An incorrigibly self-serving exiled squirrel finds himself helping his former park brethren survive by raiding a nut store, a location that also happens to be a front for a human gang's bank... Read allAn incorrigibly self-serving exiled squirrel finds himself helping his former park brethren survive by raiding a nut store, a location that also happens to be a front for a human gang's bank robbery.An incorrigibly self-serving exiled squirrel finds himself helping his former park brethren survive by raiding a nut store, a location that also happens to be a front for a human gang's bank robbery.
- Awards
- 1 win & 5 nominations
Will Arnett
- Surly
- (voice)
Brendan Fraser
- Grayson
- (voice)
Liam Neeson
- Raccoon
- (voice)
Katherine Heigl
- Andie
- (voice)
Stephen Lang
- King
- (voice)
Maya Rudolph
- Precious
- (voice)
Jeff Dunham
- Mole
- (voice)
Gabriel Iglesias
- Jimmy
- (voice)
Sarah Gadon
- Lana
- (voice)
James Rankin
- Fingers
- (voice)
Scott Yaphe
- Lucky
- (voice)
Joe Pingue
- Johnny
- (voice)
Annick Obonsawin
- Jamie
- (voice)
- (as Annick Obonswin)
Julie Lemieux
- Girl Scout
- (voice)
Rob Tinkler
- Redline
- (voice)
- …
Scott McCord
- Police Officer
- (voice)
- …
Katie Griffin
- Pigeon
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIt is the most expensive animated movie co-produced in South Korea.
- GoofsThe slats on the water wheel are the wrong way around to allow it to turn in the direction of the water flow.
- Crazy creditsDuring the end credits all the characters, plus an animated Psy, dance to Gangnam Style.
- Alternate versionsOn the Nickelodeon/Nick@Nite (U.S.) airings, the entire end credits sequence (complete with a mid-credit scene and post-credits animation) is omitted in favor of the network's on-screen credits over the ending scene.
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Reviews: The Nut Job (2014)
- SoundtracksN.E.V.E.R
Performed by Alana Da Fonseca (as Alana D)
Written by Alana Da Fonseca (as Alana da Fonseca) and Ali Dee (as Ali Theodore)
Courtesy of DeeTown Entertainment
Featured review
I was worried when I noticed that the bird on the shoulder of the animal leader is a Northern Cardinal, visually and internally styled to resemble the Cardinal from the game Angry Birds. My worries were confirmed when I heard the hit song Gangnam Style play almost out of nowhere, as the movie's main characters suddenly started to dance to the said tune. Technically, the story did give characters a reason to do the said short dance when they did it, though in a palpably heavy-handed way. Also technically, all rats animated using modern computer graphics are going to show similarities, but the rat character by the name of Buddy sure does look a lot like the main character of the animated movie Ratatouille. For that matter, all the animal characters resemble the various animals of Dreamworks and Disney films from recent times. This, ladies and gentlemen, sure does feel like a cash-in. Nut Job is a joint venture between South Korean, US and Canadian production companies that shows symptoms of trying hard to capitalise on the western animation market and the pop culture.
This is all particularly unfortunate when you consider that actual work was put into this production. Although the movie certainly has other problems, to be discussed shortly, the film does have a plot, it has a number of highly acclaimed actors that do a relatively good job at portraying their characters (however poorly those characters may have been written), and the animation is not terrible, even if rather bland. There are a few funny moments to experience, even though some jokes fall flat. There are certainly worse things to watch out there, but ultimately this Nut Job is botched (Pa-dum tss?).
In addition to its irritating exploitative nature, Nut Job suffers from poor writing. The general outlines of the story are simple and clear, but the individual scenes become less and less coherent as time goes by, less and less natural. There are many lines of dialogue that seem like were meant to be funny, or at least there is no other discernible purpose for them, like comments on smelly farts, but they aren't in fact funny.
This is a movie that is mildly entertaining and would probably go over well with young kids alive in the year in which the movie was produced, the year in which the musician PSY was still relevant, but it is unfortunate that a movie with so many good actors and such a budget is so average. The cash-in was successful, however. The movie more than made back its investment. I will not however be watching Nut Job 2. I'd have to be nutty to do that....Eh? Eh? Shut this down.
This is all particularly unfortunate when you consider that actual work was put into this production. Although the movie certainly has other problems, to be discussed shortly, the film does have a plot, it has a number of highly acclaimed actors that do a relatively good job at portraying their characters (however poorly those characters may have been written), and the animation is not terrible, even if rather bland. There are a few funny moments to experience, even though some jokes fall flat. There are certainly worse things to watch out there, but ultimately this Nut Job is botched (Pa-dum tss?).
In addition to its irritating exploitative nature, Nut Job suffers from poor writing. The general outlines of the story are simple and clear, but the individual scenes become less and less coherent as time goes by, less and less natural. There are many lines of dialogue that seem like were meant to be funny, or at least there is no other discernible purpose for them, like comments on smelly farts, but they aren't in fact funny.
This is a movie that is mildly entertaining and would probably go over well with young kids alive in the year in which the movie was produced, the year in which the musician PSY was still relevant, but it is unfortunate that a movie with so many good actors and such a budget is so average. The cash-in was successful, however. The movie more than made back its investment. I will not however be watching Nut Job 2. I'd have to be nutty to do that....Eh? Eh? Shut this down.
- How long is The Nut Job?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $42,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $64,251,541
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $19,423,000
- Jan 19, 2014
- Gross worldwide
- $120,885,527
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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