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Home on the Range (film)

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For the song, see Home on the Range (song)

Home on the Range is the forty-fourth animated feature in the Disney animated features canon. It was produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, and released on April 2, 2004 by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution. It is the last Disney movie to date to use traditional animation; Disney animated films have used some computer-generated effects for many years, but Disney has since announced plans to move entirely to computer animation after Home on the Range (an example of which lies in their later Chicken Little), and has laid off most of its animation department. The film was named after the popular cowboy song "Home on the Range".

While critics did not generally like the film, which they felt was weak on plot, it was universally praised for Alan Menken's return to Disney animated features. The lyrics were written by Glenn Slater.

The film began pre-production after the release of Pocahontas in 1995. In August 2000, the film was first heard of as Sweating Bullets, and scheduled for a fall 2003 release. Then, there were no proposed pictures from the film. In the summer of 2001, the film got its first pictures, a logo (still having the original title) and a screen-shot. Within the next few months, the film got more pictures. In April 2002, it was decided that the movie should change its title to Home on the Range. It got its new logo in the fall of 2002.

This film was originally slated to have been released in November 2003, but story and production problems forced it to swap release dates with Brother Bear (originally slated for spring 2004) in December 2002. It was also originally expected to be released with a G Rating by the MPAA. However, sources inside Disney have indicated that a joke during the movie's opening sequence, one in which a cow's udder is subtly compared to surgically-enhanced breasts, resulted in the movie being slapped with a PG rating instead, possibly alienating some of Disney's general audience and lowering the studio's expectations of the movie at the box office.#redirect Because of this the movie went on to make $50,030,461 in the U.S. and became one of the lowest grossing Disney animated features ever.

Starring the voices of: Roseanne Barr, Judi Dench, Jennifer Tilly, Steve Buscemi, G.W. Bailey, Cuba Gooding Jr., Randy Quaid, Lance Legualt, Charles Dennis, Sam J. Levine, Joe Flaherty, Richard Riehle, Carole Cook, Estelle Harris, Charlie Dell, Marshall Efron, Charles Haid and Mark Walton.

The story is set in the Old West. Unusually for a Western movie (and a Disney film), the main characters are female: three dairy cows, brash, adventurous Maggie, prim, proper Mrs. Calloway and ditzy, happy-go-lucky Grace (voiced by Roseanne Barr, Judi Dench and Jennifer Tilly respectively), who must capture an infamous cattle rustler in order to save their idyllic farm from foreclosure. (As Grace puts it, "Who better to catch a cattle thief...than a cow?") Aiding them in their quest is Lucky Jack, a feisty, peg-legged rabbit, while an overeager stallion named Buck (Cuba Gooding Jr.) selfishly seeks the bounty – and the glory – for himself.

This was arguably the first Disney animated film to feature three female main characters. However, several of its predecessors included female heroes and villains. See Female protagonists in Disney animated films for details.

The film premiered on the Starz! cable channel on the night of April 2, 2005, exactly a year after its theatrical release.

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Disney theatrical animated features
Official canon (Walt Disney Animated Classics)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) • Pinocchio (1940) • Fantasia (1940) • Dumbo (1941) • Bambi (1942) • Saludos Amigos (1942) • The Three Caballeros (1944) • Make Mine Music (1946) • Fun and Fancy Free (1947) • Melody Time (1948) • The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949) • Cinderella (1950) • Alice in Wonderland (1951) • Peter Pan (1953) • Lady and the Tramp (1955) • Sleeping Beauty (1959) • One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961) • The Sword in the Stone (1963) • The Jungle Book (1967) • The Aristocats (1970) • Robin Hood (1973) • The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) • The Rescuers (1977) • The Fox and the Hound (1981) • The Black Cauldron (1985) • The Great Mouse Detective (1986) • Oliver & Company (1988) • The Little Mermaid (1989) • The Rescuers Down Under (1990) • Beauty and the Beast (1991) • Aladdin (1992) • The Lion King (1994) • Pocahontas (1995) • The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) • Hercules (1997) • Mulan (1998) • Tarzan (1999) • Fantasia 2000 (1999) • The Emperor's New Groove (2000) •  (2001) • Lilo & Stitch (2002) • Treasure Planet (2002) • Brother Bear (2003) • Home on the Range (2004) • Chicken Little (2005) • Meet the Robinsons (2007) • American Dog (2008) • Rapunzel Unbraided (2009)
Live-action films with animation
The Reluctant Dragon (1941) • Victory Through Air Power (1943) • Song of the South (1946) • So Dear to My Heart (1949) • Mary Poppins (1964) • Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) • Pete's Dragon (1977) • Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) • Enchanted (2007)
DisneyToons Studio animated features
 (1990) • A Goofy Movie (1995) • Doug's 1st Movie (1999) • The Tigger Movie (2000) •  (2001) • Return to Never Land (2002) • The Jungle Book 2 (2003) • Piglet's Big Movie (2003) • Teacher's Pet (2004) • Pooh's Heffalump Movie (2005)
Other theatrical animated features
Academy Award Review of Walt Disney Cartoons (1937) • The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) • James and the Giant Peach (1996) • Dinosaur (2000) 

 


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