain from Pixar. Surprise villains have become fairly commonplace in recent Disney and Pixar movies and I’m all for it. It was a great twist.

Benjamin Bratt was cast as the voice of Ernesto de la Cruz. He said that he wanted to give the character swagger. For inspiration, Bratt studied movie clips of film and music stars like Pedro Infante and Jorge Negrete, but he was also inspired by his father, who was larger-than-life with a booming voice and a presence that commanded attention[2]. Bratt had experience with voice acting prior to Coco, having voiced the character of Manny in Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (2009) and its 2013 sequel, and the character of El Macho in Despicable Me 2 (2013). Bratt also appeared as FBI Agent Eric Matthews in Miss Congeniality (2000) and as Detective Reynaldo Curtis in Law & Order (1990-present) for many seasons. He was later cast as Steve Navarro in the miniseries 24: Live Another Day (2014). More recently, Bratt starred as Will in Mother of the Bride (2024) for Netflix, and as Cliff LeGrand in the series Poker Face (2023-present).

Mamá Imelda is quite strict and authoritative, but she means well. She felt like she had been wronged by her musician husband, leaving her to raise their daughter on her own and then find a way of making a living for them so they didn’t end up destitute. This would’ve been a lot for Imelda to deal with, and just thinking about music would’ve brought back all these bad memories for her. There were unresolved issues for her here, but without knowing about the circumstances around her husband’s death, Imelda couldn’t get any closure for herself, so it was just easier to avoid the pain of that time by forgetting about it completely and not telling anyone else about it. Sadly, this leads to Héctor being forgotten, which you can see Imelda actually feels quite guilty about when she sees him fading away, and the guilt is even greater when she realises he was on his way back to her when he died. Luckily, thanks to Miguel, and her bravery in standing up to Ernesto de la Cruz, we all learn the truth.

Alanna Ubach was chosen to voice Mamá Imelda. Earlier in her career, Ubach had been cast as Serena in Legally Blonde (2001) and its 2003 sequel, as well as Isabel in Meet the Fockers (2004). She went on to appear as Jeanine Pirro in Bombshell (2019) and in the recurring role of Suze Howard in the series Euphoria (2019-present). In recent years, Ubach was cast as Nova Moon in Venom: The Last Dance (2024) and as Susan, John’s mother, in the series Ted (2024-present). I didn’t like the Ted films but I love the series, and Ubach is brilliant as Susan here. Ubach also voiced the character of Katherine “Cutter” Sterns in Monsters at Work (2021-present) for Disney.

Miguel states that he is very close to his great-grandmother Coco, wanting to tell her all about his interests, like wrestling, and how he learnt to run properly. Him singing “Remember Me” to Coco is a beautiful scene, and it is so lovely when her memory is unlocked by this music, and she can remember things and communicate again. Early on, it’s obvious that Coco is getting older, being confined to her wheelchair, and not talking much. Abuelita is very happy to see her mother talking about her family again after this moment, and despite her not being happy with Miguel for playing music, like Mamá Imelda, her strictness shows how protective she is of her family.

Abuelita being head of the family matches the fact that Mexican families are generally matriarchal. Abuelita was originally given a wooden spoon to use to reprimand people, but this was changed to be a sandal, which she uses to chastise the mariachi talking to Miguel, as well as to chase off Dante[3]. Early screenings of Abuelita showed her to be too scary as a grandmother. Luckily, Pixar listened to their consultants who could correct any errors made in the story in order to truly reflect Mexican culture. These consultants said that although Abuelita should be strict, she is protecting her family because she loves them above all else. Marcela Davison Avilés was the lead consultant, having already worked with Disney on their series’ Handy Manny (2006-13) and Elena of Avalor (2016-20)[4].

Abuelita was voiced by Renée Victor, who has appeared in the series’ Weeds (2005-12) as Lupita, and as Marta Delgado in With Love (2021-23). Victor was also cast as Mama Grandé in Seasons 1 and 2 of Snowpiercer (2020-24). Coco was voiced by Ana Ofelia Murguía, who as one of the last surviving stars from the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema until her death in December 2023. Coco was her final film role.

The inspiration behind the character of Coco has been questioned in recent years. Maria Salud Ramirez became a viral sensation after the film for her resemblance to the character, with her braided white hair, squinting eyes, and her smile. She died on 16th October 2022 at the age of 109, with visitors coming to her house in Santa Fe de la Laguna in Mexico around Día de los Muertos to remember her. Although the Ramirez family claim the Pixar filmmakers met Maria and photographed her, Pixar have denied that Coco is based on anyone in real life. The Ramirez family have tried to ignore the controversy in recent years but are glad to have visitors to come and remember her[5].

