The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning | |
Director: | Peggy Holmes |
Producer: | Kendra Halland |
Music: | James Dooley |
Editing: | John Royer |
Distributor: | Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment |
Runtime: | 77 minutes |
Language: | English |
The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning (also known by the working title, Walt Disney Pictures: The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning, The Little Mermaid III: Ariel's Beginning or The Little Mermaid 3: Ariel's Beginning) is a 2008 animated direct-to-video musical fantasy film produced by Disneytoon Studios, with the animation production being done by Toon City Animation, Inc. and DisneyToon Studios Australia. This film is the prequel to Disney's 1989 animated feature film The Little Mermaid, the third installment in The Little Mermaid trilogy, and the last direct-to-video sequel after John Lasseter took over as chairman for the Disney Animation Division. It is also the first in the chronology of the story running through the series, and it is based on the fairy tale The Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Andersen and The Little Mermaid animated television series which ran for three seasons.
Directed by Peggy Holmes (in her directorial debut), the film's story is set not long before the events of the original film, when all music has been banned from the underwater kingdom of Atlantica by King Triton following the tragic death of his beloved wife. Years later, his spirited youngest daughter, Ariel, sets out to challenge her father’s decision and rediscovers the joy of music and love.
Jodi Benson and Samuel E. Wright (in his final film role) reprise their roles as Ariel and Sebastian respectively, while Sally Field voices the film's new villainess, Marina Del Rey. Jim Cummings takes over the role as King Triton, replacing Kenneth Mars, who had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.
The film was released by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment on August 26, 2008. Though critical reception was improved over its predecessor, the film received mostly negative reviews that criticized the score and screenplay while the animation and voice performances were praised.
At least 10 years before the events of the original film, King Triton and his wife, Queen Athena, rule over the underwater kingdom of Atlantica, filled with music and laughter. They have seven young daughters: Attina, Alana, Adella, Aquata, Arista, Andrina, and the youngest of whom is Ariel. One day, while the merpeople relax in a lagoon above the surface, King Triton gifts Queen Athena a music box. However, the merfolk flee at the approach of a pirate ship. Everyone escapes except Athena, who tries to recover the music box and is killed when the ship crashes into the lagoon. Devastated by his wife's death, Triton throws the music box away and bitterly bans music from Atlantica forever.
A decade later, Ariel and her sisters live under a strict routine maintained by their governess, Marina Del Rey, and her kind hearted assistant, Benjamin the manatee. Marina hates being the girls' governess and longs to be King Triton's attaché, a job currently filled by Sebastian the crab. Ariel is equally frustrated by her and her sisters' dull lifestyle, which causes arguments with her father and drives a wedge between the two.
One day, Ariel befriends Flounder, a young tropical fish whom she later follows to an underground music club. She is overjoyed by the presence of music and is shocked when she sees Sebastian performing there. When her presence is revealed, the entire band stops playing and hides, believing Ariel will tell her father about them. Instead, Ariel is moved by her mother’s memory and sings I Remember, recalling the joy that filled her family’s life when music was a part of the kingdom. She is accepted as a member of the club after swearing an oath of secrecy.
Ariel returns to the palace and her sisters confront her over her disappearance, she explains where she was and, the following night, all seven princesses go to the club and have fun. However, Marina follows them, discovers the club and later reveals its existence to King Triton. He imprisons Sebastian, Flounder, and the band and assigns Marina to take over Sebastian's duties while Ariel and her sisters are confined to the palace as punishment for their disobedience.
Unable to live in the kingdom without music, Ariel decides to leave and frees her friends from jail. Although initially against the idea, Sebastian leads them to a deserted place far away from the palace where Ariel discovers her mother's music box, as Sebastian hoped. Ariel realizes her father has forgotten how to feel happy since Athena's death and decides to bring the music box back to him, hoping it will remind him. Meanwhile, Attina informs Triton that Ariel and Sebastian are missing and he orders his guards to find them. Knowing that Triton is regretting his hasty dismissal of Sebastian and desperate to hold onto her newfound power, Marina releases her electric eels to hunt down and kill Ariel and Sebastian.
Ariel and the band are confronted by the eels on their way back, but Flounder defeats them. Sebastian and Marina fight, but she is apparently defeated when he traps her in a coral tube. However, just as King Triton arrives, Ariel notices Marina barreling towards an unaware Sebastian, intent on killing him. Triton watches in horror as Ariel rushes to protect Sebastian and gets hit herself, falling to the ground, unconscious. As he holds Ariel, Triton blames himself for the lack of joy in the kingdom and, upon hearing the music box play, sings to Ariel and she wakes. Triton apologies and the two reconcile.
Following this, King Triton lifts his decade-long banishment of music and welcomes it back into his kingdom, much to everyone's delight. Sebastian is reinstated as right hand to the King, as well as appointed as Atlantica's first official Court Composer. Marina and Benjamin are imprisoned in the dungeon for their crimes, and Ariel shares a dance with her father.
See main article: List of The Little Mermaid characters.
The film's working title was The Little Mermaid III, and it was originally scheduled for a mid-2007 release. When John Lasseter took over Disney Animation, more resources were spent on completing , and attention only returned to Ariel's Beginning in July 2006 after the wrap-up of Cinderella III.
A teaser trailer and musical preview of the film (an alternate version of "Jump in the Line") were attached to the Platinum Edition DVD of The Little Mermaid, which was released in October 2006. At the time, the working title The Little Mermaid III was still being used.
Like , this film uses digital ink and paint with the use of the Toon Boom Harmony software.
The score to the film was composed by James Dooley, who recorded the score with a 72-piece ensemble of the Hollywood Studio Symphony, as well as a big band, at the Sony Scoring Stage.[1] The film features new songs written by Jeanine Tesori, along with covers of previously recorded calypso songs that were arranged by Dooley. No soundtrack has been released yet for the film.
The film was released on Region 1 DVD in the United States on August 26, 2008, and on Region 2 DVD in the United Kingdom and Europe on September 22, 2008. The DVD contains special features including deleted scenes, a production featurette hosted by the director, games and activities, and a featurette hosted by Sierra Boggess (who played Ariel on Broadway) about the Broadway musical.
On December 16, 2008, the film was released in a "The Little Mermaid Trilogy" boxed set that includes The Little Mermaid (Platinum Edition) and . On November 19, 2013, it was released on Blu-ray as a 2-movie collection alongside the sequel.
In 2019, the film was released on Disney+.
In the United Kingdom, the word "spastic" was cut from an interactive game in the extra features of the DVD and Blu-Ray releases by the BBFC to achieve a "U" rating. An uncut version was available rated "12".[2]
The word appears uncensored in all versions of the full-length feature.[3]
The DVD became the top-selling DVD for the week ending August 31, selling 980,237 copies.
On the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, 33% of 6 critic reviews are positive.[4] The new villain, Marina Del Rey, was criticized as a poor follow-up to Ursula.[5] [6] [7] The animation quality of the film has been praised as being "impressive" for a direct-to-video and comparable to that of the original film.[8] A mildly negative review has described that in the film "goofiness often gets buried too often underneath a blah story that's much too run-of-the-mill to allow the emotional oomph of the characters' plights to truly impact".[9] The music has also been criticized as being unmemorable, with one review stating that "to label this a musical would be false advertising".