Rugrats Go Wild (partially found original 90 minute cut of Nickelodeon animated crossover film; 2003): Difference between revisions

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*[[101% Whizbang! with Henry & June (partially found Nickelodeon channel block; 1999)]]
*[[101% Whizbang! with Henry & June (partially found Nickelodeon channel block; 1999)]]
*[[Blood and Guts (partially found Nickelodeon bumpers; 2000s)]]
*[[Blood and Guts (partially found Nickelodeon bumpers; 2000s)]]
*[[HaHa Nick (lost Chinese block of Nickelodeon shows; 2005-2007)]]
*[[Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (partially lost TV promos for Nickelodeon animated film and TV series; 2001–2002)]]
*[[Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (partially lost TV promos for Nickelodeon animated film and TV series; 2001–2002)]]
*[[HaHa Nick (lost Chinese block of Nickelodeon shows; 2005-2007)]]
*[[Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (partially lost TV promos for Nickelodeon animated film and TV series; 2001–2002)]]
*[[Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (partially lost TV promos for Nickelodeon animated film and TV series; 2001–2002)]]
*[[Nickelodeon's Historical Firsts (partially lost animated promos from TV channel; 1997) ]]
*[[Nickelodeon's Historical Firsts (partially lost animated promos from TV channel; 1997) ]]

Revision as of 01:57, 15 January 2023

Rugrats go wildposter.jpg

Advertisement poster for the film.

Status: Partially Found

Rugrats Go Wild is a 2003 American animated crossover comedy film of Klasky-Csupo's TV animated series Rugrats and The Wild Thornberrys distributed by Paramount.[1] The film was the third and final film created for the Rugrats franchise as well as the second and final animated film for The Wild Thornberrys.

History

The film was originally a 90-minute special, but the test screenings were so positive that Paramount decided to remake it as an 80-minute film released in theaters. The original 90-minute special has never been leaked.

One notable cut was the character Tiki, a little animal whom Eliza communicated with and who accompanied her and the babies. He was voiced by rapper and actor LL Cool J; all of his scenes were cut from the final film.

The working title for the film was The Rugrats Meet the Wild Thornberrys. This title was retained for the film's earliest promotional material, including the first teaser trailer.

Gallery

Teaser for The Rugrats Meet the Wild Thornberrys (working title for Rugrats Go Wild), included on the VHS for Charlotte's Web 2: Wilbur's Great Adventure (0:00-1:08).

See Also

Rugrats

Anthology and Short Series

Bumpers and Promos

Films

Game Shows

Inaugural Series

Live Action

Pilots

Other

References

  1. Lenburg, Jeff (2009). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons (3rd ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. p. 222. ISBN 978-0-8160-6600-1.

External Links