Although Chicharrón, Héctor’s friend who disappears, only appears for a few moments, his death makes an impact on both the characters of Coco as well as the audience. This is because Miguel and the viewers learn that even though the Land of the Dead seems like a place where the deceased will live forever, that is actually not true, and you can die again. Chicharrón’s scene is heartbreaking, especially when Miguel says he’ll go home and remember him, and Héctor tells him it’s not that simple; Chicharrón can only be remembered by those who knew him in life. It was during the Pixar filmmakers’ research trip in Mexico that they learnt about three different deaths. The first is when you stop physically being alive anymore. The second is after burial or cremation. The third is when there is nobody left living to remember you[6]. This shows why family is so important to many cultures, because even believing in an afterlife cannot guarantee you’ll live forever.

Edward James Olmos provided the voice of this character. Edward James Olmos had been cast as Jaime Escalante in Stand and Deliver (1988) being nominated for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe for Best Actor for his performance. He also won a Golden Globe and an Emmy for his role as Martin Castillo in Miami Vice (1984-90), later winning ALMA awards for his role as Abraham Quintanilla Jr. in Selena (1997) and for his performance as William Adama in Battlestar Galactica (2003-09).

MUSIC

The soundtrack for Coco was released in multiple different languages, as is quite usual, with versions of songs being re-recorded by other famous singers from the respective countries. However, there is something a little bit different with Coco, and that is that the Spanish-language version of the soundtrack includes exclusive songs inspired by the film. These include “El Corrido de Miguel Rivera”; “La Bikina”; and “Bésame Mucho”.

Though Coco features many songs, it is not a musical in the sense that Disney animated movies are, with their Broadway-style songs and characters spontaneously breaking out into song to reflect their feelings and inner thoughts. For Coco, the characters do sing, but these are either performances, in movies, or with family, so they are more natural in that sense.

As Miguel wants to be a musician, it makes sense for him to perform in Coco on multiple occasions, with the Pixar team being very impressed with voice artist Anthony Gonzalez’s singing talents. My favourite songs of Miguel’s are “The World Es Mi Familia”, which he sings at Ernesto de la Cruz’s party, seemingly being a song from one of his movies, and “Un Poco Loco”. I like how fun “Un Poco Loco” is and I like the involvement of Héctor in this high-energy performance in particular. It’s a song about knowing that your loved one is kind of annoying, and that they drive you crazy but you love them anyway, which I think most people can relate to. Miguel’s finale song “Proud Corazón” isn’t one I particularly like, but I understand the sentiment behind it, the fact the whole family is together again and that’s something to be happy about.

For “Remember Me”, the most recognisable song in the movie, there are three versions in the film. The first is by Benjamin Bratt as Ernesto de la Cruz and it is a big showy number, full of dancers and even a moving escalator. It’s all going well until that big bell lands on his head… There is then the lullaby that Héctor sings to Coco, which is very sweet, with Gael García Bernal providing Héctor’s singing voice. García Bernal also gets to sing the silly song “Everyone Knows Juanita” where he has to improvise a more child-friendly line, much to Chicharrón’s annoyance as he requested the song be sung to him properly!

The third version of “Remember Me” is when Miguel is singing the song to his great-grandmother Coco, to get her to remember Héctor. All looks lost for a moment, but she does join in, just to make sure that if the tears weren’t flowing by then, they certainly would be now! “Remember Me” was the first song to be written for Coco and helped drive the story. Songwriters Bobby Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, who had written the songs for Frozen (2013) at this point, were approached to write this song. There is even a fourth version of “Remember Me” which features as Coco’s End Credits song. It is performed by R&B singer Miguel and Mexican artist Natalia Lafourcade as a pop duet.

A couple of other songs appear in the movie and the one I like the best is “La Llorona” performed by Alanna Ubach as Mamá Imelda. She performs it when she is lifted up on to the stage for Ernesto de la Cruz’s Sunrise Spectacular, being encouraged by Miguel and Héctor to sing instead of standing there looking stunned!

