- This is an article about the movie titled Napoleon Dynamite. For the musician who has sometimes used the pseudonym "Napoleon Dynamite", see Elvis Costello.
| Napoleon Dynamite |
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| Directed by |
Jared Hess |
| Produced by |
Jeremy Coon
Sean Covel
Chris Wyatt |
| Written by |
Jared Hess
Jerusha Hess |
| Starring |
Jon Heder
Efren Ramirez
Tina Majorino
Aaron Ruell
Jon Gries |
| Music by |
John Swihart |
| Distributed by |
Fox Searchlight Pictures (USA)
Paramount Pictures (non-USA) |
| Release date |
June 11, 2004 |
| Running time |
92 min. |
| Awards |
Best Movie, MTV Movie Awards, 2005 |
| Language |
English |
| Budget |
$400,000 |
| IMDb profile |
Napoleon Dynamite is a film directed by Jared Hess. The movie is based on the short film, Peluca, which he directed at Brigham Young University with Jon Heder. Napoleon was then filmed in the summer of 2003 in Jared's childhood hometown of Preston, Idaho.
It made its debut at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2004. Napoleon debuted in June 2004, earning $116,666 in its limited release opening weekend, $2,083,493 in its wide release opening weekend, and over $44.5 million as of January 1, 2006. The film cost only $400,000 to make. The DVD was released on December 21, 2004.
In 2005, it won three MTV Movie Awards, for Breakthrough Male Performance, Best Musical Performance, and Best Movie. This film is number 14 on Bravo's 100 Funniest Movies.
On May 16th, 2006, Fox released a special collectors edition of the film in collectable packaging in Region 1 (Paramount holds the rights in most countries outside of the US and Canada).
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Contents
- 1 Plot
- 2 Characters
- 3 Background information
- 4 Themes
- 5 Cultural effect and criticism
- 6 Soundtrack list
- 7 See also
- 8 External links
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Plot
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The film follows the protagonist Napoleon Dynamite, a socially clumsy and shy high school student with a penchant for "tots", drawing fantasy creatures and animals, fishing for bass, and telling implausible stories. The film showcases Napoleon's personality and circle of equally quirky friends, family, and associates in his hometown of Preston, Idaho and also shows how Napoleon helps his friend, Pedro Sanchez, succeed in the school presidential election. The movie is semi-autobiographical. As the film-makers state in the DVD commentaries, much of their own social awkwardness growing up in Utah was the inspiration for the characters.
One sub-plot of Napoleon Dynamite concerns Pedro Sanchez's quest to become class president of Preston High School. The film follows Napoleon Dynamite's friends Pedro (Efren Ramirez) and Deb (Tina Majorino) as they become friends. Throughout the film, Napoleon pursues Deb as a love interest. As Jon Heder jokingly said in an interview: "I think they might one day find it in their hearts to unite for eternity."
Napoleon lives with his 32-year-old geekish brother Kip and their grandmother, who sends the "has been" Uncle Rico, an ex-high school quarterback with shattered dreams of stardom on the football field, to look after them when she is hospitalized following an ATV accident. Napoleon's unemployed brother Kip spends most of his day "chattin' with babes" on the Internet — with his successful romantic hookup serving as one of several sub-plots within the movie.
Characters
Main
Napoleon plays tetherball with Deb.
- Napoleon Dynamite (Jon Heder), the film's protagonist, is a stereotypical geek who enjoys mundane diversions such as drawing fantasy creatures, drinking milk, eating tater tots, and playing with Nunchaku and tetherball. He has a flat, listless personality and poor social skills, hinting at depression or a low self-esteem. His awkward appearance and behaviour are the source of much of the comedy of the film. He is active in the Future Farmers of America and his school's Happy Hands Club. His best friends are Pedro and Deb.
- Pedro Sanchez (Efren Ramirez) is a new student to Preston High, who is originally from Colonia Juárez, Mexico. He is occasionally the target of mild antagonism on the part of the school principal. His campaign for Class President becomes the main story halfway through the film. His cousins are portrayed as the "cousins with all the sweet hook-ups" and help him protect a boy from having his bike taken.
