High up on a mountain peak surrounded by clouds, a secret Yeti society lives in peace and harmony. One day, a Yeti witnesses an airplane crash; Inside lies "Smallfoot", a legendary creature ... Read allHigh up on a mountain peak surrounded by clouds, a secret Yeti society lives in peace and harmony. One day, a Yeti witnesses an airplane crash; Inside lies "Smallfoot", a legendary creature that will rock the society to its core.High up on a mountain peak surrounded by clouds, a secret Yeti society lives in peace and harmony. One day, a Yeti witnesses an airplane crash; Inside lies "Smallfoot", a legendary creature that will rock the society to its core.
- Awards
- 1 win & 14 nominations
Channing Tatum
- Migo
- (voice)
James Corden
- Percy
- (voice)
Common
- Stonekeeper
- (voice)
LeBron James
- Gwangi
- (voice)
Danny DeVito
- Dorgle
- (voice)
Gina Rodriguez
- Kolka
- (voice)
Yara Shahidi
- Brenda
- (voice)
Jimmy Tatro
- Thorp
- (voice)
Patricia Heaton
- Mama Bear
- (voice)
Justin Roiland
- Garry
- (voice)
Jack Quaid
- Pilot
- (voice)
Sarah Baker
- Soozie's Mom
- (voice)
Kelly Bashar
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
- (as Kelly Holden Bashar)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe names of the two lead yetis in the film, Migo and Meechee, are actually two different Tibetan words for "yeti" (yeti being more the Nepalese term).
- GoofsIn the human city featured in the film, the signs are in Chinese, and right-hand traffic is used, implying that the film takes place on the north side of the Himalayas in China. However, the city appears to have a population of at least ten thousand, and would therefore have to be on the south side of the Himalayas in Nepal/Pakistan/India/Bhutan, as all of the villages on the north side are much smaller. Also, the overwhelming majority of Himalayan tourism happens on the south side.
- Crazy creditsWarner Bros. Pictures logo, the snow starting, the shield turns ice and breaks into Warner Animation Group logo.
- Alternate versionsThe UK release was cut, the distributor chose to remove a single use of mild bad language ('crap') in order to obtain a U classification. An uncut PG classification was available.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Everything Wrong with...: Everything Wrong with Smallfoot (2019)
Featured review
You never know what you're going to get with non-Disney/Pixar animation. It might be an Illumination Entertainment-style effort -- lacking in substance but lots of wise cracks and kid-friendly touches (think "Minions" or "Sing") -- or a Laika-style affair, with depth and darkness to boot ("Kubo and The Two Strings").
Warner Animation Group has form, of course, with "The Lego Movie" combining laugh-out-loud humour for the kids with a knowing, subversive quality to keep the Mums and Dads entertained. It also produced "Storks", a much more pedestrian effort. Thankfully, "Smallfoot" belongs in the former camp.
Boasting impressive CG animation courtesy of Sony Imageworks, "Smallfoot" takes a tale reminiscent of "Monsters Inc." -- two groups ignorant and fearful of the other, in this case yetis and humans -- and twists it with a clever, topical message about the perils of putting dogma and self-interest ahead of critical thinking and the greater good. Ignorance really isn't bliss. This adult-friendly message may elude kids too busy laughing at the many visual gags, including a fantastic sequence involving fraying rope that brings to mind classic Warner animations of yesteryear, but it elevates the movie above most of its peers and ensures that not-so-young audience members are entertained too.
The film isn't quite Disney/Pixar level -- the yeti character designs are a little odd, as though the animators were trying to avoid too close a resemblance to Pixar's Sully, and the featured songs are catchy rather than great (Zendaya's "Wonderful Life" being the stand-out).
Still, "Smallfoot" is a thoroughly entertaining family film that aspires to be different, backed by appealing protagonists, well-judged comic moments, a thought-provoking message, and a rewarding resolution that steers clear of being saccharine. Recommended.
Warner Animation Group has form, of course, with "The Lego Movie" combining laugh-out-loud humour for the kids with a knowing, subversive quality to keep the Mums and Dads entertained. It also produced "Storks", a much more pedestrian effort. Thankfully, "Smallfoot" belongs in the former camp.
Boasting impressive CG animation courtesy of Sony Imageworks, "Smallfoot" takes a tale reminiscent of "Monsters Inc." -- two groups ignorant and fearful of the other, in this case yetis and humans -- and twists it with a clever, topical message about the perils of putting dogma and self-interest ahead of critical thinking and the greater good. Ignorance really isn't bliss. This adult-friendly message may elude kids too busy laughing at the many visual gags, including a fantastic sequence involving fraying rope that brings to mind classic Warner animations of yesteryear, but it elevates the movie above most of its peers and ensures that not-so-young audience members are entertained too.
The film isn't quite Disney/Pixar level -- the yeti character designs are a little odd, as though the animators were trying to avoid too close a resemblance to Pixar's Sully, and the featured songs are catchy rather than great (Zendaya's "Wonderful Life" being the stand-out).
Still, "Smallfoot" is a thoroughly entertaining family film that aspires to be different, backed by appealing protagonists, well-judged comic moments, a thought-provoking message, and a rewarding resolution that steers clear of being saccharine. Recommended.
- BrodyMarcusMacey
- Sep 25, 2018
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Chân Nhỏ, Bạn Ở Đâu?
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $80,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $83,315,531
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $23,045,635
- Sep 30, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $218,015,531
- Runtime1 hour 36 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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