The guitar playing in Coco has been praised for being incredibly accurate, and there’s a good reason for this: the Pixar filmmakers studied guitar players to ensure the playing was as realistic as possible, strapping GoPro cameras onto the instruments. It is a pet peeve of director Lee Unkrich that when watching a movie, it is incredibly frustrating to see actors only pretending to play the instruments[7]. One instance where we can see accurate guitar playing up close is when Miguel is playing along to one of Ernesto de la Cruz’s movie clips, as the song “Much Needed Advice” briefly plays. Miguel goes into himself and instead of playing along, he starts to improvise and just feel the music.

Germaine Franco and Adrian Molina, co-director of Coco, are credited with writing the other original songs that are not “Remember Me”. Germaine Franco went on to compose the music for Disney’s Encanto (2021), as well as compose the music for other movies such as Netflix’s Work It (2020) and The Mother (2023).

Although Coco did not turn out to be a full musical movie, there was a time when it was going to be. A whole opening song was written to teach the audience about Día de los Muertos, that would have begun in present day, as women sing in the cemetery, leaving marigold petals on the ground. It would then have taken viewers back to 1953, to see a big performance of the song with Ernesto de la Cruz, with the finale being the bell dropping on his head, as per the final film. This number was written by Lopez and Anderson-Lopez, however, although fun to watch, it gave the audience too much information to absorb. Another song, titled “The Way of the Riveras” was also cut. It was a song sung by the Rivera family about their family legacy and the traditions they’ve followed, but it made no sense for a family who hate music to start singing[8]!

Another piece of music I noticed was during the opening of Coco, where the classic Disney castle is seen. Normally “When You Wish Upon a Star” can be heard. In Coco, this song is performed by a mariachi band, setting the tone for the movie from the outset.

Michael Giacchino composed the score for Coco. The use of traditional instruments, guitars, and mariachi bands has been seamlessly combined to create a score that had to move from fun celebration, to magical moments, to feelings of heartbreak, as things change quickly for Miguel in the Land of the Dead. Although I didn’t pick out any favourite instrumentals here as I have done with Disney animated movies, I think the level of research, of spending time with musicians to get the sound just right for the film, is inspiring and the overall score is good.

Giacchino had previously composed the score for Pixar’s film Up (2009), for which he won the Oscar, BAFTA, Golden Globe, and Critics’ Choice Award for Best Score. Giacchino has composed numerous scores for Pixar movies, beginning with The Incredibles (2004), and its 2018 sequel, Ratatouille (2007), and Inside Out (2015). Outside of Pixar, he has composed music for the most recent Spider-Man films, the three latest Jurassic World movies, and for the series of Disney television Christmas specials, Prep & Landing (2009-11). Giacchino was also nominated for Primetime Emmy awards for his work on the series Lost (2004-10), winning one for his underscore of its pilot episode.

The Coco soundtrack won the Annie Award for Music in an Animated Feature, and “Remember Me” won awards for Best Original Song at the Academy Awards, and the Critics’ Choice Movie Awards. Giacchino won a Saturn Award for Best Music, where Coco also won Best Animated Film. The song “Remember Me” and the score were both nominated for Grammy Awards, however, lost out to “Shallow” from A Star Is Born (2018) and the score of Black Panther (2018) respectively.

PRODUCTION

Production on Coco is said to have started around 2011, as Lee Unkrich, who had just directed Toy Story 3 (2010) for Pixar, found inspiration for the movie whilst riding the Gran Fiesta Tour boat ride in the Mexico pavilion of Epcot at Walt Disney World. There is a scene within that ride that shows animatronics enjoying the holiday of Día de los Muertos, and a mariachi skeleton band is playing for the festivities. This gave Unkrich an idea; about telling a story set against the culture of Mexico, during the time of Día de los Muertos[9].

The Pixar team wanted to represent the Mexican culture faithfully by physically seeing all the great traditions that exist there. Research trips in general are a good way of finding ideas to create fantastical places, or seeing real-life places and architectural landmarks that can be recreated accurately in a movie.

Whilst in Mexico, the Pixar team met with numerous families to get a feel for what an extended family living in the country looks like, so that viewers could identify with the characters on screen and feel like aspects of their heritage are being represented. The filmmakers were invited into family homes, where they were warmly welcomed by kind, generous people. During their meetings, the filmmakers discovered that many families have a trade or craft that is passed down from generation to generation, with one family they met being shoemakers. This gave Pixar lots of inspiration to make the Riveras a shoemaking family too. The Pixar team were amazed at how everything was made by hand, with tools and methods being inherited from the generation before them. Though the families here were happy to all have a hand in the production of different items as part of their family business, Pixar thought about how someone might feel if they were working for a family business despite not having a passion for the craft, which became a central point of conflict between Miguel and his family. Other crafts were looked into as well, such as pottery making and papel picado, which is the intricately detailed and beautifully designed paper bunting that is used in Coco to tell the backstory of Mamá Imelda and the Rivera family.