- Deb (Tina Majorino) is a shy and awkward schoolmate, a friend of Napoleon and possible love interest. She is interested in photography, and spends her time trying to earn money for college by selling glamour shots and boondoggle keychains. She often wears her hair in a single ponytail off to one side. Deb seems to be the most articulate character in the film.
- Kipland "Kip" Ronald Dynamite (Aaron Ruell) is Napoleon's wimpy older brother ("like 32 years old") who enjoys online dating and claims to be training to become a cage fighter. He and Napoleon live with their grandmother. After a long time of online chatting, he meets a girl, LaFawnduh Lucus, and they eventually wed. (Post-credit sequence)
- Uncle (Kyle) Rico (Jon Gries) is the uncle of Napoleon and Kip. Rico lives in an old van in the middle of a field. He played football in his younger days ("back in '82"), and is constantly living in the past. He longs to go back in time and change his fortunes, certain he had the potential to join the NFL. Uncle Rico enjoys eating microwaved steak. He watches Kip and Napoleon while their Grandma is in the hospital due to a broken coccyx. During this time, he and Kip bumble through a variety of business engagements, such as selling imitation Tupperware and herbal breast augmentation. He uses the money they earn to buy a time machine on-line. To the chagrin of Uncle Rico and Napoleon, the machine fails to work, but the hoax was a very thorough one; the time machine was fully labelled, came with an owner's manual and a set of "crystals" to fuel it. He very nearly ruined Napoleon and Deb's fledgling relationship when he gave her a brochure for his herbal breast enlargement business, telling her Napoleon recommended her to him. This leads to Napoleon kicking him out.
Secondary
- Summer Wheatley (Haylie Duff) is a stereotypical blonde against whom Pedro runs for class president. She is pretty, popular, and preppy.
- Don (Trevor Snarr) is Summer's cocky boyfriend. He helps Summer on her campaign for class president and occasionally bullies Napoleon and Pedro.
- Trisha Stevens (Emily Kennard) is one of Summer's good friends, and is forced, by her mother, to go with Napoleon to the school dance. She is a member of the school's "Happy Hands Club" along with Napoleon. Her mother is a "client" of Rico.
- LaFawnduh Lucas (Shondrella Avery) is a woman Kip met over the Internet, with the screenname "LaFawnDuh". She is tall, stylish, and black contrasting with Kip's short stature, awkward demeanor, and pale complexion. After spending time with her, Kip changes his clothes and demeanor to mimic African-American or white rapper stereotypes. In the post-credit sequence, she and Kip wed.
- Rex (Diedrich Bader) is sensei of the "Rex Kwon Do" martial arts dojo. He is an ex-'ultimate fighter' and charges a large fee for his services ($300 for an 8-week program). He is a very confident man and is married to Starla (Carmen Brady), a female bodybuilder.
- Grandma (Sandy Martin) is the divorced grandmother of Napoleon and Kip. She breaks her coccyx on a jump while driving a Quad (ATV) at the sand dunes while on a date. According to Rico, there is a lot Napoleon and Kip do not know about her.
- Randy (Bracken Johnson) is the school bully. He frequently injures and robs Napoleon and other students.
- Tina ("Dolly") is the stubborn llama that belongs to Napoleon's grandmother.
- Ilene (Ellen Dubin)
- Lyle (Dale Critchlow) is the farmer who lives across the street from Napoleon.
Background information
Preston, Idaho is a real town located near the Utah border, and is predominantly Mormon. Since the release of Napoleon, it has become a tourist attraction of sorts, with the school, Preston High School, being a main feature. In 2005, Preston held a Napoleon Dynamite Festival celebrating the film on June 24-25. An estimated 6,000 people attended the two-day event. Preston is planning to hold the 2006 festival in the early part of July. Napoleon T-shirts have also become somewhat hot commodities in 2005, selling at many stores that sell novelty shirts, such as Hot Topic. In April 2005, the Idaho state legislature approved a resolution commending the filmmakers for producing Napoleon Dynamite, specifically enumerating the benefits the movie has brought to Idaho as well as for showcasing various aspects of Idaho's culture and economy [1].
