Boonie Bears: A Mystical Winter
Boonie Bears: A Mystical Winter (Chinese: 熊出没之雪岭熊风) is a 2015 Chinese animated family adventure comedy drama film directed by Ding Liang and Liu Fuyuan. It was released on 30 January 2015.[2][3] Though being criticized by some Chinese viewers for its similarity to Walt Disney's Frozen.
Boonie Bears: A Mystical Winter | |
---|---|
熊出没之雪岭熊风 | |
Directed by | Ding Liang Liu Fuyuan |
Starring | Rick Jay Glen Justin J. Wheeler Paul "Maxx" Rinehart Siobhan Lumsden Jenny Ansell Ethan Kiely Che Devereux Scott Rinehart Luc Alexander Mainland Rinehart |
Music by | zhiping Li and Rick Jay Glen |
Production companies | Shenzhen Huaqiang Shuzi Dongman Co.,Ltd Le Vision Pictures (Tianjin) Co.,Ltd Fantawild Holdings Inc Pearl River Pictures Co., Ltd Beijing Iqiyi Co.,Ltd Beijing LeTV Mobile Media & Technology Co. Ltd He Yi information technology (Beijing) Co., LTD Tencent Video TV.SOHU.COM You Yang( Tian Jin) Dong Man Culture Media Co., LTD |
Distributed by | Le Vision Pictures (Tianjin) Co.,Ltd Mr. Cartoon Pictures Co.,Ltd Pearl River Pictures Co., Ltd Shenzhen Huaqiang Shuzi Dongman Co.,Ltd |
Release date |
|
Running time | 96 minutes approx. |
Country | China |
Languages | Mandarin Chinese English |
Box office | US$47 million China¥295.3million Russia$60 million[1] |
Plot
As a cub, two bears heard the legend of a creature who comes into the woods in winter and brings snow and cold. The name is "Neova" and the bear brothers once saw her as a cub. But after a while the winter spirit was spreading snow. It was attacked by winged people and with the help of the bear brothers could escape and rescue the creature (...) [4]
Voice cast
Chinese cast:
- Zhang Wei
- Zhang Bingjun
- Tan Xiao
- Meng Yutian
- Sun Yaodong
- Zhao Xiaoyu
- Xin Yuan
- Wan Danqing
English cast:
- Rick Jay Glen
- Justin J. Wheeler
- Paul (Maxx) Rinehart
- Siobhan Lumsden
- Ethan Kiely
- Jenny Ansell
- Che Devereux Scott Rinehart
- Luc Alexander Mainland Rinehart
Box office
As of 15 February 2015, the film has earned over US$40.13 million in China.[5]
See also
- Boonie Bears, the television series
- Boonie Bears: To the Rescue, the 2014 film based on the television series
References
- Patrick Frater (2 March 2015). "China Box Office: 'Man From Macau,' 'Wolf Totem' Hit Top in Second Holiday Week". Variety. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
- "熊出没之雪岭熊风 (2015)". movie.douban.com (in Chinese). douban.com. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- Frater, Patrick (13 June 2016). "China's 'Boonie Bears' to Get U.S. Release (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
- "Boonie Bears: A Mystical Winter 2016". Archived from the original on 1 November 2019.
- Clifford Coonan (16 February 2015). "China Box Office: Valentine's Day Lifts 'Somewhere Only We Know' Ahead of New Year Face-Off". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
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