Since Día de los Muertos is the focal point of the story of Coco, it was necessary for the filmmakers to fully understand the meaning behind the holiday, as well as the traditions it involves. They were allowed to visit family ofrendas, where they were encouraged to pay their respects to their hosts’ ancestors. Ofrenda means offering in English, so alongside photographs of family members being featured on the ofrendas, offerings of fruit, flowers, and incense are also included, to provide something for their returning ancestors. Instead of Día de los Muertos being a melancholic ceremony as some may expect as some cultures do not like to think about death, Día de los Muertos is a time for celebration, to remember those you love. People go to their ancestors’ graves to clean and decorate them, with many keeping vigil by the gravestones through out the night. As the daylight fades, candles and bright colourful flowers light up the area. It is a time for joy, not sadness[10].

To match this feeling of celebration in the Land of the Living in Coco, the Land of the Dead had to feel colourful and alive, not spooky or macabre. This was Pixar’s opportunity to create a new land. For the vertical structures found within the Land of the Dead, the Pixar filmmakers wanted to design these towers to show that new ways of living have been built on top of previous generations. The base of these towers are Mayan pyramids, with pre-Colonial structures on top. This then moves into colonial architecture, and then to those of the 1950s. More modern structures are built on top of those and cranes are placed at the very top to show new building work. As well as this, to make the Land of the Dead feel like its own city, haciendas, docks, plazas, alley ways, and methods of transportation, such as suspended trolley cars, were all included in the sets[11].

The characters in the Land of the Dead, since they have all died during different time periods, have outfits that go back to the 1800s all the way through to present day, with these coming from all areas of Mexico. Clothing would naturally fall differently on skeletons, and despite reference modelling being used, especially for some of the layered, full skirts that dancers wear in the movie, this wouldn’t necessarily match how it would work on a skeleton. Would the fabric hang differently? Would it sit on their bones instead of falling past them? Would it feel less heavy on a skeleton? All of these questions had to be answered, and in animation tests, clothing kept getting caught between the bones of the skeleton, becoming so much of an issue that Pixar had to create software to deal with this recurring problem! Costuming is just as important in Santa Cecilia with the present-day Riveras who wear a mixture of contemporary and traditional clothing. Miguel’s cousin is wearing a soccer top and his aunt is wearing jeans and a bright top. Miguel’s mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother wear more traditional garments. Miguel is wearing contemporary clothing, with his jeans, white top, and red hoodie, which became complicated during animation with all its zips, pockets, and that hood, as Miguel uses all these aspects of the hoodie in the film[12].

Coco might follow a series of human and skeletal characters, who all had to look and feel real, but they are not the only characters in the movie. Alebrijes are brightly coloured sculptures. These works of art are traditionally carved from wood and hand painted, with these alebrijes being fantastical animals that are said to be spiritual guides. Although alebrijes are not traditionally linked to Día de los Muertos, when the filmmakers saw these creations after visiting an alebrije workshop in Oaxaca, they knew they had to include them in some way in Coco[13]. They are seen as sculptures in the Land of the Living, but in the Land of the Dead, they come to life, being all shapes and sizes. Mamá Imelda’s alebrije is green-blue big cat with huge wings, called Pepita. She helps find Miguel in the Land of the Dead to reunite him with his family. Other alebrijes also fly around the world too.

The most surprising alebrije of them all is Dante. He is seen to just be an ugly street dog, complete with missing teeth, a floppy tongue, and a broken tail. Dante is Miguel’s friend; however, others just find Dante to be a stray that is probably only begging for food. Dante is able to follow Miguel into the Land of the Dead, where Frida Kahlo tells Miguel he is a Xolo dogs, and Xolo dogs are said to be great spirit guides. This goes back to Aztec myth; people would have to make their journey to the Land of the Dead having a Xolo dog with them to accompany them there. Because of this historical connection to the Land of the Dead, the filmmakers knew they had to include a Xolo dog in the film. Dante is soon found to have an important purpose, as he spends his time trying to keep Miguel on his journey to reuniting the family, by pushing Miguel towards Héctor, even though Miguel thinks Ernesto de la Cruz is his family. Once this mission is complete, Dante suddenly changes colour and sprouts wings, becoming a full alebrije, like Pepita[14].

