Christopher Plummer, Glen Campbell, Sandy Duncan, Ellen Greene, Phil Harris, and Will Ryan in Rock-A-Doodle (1991)

Rock-A-Doodle

Movie1991• G• 1h 17m
AnimationAdventureComedyFamilyMusicMusical
⭐ 6.0 / 10(11,478)

In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.

Rated
G
Runtime
1h 17m
Released
1991
Country
Ireland, United Kingdom, United States

Details

Release year: 1991

Storyline

In order to defeat the wicked Grand Duke of Owls, a young boy, transformed into a cat, teams up with a group of barnyard animals to find the rooster who can raise the sun.

Top credits

Cast
See all 37 credits →

Did you know

• The final scene's blending live action with animation was inspired by the popularity of it in Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988). Similarly, Goldie the pheasant's sultry appearance was slightly based off of that of Jessica Rabbit. As shown in one of the early trailers (found on the original 1990 VHS release of All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989)), Goldie was also originally given large cleavage, identical to that of Jessica Rabbit. However, after mothers at test screenings were scandalized by her outrageous proportions, Bluth's animators were ordered by Goldcrest Films to censor Goldie's cleavage.

• Don Bluth, who had grown up on a farm, was especially uncomfortable directing the scene in which Edmond's family saves a cow from sinking in the mud. The animal was heavily sedated to make her behave during the shoot, and Bluth needed constant reassurance that she was safe. When he went up to inspect the cow, who was named Abigail, Bluth's experience with cows allowed him to notice something the rest of the crew had not - the cow was pregnant. Bluth turned to the head grip and asked 'What's your name?' 'Clifford,' the grip answered. 'The wee one inside Abigail we will be naming Clifford,' Bluth told him. 'Make sure he stays alive.' Both Abigail and her calf survived.

• The film originally included more darker elements, a famous one being a deleted sequence from the kitchen scene. In this sequence the Duke bakes a live baby skunk in a pie and then eats it. Oddly enough, according to Gary Goldman, the reason this was cut wasn't because of the content but because Bluth's studio received a complaint from Goldcrest's marketing representative that most cases of child abuse happen in the kitchen, and involve baking instruments.

Box Office

Gross (Domestic): $11,657,385

Opening Weekend (Domestic): $2,603,286 (1992-04-05)

User reviews

⭐ 7/10

An Underrated Gem Held Down By Executive Meddling

šŸ‘ 14 Ā· 7/24/2019
⭐ 7/10

Gets bashed WAY too much, way too unfairly!!

šŸ‘ 24 Ā· 6/30/2009
⭐ 7/10

my outlook

šŸ‘ 26 Ā· 7/7/2006

Technical specs

Sound mix
Dolby Stereo
Aspect ratio
1.78 : 1, 1.85 : 1, 1.85 : 1
Color
Color

FAQ

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