The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas
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"Yabba-Dabba-Don't!"
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The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas is a 2000 American romantic comedy film directed by Brian Levant, produced by Bruce Cohen, co-written by Jim Cash (it was his final film as he died one month before the premiere), Harry Elfont, Deborah Kaplan, and Jack Epps Jr., and is the prequel to Levant's smash box office hit The Flintstones from 1994, based on the cartoon television series of the same name. Produced by Amblin Entertainment and Hanna-Barbera Productions and distributed by Universal Pictures, it is set before the events of the first film, showing how Fred and Barney met Wilma and Betty.
The movie stars Mark Addy, Stephen Baldwin, Kristen Johnston, Jane Krakowski, Joan Collins, Thomas Gibson, Harvey Korman (in his final film role), and Alan Cumming.
Plot
Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble meet Wilma Slaghoople and Betty O'Shale and go on a trip to Rock Vegas, where Wilma is pursued by playboy Chip Rockefeller.
Why It’s a Yabba Dabba Disaster Again
- The plot is a mishmash of references to the cartoon, and tries to shoehorn in the origins of all the famous traits, such as how and when Fred and Barney met Wilma and Betty, how they got Dino, how Wilma got her pearl necklace, how Fred learned to use a bronto-crane, etc.
- The movie retcons the scene in the first movie of Fred explaining to Miss. Sharon Stone how he met Wilma, and none of what he told her is presented in this movie.
- Stephen Baldwin, Kristen Johnston, and Alan Cumming are all seriously miscast as Barney, Wilma, and the Great Gazoo respectively.
- There are unfunny jokes and unfunny dialogue in this film, consisting of fart jokes.
- Many plot holes that seem to go nowhere, especially with the Great Gazoo.
- For example, how was Chip's "win/lose" lever only targeted to Fred and not to anyone else?
- Gambling in a kids' movie.
- Our villain, Chip Rockefeller is not super-hateful like Cliff Vandercave was in the first film, he's the stereotypical spoiled rich man who just comes off as annoying and unconvincing.
- The performances came more off as awkward and laughable than amusing.
- There are so many creepy things in it, like The Great Gazoo for instance.
- Too many montages and random things going on, which also hurt the story.
- The misunderstanding plot point is pointless because since this is a prequel, we know that they are going to end up together.
- For reasons unknown, Chip pulls a lever that causes Fred to lose.
- In this film, Wilma enjoys bowling unlike in the original cartoon in which she never did.
Redeeming Qualities That Still Go "Yabba-Dabba-Doo!"
- Mark Addy and Jane Krakowski are well cast as Fred and Betty.
- While not as good as Rick Moranis, Stephen Baldwin did do a good job playing the role of Barney.
- Jim Doughan plays a man in the casino who plans to wipe out the dinosaurs; his lines are funny, and his idea and plan are extremely clever.
- Rosie O'Donnell and Irwin Keyes are the only original cast members from the 1994 film to return, with the former voicing an octopus giving Wilma and Betty a massage, and the latter reprising his role as Joe Rockhead.
- Mel Blanc sounds so good, as the puppy Dino.
- Seeing Dino as a puppy is adorable.
- The CGI on the dinosaurs is quite impressive.
- Despite this, the origin story is kind of interesting.
- William Hanna and Joseph Barbera had a hand in with making the film just like they did previously with making the first film and even made a cameo at Fred and Wilma's wedding.
- The very heartwarming ending.
- Great soundtrack.
- Very funny prehistoric puns.
Reception
Like the original film, The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas received mixed-to-negative reviews from critics, fans and audiences. The film currently holds a 25% "rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a critic consensus that reads "The prequel to the first full-length feature set in Bedrock, Viva Rock Vegas is a surprising improvement over The Flintstones. Aimed towards an audience of adults and children alike, critics feel Viva will appeal to a broad range of viewers." Film critic Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film a 0.5 out of 4 and described it as "not delightful or funny or exciting, and for long stretches, it looks exactly like hapless actors standing in front of big rocks and reciting sitcom dialogue."
On IMDb, the film currently sits at a rating of 3.7/10.
Box Office
The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas opened at #2 on its opening weekend with a domestic gross of $10,518,435. It would later make a total domestic gross of $35,268,275. In foreign markets, the film made $24,200,000. Overall, the film grossed $59,468,275 against its $83 million budget, making it a box office bomb.
Awards and nominations
The film was nominated for four Golden Raspberry Awards including Worst Picture but failed to win any award. The film lost most of the awards to Battlefield Earth.
Trivia
- This film was originally planned to be a sequel that would be a continuation of the first Flintstones film. However, when the original cast (particularly John Goodman, who refused to reprise his role as Fred, and Rick Moranis, who had retired from acting in 1997) chose not to star in the film, the production was pushed back until the sequel idea was cancelled and rewritten into a prequel.
- David Spade was the original choice to play Barney.
- A pre-teen Kristen Stewart made a cameo as a ring toss girl in the carnival portion of the story, due to her mother Jules Stewart being a script supervisor.
Videos
External links
- The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas at the Internet Movie Database
- The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas on Rotten Tomatoes
Comments
- 2000s films
- Amblin Entertainment films
- Based on cartoons
- Based on television
- Box office bombs
- Comedy films
- Family films
- Hanna-Barbera films
- Prequel films
- Razzie Awards Worst Picture nominees
- Romance films
- Universal films
- Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-off or Sequel nominees
- Abusing the show
- Live-action films
- Films that inspired a Roger Ebert book review title
- Bad movies from good franchises
- Live action films based on cartoons
- Movies that killed the franchise
- Gross-out films
- Bad media