Even with all this information and research into Mexican culture and Día de los Muertos, the final story did not come together easily. Originally, the story was going to be about an American kid discovering his Mexican heritage. Then, this changed to being about a child losing their mother and struggling with their grief. Through the story, they would learn to move on with their life and deal with the grief. However, this idea is fundamentally at odds with the whole point of Día de los Muertos, where family is never forgotten and everyone has an obligation to hold on to the memories of their ancestors and pass them down to others, so that the ancestors never die. Pixar had to start again.

Adrian Molina had previously worked with director Unkrich on Toy Story 3 (2010), having worked as a storyboard artist for Pixar. He had gone on to work on Monsters University (2013) and The Good Dinosaur (2015), before working on Coco. When story troubles began, Molina went away and wrote whole redrafts of the story and sent them over to Unkrich. Unkrich read these story treatments and was amazed by them, asking Molina to come on as the screenwriter for Coco. He later stepped up to be the co-director as well. Thanks to his Mexican heritage, Molina could use his family history to keep the story on track with its basis in Mexican culture.

From this point, other versions of the story were considered and then edited. One of these was the story point of Marco, the original name for the character of Miguel, and his guitar. Marco would have had his guitar in the Land of the Dead and this would be his means of returning to the Land of the Living. At one point, Marco’s family were going to want to break the guitar as a way of reversing a curse. Naturally, a family that hates music in the Land of the Living would then be cursed to sing forever in the Land of the Dead! Ernesto de la Cruz was also going to successfully break the guitar, barring Marco from returning to the Land of the Living, until the family rebuild the guitar for him. I think there was also a deleted scene showing that Miguel, now using his final name, would need to return the guitar back to Ernesto de la Cruz to get home, although I was so distracted by the main concept of the scene – that Héctor was running a celebrity bus tour of the celebrities in the Land of the Dead – that I missed some of the intricacies of the story.

The mechanics of Miguel getting back home from the Land of the Dead became a regular topic of discussion, where an option was for Miguel to simply cross the bridge back to the Land of the Living before the end of Día de los Muertos. During this deleted scene, Miguel is almost out of time, trying to jump over huge gaps in the bridge as the petals forming it fly away. Ernesto de la Cruz chases him, trying to prevent him getting home to destroy his legacy. Miguel runs through a crumbling Ernesto and leaps off the end of the bridge. Though these ideas all sounded interesting to me, I can see why these were ultimately not used, as the blessing is a much more poignant way of returning Miguel home. This was Adrian Molina’s idea based on a real moment in his life, when he was given his parents’ blessing to do whatever he wanted in life as he was heading off to college[15].

Even with the seriousness of the themes within Coco, Pixar couldn’t ignore their usual Easter eggs to treat their viewers. A113 and the Pizza Planet truck exist in every one of Pixar’s movies, referencing a classroom at CalArts where many of the animators studied, and the famous truck from Toy Story (1995), their first full-length animated feature film. In Coco, A113 is the room number for the Bureau of Family Grievances, and the Pizza Planet truck can be briefly seen passing by Miguel as he looks out the window near to the start of the film. John Ratzenberger, who voiced characters in the majority of Pixar movies, can be briefly heard here as Juan Ortodoncia, the skeleton who is leaving the Land of the Dead as Miguel arrives there because his picture is on his dentist’s ofrenda; this is a very small role. Another Easter egg I enjoyed is that a skeleton wearing a skull t-shirt performs at the talent contest in the Land of the Dead. This is clearly a reference to Sid, the crazy kid in Toy Story, showing that he has apparently died, though the events leading to it remain unknown…

RECEPTION

Coco ended up being in development for around six years, after first being announced in 2011. Disney had been criticised early on in the development of the movie, as they attempted to trademark the phrase Día de los Muertos in 2013. This was because Día de los Muertos was going to be the title for the movie, however, this was heavily condemned as it seemed like Disney were trying to demean the tradition of Día de los Muertos, concerning many that this film was not going to be culturally sensitive or accurate[16]. The trademark attempt was later cancelled.

To make matters worse, in 2014, The Book of Life was released, a movie also about Día de los Muertos, produced by 20th Century Fox and directed by Jorge R. Gutierrez. This would mean that Coco was going to be compared with this movie after its release.

