Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses

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Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses
BarbieDancingPrincesses.jpg
DVD cover
Directed byGreg Richardson
Written byElana Lesser
Cliff Ruby
Based on"The Twelve Dancing Princesses" by the Brothers Grimm
Produced byShea Wageman
Starring Kelly Sheridan
Nicole Oliver
Jennifer Copping
Kathleen Barr
Chiara Zanni
Adrienne Carter
Ashleigh Ball
Britt McKillip
Maddy Copozzi
Chantal Strand
Catherine O'Hara
Shawn MacDonald
Christopher Gaze
Edited byColin Adams
Music by Arnie Roth
Production
companies
Distributed by Universal Studios Home Entertainment [lower-alpha 1]
Release dates
  • September 10, 2006 (2006-09-10)(Nickelodeon) [1]
  • September 19, 2006 (2006-09-19)(DVD)
Running time
81 minutes
CountriesCanada
United States
LanguageEnglish

Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses is a 2006 animated dance film. It premiered on Nickelodeon on September 10, 2006, [1] and it was later released to DVD on September 19. [2]

Contents

The film was directed by Greg Richardson and loosely based on the German fairy tale "The Twelve Dancing Princesses". [3] It is the ninth entry in the Barbie film series and features the voice of Kelly Sheridan as the Barbie protagonist. This is the first Barbie film to be distributed by Universal Studios Home Entertainment in North America, to-which Universal's international subsidiary already handled distribution to the previous films under a deal with Entertainment Rights. [4]

Music for the film was composed by Arnie Roth. "Shine", the end title song written by Roth, Amy Powers and Rob Hudnut, was nominated for a 2007 Emmy Award.

Plot

Genevieve (played by Barbie) is one of twelve princesses (played by Teresa, Lea, Drew, Raquelle, Midge, Skipper, Chelsie, Becky & Kelly) who share a passion for dancing and live in a castle with their widowed father, King Randolph. Unbeknownst to the princesses, other people consider them improper for having unique but unladylike hobbies and interests. King Randolph summons his cousin, Duchess Rowena, to help educate them into proper ladies. However, the Duchess wants the throne and removes all color, music, and joy from the palace, trying to break the girls' spirits.

On their youngest sisters' birthday, the other sisters gift a copy of their late mother's favorite story, wherein a princess discovers a magical land and dances there for three nights before it vanishes. Looking at the story and the tiles on their bedroom floor, Genevieve discovers how to open a portal into the magical land. Upon entering, they dance the night away. They learn the hanging golden flowers grant wishes, the statues can come to life, and the water has healing properties.

The next day, the princesses appear tired and Rowena finds their new dancing shoes worn out, arousing her suspicions. King Randolph falls ill, so Genevieve asks the royal cobbler, Derek, to investigate Rowena's true intentions. That night, the princesses return to the magical land; Derek confronts a local apothecary and deduces that Rowena has been poisoning the King.

The next morning, the sisters are again exhausted. Rowena, refusing to believe the sisters when they tell her the truth, forces them into servitude. After overhearing Rowena maneuver the King into referring to his daughters as burdens, the heartbroken princesses return to the magical land for a third time, and Rowena finds them missing the next morning.

After learning that the princesses are missing, Derek figures out how to open the portal and makes his way into the magical land. Rowena's pet monkey, Brutus, spies on Derek and leads Rowena through after him; she steals one of the wish-granting flowers. The princesses decide to go home and help their father; however, Rowena returns to the palace ahead of them and has her henchman, Desmond, destroy the portal. Derek and Genevieve figure out how to activate another portal by dancing together, freeing the group.

Once home, they find out that the King is dying and that Rowena has taken over as Queen. The Duchess uses the golden flower to wish for Genevieve to dance forever without rest, but Genevieve blows the magic dust back at her with a hand fan, forcing Rowena to dance uncontrollably. When Desmond tries to help Rowena, he is pulled into the spell, and the two dance their way out of the castle. Lacey uses the healing water she took from the magic land to revive her father. King Randolph affirms his unconditional love for his daughters and Genevieve and Derek celebrate their wedding.

Characters

Princesses

Each of the 12 Princesses is designated with a gemstone and a flower. Each princess' flower appears on their dresses, the book gifted to each of them, and on the stones on the floor of their bedroom, and each of the princesses' names begin with the first 12 letters of the alphabet.

Other

Voice cast

Production

The film's ballet scenes feature the movement of New York City Ballet dancers, computer animated through motion capture imaging. [5]

Music

The songs featured in this film are:

Reception

Commercial reception

In the October 14, 2006 issue of Billboard , Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses debuted at number one on the Top DVD Sales chart. [6] The film sold nearly 500,000 units in its first week, 15% more than the previous princess-themed film in the Barbie franchise. [7]

Critical response

Jill Stark of The Sunday Age rated the film 3/5 stars, calling it "good wholesome stuff, though the story sometimes plods." [8] Describing the plot as " Footloose in a fairy-tale setting", D. Liebenson of The Video Librarian wrote, "Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses serves up plenty of magic to enchant young, starry-eyed Barbie fans and aspiring dancers", and "the CGI animation sparkles, with each character boasting an otherworldly porcelain sheen." [9]

Reviewing the film for Common Sense Media, Teresa Talerico described it as "an innocent story about sisterly love and ballet dancing" but advised that the villain subplot and poisoning scenes may be frightening for young children. Talerico also wrote that the 12 sisters' characters weren't well developed. [10]

Awards

Merchandise

The line of tie-in Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses products included dolls, playsets and accessories. Dolls of each of the 12 princess characters and Derek were released, as well as a "Magic Dance Castle" dollhouse, a princess vanity for the 12 dolls, a horse and carriage set that can seat all 12 dolls, and two Twyla plush toys. [13]

See also

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References

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  4. "Mattel, Universal Studios hook up on Barbie movies deal". The Globe and Mail. 12 April 2006.
  5. Zacharias, Yvonne (17 May 2007). "Barbie animators dancing for joy; Jurists for the Leo Awards have nominated Rainmaker animators for several awards: [Final Edition]". Westcoast Life. The Vancouver Sun . Postmedia Network Inc. p. D14. ProQuest   242116980.
  6. "Archive: Sales Charts". Cinema Sight by Wesley Lovell. 2020-05-31. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
  7. Arnold, Thomas K. (28 September 2006). "'Wild,' 'Slevin' remain on top in slow week". The Hollywood Reporter . Vol. 396. P-MRC. p. 16. ProQuest   235346108.
  8. Stark, Jill (17 September 2006). "Critics' choice". The Sunday Age . Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited. p. 63. Gale   A283518197.
  9. Liebenson, D. (1 November 2006). "Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses". The Video Librarian. Poulsbo. ProQuest   1977967540.
  10. Talerico, Teresa. "Barbie in the 12 Dancing Princesses". Common Sense Media . Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  11. DeMott, Rick (7 February 2007). "PBS & Discovery Kids Lead Children's Emmy Awards Nods". Animation World Network . Archived from the original on 18 April 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  12. 1 2 "2007 Leo Award Nominees & Winners" (PDF). Leo Awards . Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  13. "Magic of dance: [New Sunday Times Edition]". New Straits Times . Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. 27 August 2006. ProQuest   272015181.
  1. Released under Entertainment Rights/Classic Media outside North America, with Right Entertainment distributing in the United Kingdom