A power-hungry sorcerer curses a princess to live as a swan by day in this tale of everlasting love.A power-hungry sorcerer curses a princess to live as a swan by day in this tale of everlasting love.A power-hungry sorcerer curses a princess to live as a swan by day in this tale of everlasting love.
- Awards
- 1 win & 8 nominations total
Jack Palance
- Sir Rothbart
- (voice)
Liz Callaway
- Princess Odette
- (singing voice)
John Cleese
- Jean-Bob
- (voice)
Steven Wright
- Speed
- (voice)
Steve Vinovich
- Puffin
- (voice)
Mark Harelik
- Lord Rogers
- (voice)
Davis Gaines
- Sir Chamberlain
- (singing voice)
Joel McKinnon Miller
- Bromley
- (voice)
Dakin Matthews
- King William
- (voice)
Sandy Duncan
- Queen Uberta
- (voice)
Brian Nissen
- Narrator
- (voice)
Adam Wylie
- Young Prince Derek
- (voice)
Tom Alan Robbins
- Musician
- (voice)
Bess Hopper
- Bridgette
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJohn Cleese had a choice of playing Zazu in The Lion King (1994) or Jean-Bob in this film. He chose to play Jean-Bob because he felt this character was more interesting.
- GoofsDuring the song "No More Mr. Nice Guy", at 52:33, if you look at the top of the screen, you will see the top of the animation table accidentally revealed by the camera's movement.
- Quotes
Rogers: What else is there? She says, "Is beauty all that matters?" And you say, "What else is there?"
Prince Derek: It was dumb. I know.
Rogers: You should write a book. "How to Offend Women in Five Syllables or Less".
- Alternate versionsThe United States full screen printings use the Nest Entertainment logo, but the worldwide printings (excluding theatrical international printings and the 1995 Mexican VHS, which use the Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International logo) and the pre-2019 North American digital printings use the New Line Cinema logo. However, the 2019 Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD digital printings retain the Nest Entertainment logo.
- SoundtracksFar Longer Than Forever (End Title Version)
Music by Lex de Azevedo
Lyrics by David Zippel
Performed by Regina Belle and Jeffrey Osborne
Produced and Arranged by Robbie Buchanan
Regina Belle appears courtesy of Columbia Records
Featured review
Compared to previous attempts by competing studios to break Disney's stranglehold on the animated film market, The Swan Princess really is a good movie. The animation does not quite have Disney's finesse and got a little rough in places, but was still watchable and generally pleasing to the eye, unlike, say, Thumbelina. The songs, though not particularly memorable and vaguely cheesy in the manner of much older animated flicks, did not bring the movie to a grinding halt and actually managed to, in general, help it along. It has a plot.
That's not to say that The Swan Princess doesn't have its problems, mostly in its characters. The titular lead, Princess Odette, is a flat failure as a heroine--she never *does* anything except lead her one true love, Prince Derrick, to her--and even then, she only does that because her animal friends, Puffin, Speed the turtle, and Jean-Bob the frog, cook up the plan for her.
Derrick is much more likeable, and though throughout most of the movie he is a flaming idiot, he is a likeable and sympathetic flaming idiot--and he does learn. His mistakes are, as a rule, human and understandable, and in the end it is he who saves the day and finally learns the movie's apparent lesson--that beauty is not all there is in matters of love or anything else.
The development of their relationship is refreshing--rather than falling in love at first sight, they start out hating each other with a passion, and it takes them years--spanned capably over the course of one amusing if sugary song--to realize that they do love each other. And then Derrick blows it(!), and spends the rest of the movie scrambling to recover from his mistake.
The end battle was satisfying, though in general I prefer for the heroine to help save their hides in some manner. The movie-makers were not afraid to beat the living daylights out of their hero, and though the save he pulls in the end is nothing short of miraculous, it was at least shown much earlier to be within his princely capabilities.
Despite its flaws, I found The Swan Princess to be a satisfying and re-watchable movie--though I did catch myself agreeing with Derrick's comment (stated early in the movie) that he could do much better.
That's not to say that The Swan Princess doesn't have its problems, mostly in its characters. The titular lead, Princess Odette, is a flat failure as a heroine--she never *does* anything except lead her one true love, Prince Derrick, to her--and even then, she only does that because her animal friends, Puffin, Speed the turtle, and Jean-Bob the frog, cook up the plan for her.
Derrick is much more likeable, and though throughout most of the movie he is a flaming idiot, he is a likeable and sympathetic flaming idiot--and he does learn. His mistakes are, as a rule, human and understandable, and in the end it is he who saves the day and finally learns the movie's apparent lesson--that beauty is not all there is in matters of love or anything else.
The development of their relationship is refreshing--rather than falling in love at first sight, they start out hating each other with a passion, and it takes them years--spanned capably over the course of one amusing if sugary song--to realize that they do love each other. And then Derrick blows it(!), and spends the rest of the movie scrambling to recover from his mistake.
The end battle was satisfying, though in general I prefer for the heroine to help save their hides in some manner. The movie-makers were not afraid to beat the living daylights out of their hero, and though the save he pulls in the end is nothing short of miraculous, it was at least shown much earlier to be within his princely capabilities.
Despite its flaws, I found The Swan Princess to be a satisfying and re-watchable movie--though I did catch myself agreeing with Derrick's comment (stated early in the movie) that he could do much better.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $45,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $9,771,658
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,445,155
- Nov 20, 1994
- Gross worldwide
- $9,771,658
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