In 2017, to build anticipation for the release of Coco, more details and clips were revealed at that year’s D23 Expo. A performance of “Remember Me”, dubbed the signature song of the film, became the grand finale of this panel presentation. It was also confirmed that Coco would be released on 22nd November 2017 in US theatres. At Disney Springs in Walt Disney World, a whole area was set up for around two weeks with banners, food, and music to promote the film. This ran until 26th November 2017, this being just enough time to see out Coco’s opening weekend in cinemas. A sneak peek of the film was also shown at Walt Disney Presents at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, along with a small exhibit about the movie’s animation and creation, as is common for new Pixar and Disney releases[17]. At Disneyland’s Disney California Adventure Park, a preview of the movie was shown at Sunset Showcase Theater in Hollywood Land, and the area, Plaza de la Familia, was created at Paradise Gardens to celebrate the movie[18].

Coco was released on 22nd November 2017 in the US, in time for Thanksgiving Weekend. But Coco was first released in Mexico on 27th October, almost an entire month before the US release, after premiering during the Morelia International Film Festival on 20th October. Coco was a huge hit in Mexico, becoming the No.1 movie there and earning 965m pesos in its first month, surpassing the highest-grossing release The Avengers (2012) with its initial 827m pesos[19]. Coco later exceeded the 1-billion-peso mark at the box-office.

One thing that was a complaint echoed across the world but first in Mexico was that Coco was released alongside Olaf’s Frozen Adventure, as a double-feature. Normally, Pixar movies would be preceded with a five-minute short but Olaf’s Frozen Adventure is around twenty-minutes long, much too long to come before a full movie, especially if you want to keep kids interested and not make them wonder if they’ve accidentally walked into a showing of Frozen (2013). Olaf’s Frozen Adventure was meant to be an ABC TV special, so I’m unsure why the decision was made to release it alongside Coco. Audiences in Mexico complained about the length of the short before the main feature, so it was removed[20].

Although some may have expected to see a lot of clichés and stereotypes within Coco, it was appreciated by most that Coco shows a positive side of Mexico, whereas many American movies set in Mexico have either been stereotypically comical or quite sinister. Many also said it was comparable emotionally to Up (2009) and was much better than Cars 3 (2017) and The Good Dinosaur (2015) that came before it. The message around death, heritage, and family was appreciated. However, a few negative comments referenced the fact that kids may have been bored by the serious nature of the movie and the lack of humour and comedic moments. Speaking as an adult though, it’s a beautiful film with many tearjerker moments. It might not be as funny as other movies, but it wouldn’t have felt right to make an outright comedy when Coco is supposed to be sensitively portraying a celebratory but sacred tradition. It still has its funny moments.

Coco pulled in $71.2 million in the US and Canada in its five days over the Thanksgiving Weekend. Overall, the movie grossed over $800 million worldwide and won various awards. Coco won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and won numerous Annie Awards in areas such as character design, directing, music, and Best Animated Feature. Coco won Best Animated Feature Film at the Golden Globe Awards, and at the Imagen Awards, which are dedicated to recognising positive portrayals of Latinos in the entertainment industry, it won for Best Picture and Best Director. Coco also fared better than The Book of Life in terms of accolades, box-office results, and reviews, however, the two are very different, both in story and animation, so it’s worth watching both to come to your own conclusion on which is “best”.

LEGACY

Because of Coco’s huge success, it makes sense that the story did not end there. Though a sequel was never made, other ways of extending its reach have been developed.

One of these is A Celebration of the Music From Coco. This came to Disney+ in 2020 and it is a recorded performance of a concert held at the Hollywood Bowl in November 2019 as a one-weekend-only special event. It was hosted by Eva Longoria and Benjamin Bratt, and featured music from both the English- and Spanish-language versions of the soundtrack, as well as other traditional Mexican songs. The concert used dancers, puppets, an orchestra, and clips from the movie to enhance the performances. Mexican singer Carlos Rivera and Spanish singer-songwriter Natalia Jiménez took to the stage, as did Benjamin Bratt and Alanna Ubach, voices of Ernesto de la Cruz and Mamá Imelda. Anthony Gonzalez’ younger brother Alex took over the role as Miguel as his brother’s voice had changed. There have also been talks since 2023 that a Broadway musical version of Coco will be coming to the stage in due course, though no opening date has yet been announced.

