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Planes

  • 20132013
  • PGPG
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
46K
YOUR RATING
Planes (2013)
Dusty is a cropdusting plane who dreams of competing in a famous aerial race. The problem? He is hopelessly afraid of heights. With the support of his mentor Skipper and a host of new friends, Dusty sets off to make his dreams come true.
Play trailer2:31
18 Videos
78 Photos
AnimationAdventureComedy
A cropdusting plane with a fear of heights lives his dream of competing in a famous around-the-world aerial race.A cropdusting plane with a fear of heights lives his dream of competing in a famous around-the-world aerial race.A cropdusting plane with a fear of heights lives his dream of competing in a famous around-the-world aerial race.
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
46K
YOUR RATING
    • Klay Hall
  • Writers
    • John Lasseter(original story by)
    • Klay Hall(original story by)
    • Jeffrey M. Howard(original story by)
  • Stars
    • Carlos Alazraqui(voice)
    • Dane Cook(voice)
    • Stacy Keach(voice)
    • Klay Hall
  • Writers
    • John Lasseter(original story by)
    • Klay Hall(original story by)
    • Jeffrey M. Howard(original story by)
  • Stars
    • Carlos Alazraqui(voice)
    • Dane Cook(voice)
    • Stacy Keach(voice)
  • See production, box office & company info
    • 144User reviews
    • 170Critic reviews
    • 39Metascore
  • See more at IMDbPro
    • Awards

    Videos18

    Trailer #2
    Trailer 2:31
    Watch Trailer #2
    Sneak Peek
    Trailer 1:28
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    Version 1
    Trailer 1:26
    Watch Version 1
    Planes
    Clip 0:37
    Watch Planes
    Planes
    Clip 1:50
    Watch Planes
    Planes
    Clip 1:20
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    Planes
    Clip 1:35
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    Planes
    Clip 1:22
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    Planes
    Clip 1:39
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    Planes
    Clip 1:19
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    Planes
    Clip 0:31
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    Planes
    Clip 0:30
    Watch Planes

    Photos78

    Dane Cook in Planes (2013)
    Carlos Alazraqui and Oliver Kalkofe in Planes (2013)
    Gabriel Iglesias in Planes (2013)
    Dane Cook and Oliver Kalkofe in Planes (2013)
    Dane Cook in Planes (2013)
    Sinbad in Planes (2013)
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus in Planes (2013)
    Dane Cook and Priyanka Chopra Jonas in Planes (2013)
    Dane Cook in Planes (2013)
    Sinbad in Planes (2013)
    Stacy Keach and Danny Mann in Planes (2013)
    Teri Hatcher and Brad Garrett in Planes (2013)

    Top cast

    Edit
    Carlos Alazraqui
    Carlos Alazraqui
    • El Chupacabra
    • (voice)
    • …
    Dane Cook
    Dane Cook
    • Dusty Crophopper
    • (voice)
    Stacy Keach
    Stacy Keach
    • Skipper
    • (voice)
    Brad Garrett
    Brad Garrett
    • Chug
    • (voice)
    Teri Hatcher
    Teri Hatcher
    • Dottie
    • (voice)
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus
    • Rochelle
    • (voice)
    Priyanka Chopra Jonas
    Priyanka Chopra Jonas
    • Ishani
    • (voice)
    • (as Priyanka Chopra)
    John Cleese
    John Cleese
    • Bulldog
    • (voice)
    Cedric the Entertainer
    Cedric the Entertainer
    • Leadbottom
    • (voice)
    Roger Craig Smith
    Roger Craig Smith
    • Ripslinger
    • (voice)
    • …
    Anthony Edwards
    Anthony Edwards
    • Echo
    • (voice)
    Val Kilmer
    Val Kilmer
    • Bravo
    • (voice)
    Sinbad
    Sinbad
    • Roper
    • (voice)
    Gabriel Iglesias
    Gabriel Iglesias
    • Ned
    • (voice)
    • …
    Brent Musburger
    Brent Musburger
    • Brent Mustangburger
    • (voice)
    Colin Cowherd
    • Colin Cowling
    • (voice)
    Danny Mann
    Danny Mann
    • Sparky
    • (voice)
    • …
    Oliver Kalkofe
    • Franz
    • (voice)
    • …
      • Klay Hall
    • Writers
      • John Lasseter(original story by)
      • Klay Hall(original story by)
      • Jeffrey M. Howard(original story by) (screenplay by)
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Bravo and Echo are F/A-18F Super Hornets, numbers 113 and 210 respectively and referred to as "The Jolly Wrenches" in this movie. VFA-103 In the real-life Top Gun academy is known as "The Jolly Rogers"; Val Kilmer and Anthony Edwards were cast to voice them based on them both appearing in the movie Top Gun (1986). In addition, Bravo and Echo's flight helmets are the same design/colors as 'Goose' and 'Ice Man', the characters Edwards and Kilmer played in Top Gun (1986).
    • Goofs
      In Skipper's flashback, a Jolly Wrencher sees an enemy ship and Skipper calls him Jigsaw 2 when he has a 3 painted on his side. Often an airplane's radio call sign is different from its visual identification number.
    • Quotes

      Dusty Crophopper: I've been flying over the same patch of grass, day after day, month after month, for years! I'm just trying to prove that maybe, just maybe, I can do more than what I was built for.

