IMDb RATING
6.0/10
8.1K
YOUR RATING
Throughout three different stories, Kari Kamiya and her friends take on explosive adventures involving digital creatures.Throughout three different stories, Kari Kamiya and her friends take on explosive adventures involving digital creatures.Throughout three different stories, Kari Kamiya and her friends take on explosive adventures involving digital creatures.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Lara Jill Miller
- Kari
- (voice)
- …
Joshua Seth
- Young Tai
- (voice)
- …
Bob Papenbrook
- Red Greymon
- (voice)
David Lodge
- Parrotmon
- (voice)
Dorothy Elias-Fahn
- Tal's Mom
- (voice)
Michael Sorich
- Miko
- (voice)
- …
Peggy O'Neal
- Botamon
- (voice)
Colleen O'Shaughnessey
- Sora
- (voice)
- …
Brianne Brozey
- Koromon
- (voice)
- …
Jeff Nimoy
- Truck Driver 1
- (voice)
- …
Bob Buchholz
- Truck Driver 2
- (voice)
- …
Philece Sampler
- Mimi
- (voice)
- …
Mona Marshall
- Izzy
- (voice)
- …
Michael Lindsay
- Joe
- (voice)
- …
Michael Reisz
- Matt
- (voice)
Wendee Lee
- Young T.K.
- (voice)
- …
Elizabeth Rice
- Boy 1
- (voice)
- …
Anna Garduno
- Boy 2
- (voice)
- …
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen the Digi-Egg emerges from the computer in the first part, the text in the background is from Psalm 109.
- GoofsThe Lopmon and Terriermon featured on the cover and poster art were drawn incorrectly. Some errors include wrong colorings, swapped markings, an incorrect number of horns, and incorrect shading.
- Quotes
[Giant Agumon leaps over a passing truck]
Man 1: Whoa! Did you see that?
Man 2: No, I was sleeping.
Man 1: But you're driving!
- Crazy creditsIn the Japanese version of segment 2: An hour glass mouse pointer is seen. Then a Windows computer screen with a window open on the right side appears. As the credits go by on the left side of the screen, images flash by in the open window. They are: TK and the old couple, Matt getting a hair cut, Joe after his test, Mimi and her family surrounded by bags, Kari and the group of friends at the birthday party, TK and Matt's grandma, random tinted yellow flashes of everyone who sent e-mails (including Yolei and Ryo), Tai's mother sitting at the kitchen table looking at the cake she baked, Izzy leaving Tai's appartment, All the digimon happy with Gennai, and Sora e-mails Tai back. The e-mail reads "Taichi, I'm so sorry. Let's forget it happened. Thanks... Sora." Sora smiles and The mouse pointer closes the open window then shuts down the computer. The screen goes black.
- Alternate versionsThe ABC Family and Toon Disney broadcast premieres removed the 4-minute intro with Angela Anaconda before the 20th Century Fox logo sequence, and replaced the Fox Kids logo between the 20th logo sequence and the opening credit sequence with the Saban International logo. 20th Century Fox is owned by the News Corporation in which it and Haim Saban, in 2001, sold what Fox Family became ABC Family, including what Saban Entertainment became BVS Entertainment and what the Fox Kids International channels became Jetix in 2005, to the Walt Disney Company.
- ConnectionsEdited from Digimon Adventure (1999)
- SoundtracksDigi Rap
Performed by M.C. Pea Pod and Paul Gordon
Produced by Paul Gordon
Written by Paul Gordon, Shuki Levy, and Haim Saban (as Kussa Mahchi)
Used by permission of Eifoata Music and Kukunia Music
Featured review
It took me forever to figure it out, but after enough searching, I found out why.
I found that the movie was a lot like the show, so close that it seemed like they had just thrown three episodes together. The only reason I put up with this, these three 'episodes' were effectively on their own and were referred to briefely in the series (well, 2 of them were).
It ends up that I was half right. after searching, I found out that it isn't three episodes strung together, but currently there are some 6 digimon 'movies' released in Japan, and three of them are in this single movie that we saw in the western world. It seems that the Japanese form of a movie is 30 minutes long (how this works is beyond me).
Outside that, it was enjoyable. I had fun watching it, taping it and watching it again, and catching all the jokes they had. It's what makes the series enjoyable, and it sure saved the movie.
I found that the movie was a lot like the show, so close that it seemed like they had just thrown three episodes together. The only reason I put up with this, these three 'episodes' were effectively on their own and were referred to briefely in the series (well, 2 of them were).
It ends up that I was half right. after searching, I found out that it isn't three episodes strung together, but currently there are some 6 digimon 'movies' released in Japan, and three of them are in this single movie that we saw in the western world. It seems that the Japanese form of a movie is 30 minutes long (how this works is beyond me).
Outside that, it was enjoyable. I had fun watching it, taping it and watching it again, and catching all the jokes they had. It's what makes the series enjoyable, and it sure saved the movie.
- forgottenlord
- Jan 29, 2002
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Digimon: Digital Monsters - The Movie
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $5,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $9,631,153
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,233,304
- Oct 8, 2000
- Gross worldwide
- $16,643,191
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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