At the Disney Parks, Coco has been featured in some form at many of them. In Walt Disney World’s Epcot Park, there is a whole pavilion dedicated to Mexico, so it is only natural that has been themed to Coco in places. The entrance to the pavilion houses the Remember Me exhibit, which is about the history and traditions of Día de los Muertos. There has been discussion about the boat ride, Gran Fiesta Tour, which is currently themed to The Three Caballeros (1944) being rethemed to Coco, but that has been ongoing for years and nothing has been announced – yet. Epcot’s resident mariachi band, Mariachi Cobre, sometimes play music from Coco and, for Hispanic and Latin American Heritage Month, they played the show Together We Are Magia! With Miguel, which ran from 15th September to 15th October 2024, where Miguel made an appearance. Miguel as a puppet has also appeared at other times during Mariachi Cobre performances in Epcot as well for events or festivals.

At Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom Park, Miguel is a character within the Disney Adventure Friends Cavalcade and Miguel and Héctor’s performance of “Un Poco Loco” was also added to the Mickey’s PhilarMagic 3D show here, with this version of the show now existing at Disneyland, Disneyland Paris, and Tokyo Disneyland too. Finally, for the revamped Country Bear Jamboree Big Al now sings “Remember Me” instead of “Blood on the Saddle” but don’t get me started on that…

At Disneyland Paris, they have the Casa de Coco – Restaurante de Familia quick-service location, serving Tex Mex food and being themed to the movie, with a statue of Miguel playing his guitar outside the entrance. It opened in Summer 2023, replacing Fuente del Oro Restaurante. There is also a Coco segment within their Together: A Pixar Musical Adventure show. At Shanghai Disneyland, Miguel features within the show Mickey’s Storybook Adventure briefly during the finale section of the show, within one of the pages of the storybook. At Hong Kong Disneyland, “Remember Me” plays within their fireworks show Momentous, and Miguel and the song appear in the stage show Follow Your Dreams. At Tokyo Disneyland, there is a Coco section within their parade, Harmony in Color.

The most exciting Coco update though for Disney Parks is that a Coco-themed boat ride was announced for Disney California Adventure Park at Disneyland during the D23 Expo in 2024. This will be the first ever attraction themed to Coco. Not many details have been announced yet, only that it should begin construction in 2026[21].

Also at Disney California Adventure Park, the Plaza de la Familia has been home to The Musical World of Coco, an outdoor show being performed by The Storytellers of Plaza de la Familia, dancers and puppeteers, as well as the Mariachi Divas, who help tell the story of Miguel and his journey to the Land of the Dead. This show began in September 2017, before the movie was released in theatres, with multiple showings throughout the day. Over the years, the show has changed in some ways, and now seems to only run for the Halloween season, which in the world of Disney runs from August to 31st October, but as Día de los Muertos runs into the first few days of November, so does this show. One of the biggest changes is that around 2019, a hand-crafted puppet Miguel was added to the show, who performs “Un Poco Loco” and “Proud Corazón” to the crowd. Additional props have been added too. This show also ran at Hong Kong Disneyland around 2018.

Other limited time offerings are available at this time to celebrate Coco and Día de los Muertos, such as Coco-inspired food being served at Paradise Gardens, and the opportunity to make paper alebrije masks, or post personal messages to loved ones on the Memory Wall. At Disneyland Park, Frontierland is home to celebrations for Día de los Muertos, although this doesn’t seem to be specifically themed to Coco.

Since Coco is a Pixar film, and one that has not been forgotten, it featured at Pixar Fest 2024 with Coco-inspired treats; Miguel on a float during the Better Together Parade; and the song “The World Es Mi Familia” and projections from the movie being shown during the Together Forever fireworks show. There is also a Coco-themed suite at the Pixar Place Hotel, and small references to the movie are likely to be found at the Lamplight Lounge restaurant at Pixar Pier at Disney California Adventure. Miguel, in his mariachi suit from the finale of the show, along with Mamá Imelda and Héctor as animatronics featured in a Coco float for the Magic Happens Parade, with a huge float of Pepita following on behind, as versions of “Proud Corazón” and “Remember Me” play, however, the Magic Happens Parade stopped running in Summer 2024, though it may return at some point. Miguel will appear for the seasonal ¡Viva Navidad! event at Disneyland from November 2024 to January 2025.

In terms of meet-and-greets, Miguel and Ernesto de la Cruz are the most common ones to encounter, although Ernesto de la Cruz has only been seen at Disney California Adventure’s Halloween party, the Oogie Boogie Bash. He made his debut in 2022, and has been seen every year since as part of the Trick or Treat trails. If you’re lucky, he might even sing “Remember Me” for you. Ernesto de la Cruz has not yet made it to Walt Disney World’s Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party but people are hopeful.