    • Crazy credits
      The tower in the Walt Disney logo shines like an airport control tower and two planes fly overhead.
    • Connections
      Featured in ReelzChannel Specials: Richard Roeper's Red Hot Summer (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Nothing Can Stop Me Now
      Music and Lyrics by Mark Holman

      Performed by Mark Holman

      Produced and Mixed by Ed Cherney

    User reviews144

    Review
    Review
    Featured review
    4/10
    Flies aimlessly - like a cropduster
    Planes is a mixture of its direct-inspiration Cars, Monsters University, and the forgotten PBS Kids show Jay Jay the Jet Plane. Even with reminders of brighter, more vivid animated works, Planes is a middling Disney effort and clearly a corporate byproduct from Disney (not Pixar as many will assume) to sell merchandise to children, with the quality of the actual film being a clear afterthought.

    The film was originally conceived as a direct-to-DVD film and have a series of sequels follow accordingly. Of course, last minute, Disney decided Planes and its planned sequels possessed enough promise to go theatrical. This decision isn't hard to comprehend; Cars and its sequel weren't critical favorites and their box office receipts were notably lower than previous Pixar films, but their merchandise sales totaled roughly $8 billion. From toy cars, to diecast collectibles, to blankets, to bedspreads, to posters, to stray DVD short films featuring the characters lining store shelves, the marketing behind the Cars name was stunning and blatant. Planes hasn't been graced with the brazenness of toys and TV commercials, making me question why Disney decided to allow the film to go to theaters if they weren't going to milk it for what's its worth.

    Whatever; it's probably best the marketing splash for the film was reduced to a quiet disruption in the cinematic ocean. The film focuses on Dusty Crophopper (voiced by Dane Cook), an ambitious cropdusting plane that predictably spends his days flying over tall grass spraying fertilizer. His ambition is to become a racing plane, flying high, soaring to unforeseen heights, and racing around the world. His biggest drawback isn't really the fact that he's not built for flying of this capacity but his fear of heights. Since he is so used to flying at pretty low heights for planes, he fears soaring to the "highway in the sky," as put by Skipper Riley (Stacy Keach), an F4U Corsair with a successful past, who also serves as Dusty's mentor. Backed by a crew of ground-ridden misfits (okay, vehicles) and his passion, which is incorruptible, Dusty's dreams literally soar as he competes in one of the most prestigious plane competitions in the world.

    The animation in the film is some of the strangest I've seen in the post-CGI animation takeover. Some scenes are truly evocative and breathtaking, and usually exist when we're somewhere like the Taj Mahal or in The Himalayas. They showcase the location in stark detail and really show off the beauty and majestic area that encompasses such a place. Other scenes, specifically ones that feature several characters on the screen at one time, appear stunningly bland and unfinished. They almost look like unfinished products of CGI animation – like the final still before all the finalizing and color-correcting is done. They lack detail and lighting specifics known in modern animated films, and before you tell me otherwise, remember Disney just brought us "Wreck-It Ralph," which showcased dozens of video game worlds through the beautiful medium that is animation.

    This is likely because the project was meant to line store shelves immediately rather than be blown on the big screen. On an average, living-room-size Television, Planes probably looks pretty damn good. On a gigantic theater screen before an audience of maybe fifteen people (in my case), it looked underwhelming. Whether or not you liked "Cars" or its sequel (I'm in the minority that loved the original film and tolerated the sequel), you can't say this film exists on the same level of visual beauty that the latter pictures did. Cars 2, alone, had a number of amazing set-pieces and lighting techniques that were used perfectly. Even Monsters University was beautiful in the way the animation was textured and the way the lighting was used to brighten and liven certain settings. In comparison to the look of other animated features such as Despicable Me 2 and Turbo (both of which currently attracting children now), Planes will likely not come close to the revenue of both of those films or inspire the true awes thanks to the animation.

    To all the people who criticized Larry the Cable Guy's Mater as being an insufferable character, I challenge the same people to not mention the stunning shallowness of the characters here, especially the international planes that could be the perfect example as to why other countries view Americans as close-minded and ignorant. Just to give you an inkling as to how deep the international planes are, one is named "El Chupacabra," and is known for being a passionate romantic, a gifted Mexican singer, and a telenovela star. He also boasts the most stereotypical Mexican accent in cinema history. For all you kids out there, imagine Juandissimo Magnifico from The Fairly Odd Parents and there you have it. Even the British plane at one point says, "I don't cry, I'm British!" There are children's films that will make both a child and their parent smile and have a rewarding time at the movies (most of them come from Pixar, but Dreamworks is known for several too). There are children's films that will appeal to children and leave the parents groaning at the thought they had to pay to get in as well.

    Then there are films like Planes that may appeal to some children, but the stimulating effect on their growth and mental health shouldn't be sacrificed for the ninety-two minute electronic babysitter that the film is. Everything about the film has been done in previous animated efforts, right down to the "be yourself and be brave" moral at the very end, only this time, it feels especially, almost unacceptably lazy and contrived.
    helpful•78
    37
    • StevePulaski
    • Aug 11, 2013

    FAQ2

    • Is this a "Cars" sequel?
    • Was this movie produced by Pixar?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 9, 2013 (United States)
      • United States
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
      • English
      • Spanish
      • French
      • German
      • Mandarin
      • Icelandic
    • Also known as
    • Production companies
      • Prana Studios
      • Disneytoon Studios
      • Walt Disney Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Technical specs

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    • 1 hour 31 minutes
      • Color
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Atmos
      • SDDS

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