Miguel recently made an appearance as a meet-and-greet character in his hoodie and jeans at Disneyland Paris in Frontierland for the Halloween Festival in 2024. This same costume was what Miguel met guests in at Hong Kong Disneyland in 2021. Miguel has also been in his mariachi costume at Frontierland in Disneyland. Previously, the Miguel puppet had been the primary way that guests met Miguel at Disneyland, either after the show or in his own character spot in Plaza de la Familia. Puppet Miguel is the only way that guests at Walt Disney World have met Miguel before, and he was also spotted at Disneyland Paris during Halloween in 2018 and Shanghai Disneyland in 2018.

FINAL THOUGHTS

There is no doubt about it, Coco was a huge success for Pixar. It gained fans for its brilliant music, its relatable characters, and its stunning animation.

But just making another money-making hit was not the point of Coco. This story had to be handled with respect and thoughtfulness. The effort taken to do this is evident.

Coco delivered a touching message to all who saw it, about the importance of our loved ones, both here and not. Families aren’t perfect and they all have moments of conflict or disagreement. Despite that, memories can last a lifetime if our family stories are preserved and told to the younger generations.

We have to remember our loved ones, or risk losing them forever.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Carolyn Giardina, ‘‘Coco’: How Pixar Brought Its “Day of the Dead” Story to Life’, HollywoodReporter.com, 12th December 2017.

[2] Credit: Courtney Potter, ‘5 Especial Things We Learned from Coco’s Cast & Filmmakers’, D23.com, 17th November 2017.

[3] Credit: Pixar, Mi Familia (2018), Disney+.

[4] Credit: Diana Aguilera, ‘How Disney Got It Right with ‘Coco’’, StanfordMag.org, March 2018.

[5] Credit: Theo Farrant & AFP, ‘Day of the Dead: Family of the woman who allegedly inspired Pixar’s Coco pay their respects’, EuroNews.com, 2nd November 2022.

[6] Credit: Tasha Robinson, ‘Pixar’s Lee Unkrich on the ‘anxiety’ of directing Coco’, TheVerge.com, 22nd November 2017.

[7] Credit: Rob Lowman, ‘Why ‘Coco’ filmmakers strapped GoPro cameras onto musicians’ guitars’, DailyNews.com, 18th November 2017.

[8] Credit: Pixar, Deleted Scenes (2018), Disney+.

[9] Credit: Carolyn Giardina, ‘‘Coco’: How Pixar Brought Its “Day of the Dead” Story to Life’, HollywoodReporter.com, 12th December 2017.

[10] Credit: Pixar, Coco: A Thousand Pictures (2018), Pixar Facebook Page, 21st September 2018.

[11] Credit: Pixar, Land of Our Ancestors (2018), Coconut Press YouTube Channel, 22nd October 2023.

[12] Credit: Pixar, Fashion Through the Ages (2018), Coconut Press YouTube Channel, 23rd October 2023.

[13] Credit: Disney News Contributor, ‘We Took a Trip to Mexico With the Filmmakers Behind Disney Pixar’s Coco’, News.Disney.Com, 27th February 2018.

[14] Credit: Pixar, Dante (2018), Frozen Bus Channel YouTube Channel, 5th March 2018.

[15] Credit: Tasha Robinson, ‘Pixar’s Lee Unkrich on the ‘anxiety’ of directing Coco’, TheVerge.com, 22nd November 2017.

[16] Credit: Diana Aguilera, ‘How Disney Got It Right with ‘Coco’’, StanfordMag.org, March 2018.

[17] Credit: Jeremiah Good, ‘Disney•Pixar’s “Coco” Around Walt Disney World’, LaughingPlace.com, 16th November 2017.

[18] Credit: Rikki Niblett, ‘Sneak Preview of Pixar’s “Coco” Coming to Disney Parks’, TouringPlans.com, 13th September 2017.

[19] Credit: Author Unknown, ‘Disney•Pixar’s ‘Coco’ Uses Innovative Visual Effects to Celebrate Family and Tradition’, TheWaltDisneyCompany.com, 22nd November 2017.

[20] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘Disney Christmas Cartoons’, MousePlanet.com, 27th December 2017.

[21] Credit: Alexandra Hurtado, ‘‘Coco’ and ‘Encanto’ rides are coming to Disney Parks: What we know!’, Hola.com, 13th August 2024.