The film also displays many quirky references to Mormon popular culture. Napoleon uses euphemisms like flip, gosh, and heck that are common in, but far from exclusive to, Latter-day Saint circles. (For Example: "What the flip was Grandma doing at the Sand Dunes?" or "Heck yes. I'd vote for you.") He wears a t-shirt that reads "Ricks College," the former junior college located in Rexburg, Idaho now known as BYU Idaho. In the DVD extras, there is an interview with Jon Heder in which he jokes that perhaps Napoleon and Deb may be "sealed for time and all eternity"—a reference to the Latter-day Saint belief in "eternal marriage" or "sealing" performed in the Church’s temples. The principal's reference to "Juarez"—where he assumes Pedro is from—may be a reference to Colonia Juarez, a Latter-day Saint colony in Mexico founded in the nineteenth century. Characters, even those intended to be the popular girls, do not wear shorts any shorter than knee-length. Fashions in LDS culture tend to be more modest than those of popular culture. Napoleon goes to Deseret Industries, a thrift store operated by the Church of Jesus Christ, to buy his infamous suit. At the same time, the director seems to have taken care to not project an overt presence of Latter-day Saint/Mormon culture. Crosses and statue images pertaining to other Christian churches are placed prominently in some scenes, particularly at Pedro's house. Some have also speculated that Pedro is Catholic, which is what the majority of Mexicans are.
While the film is set in the present day, it contains many anachronisms. For example, the music playing at the school dance is from the 1980s, featuring Alphaville and Cyndi Lauper. Other vestiges of earlier decades include fashion trends that reflect those of the 70s and 80s, and the top-loading VCR in the Dynamite residence that resembles those from the early 1980s. Throwbacks to the 1990s come from music by the Backstreet Boys when the two girls were dancing to Max Martin and Jay Orpin's "Larger than Life" and Jamiroquai used in the choreography of Summer and Pedro's skits. Also, the TV resembles a model of the early 1990s and some of the shows resemble 1999 pop culture, especially the exercise commercials. The type of Tupperware Uncle Rico is seen selling door-to-door has not been available for purchase for many years. Kip uses the Internet for dating and purchasing a "time machine". However, the style of computer is arguably from the mid to late 1990s and he is using a dial up internet service that charges users by how long they have been on, a practice uncommon in the US since the late 1990s. Yet Uncle Rico (who appears to be in his late 30s to early 40s) frequently refers to his high school glory days of 1982 (the date on which he set the aforementioned "time machine"). The hydraulically equipped Pontiac in which Napoleon gets a lift to the dance - and the music playing therein - are fairly modern icons. Finally, Napoleon's school ID card, as shown in the opening credits, clearly reads "2004/2005," unambiguously setting the movie in the present-day, but many people do believe it's 1999.
The retro aspects of the movie have been suggested by some to be a depiction of cultural stagnation such as that seen in areas without immediate connection to culturally fast-paced areas like major cities (rural and midwestern America being an appropriate example), or an homage to similar genre films of the 1980s, such as Ferris Bueller's Day Off. One could argue that such anachronisms have become popular in hipster film culture. The films of Wes Anderson, for instance, have the same out-dated electronics/music/clothing while still taking place in the present. When asked when his movie was set, writer/director Jared Hess simply replied, "Idaho." citation needed]
Themes
All the characters of Napoleon Dynamite experience a rite of passage. Virtually everyone in the movie is stuck either in the '80s era or a past state-of-mind. This is evident in Deb's fashion sense (her hair and wardrobe), Uncle Rico's appearance and wistfulness, Kip's fashion sense (a nerdy, retro wardrobe and excessively large glasses), and Pedro's bewilderment at being reprimanded for practising a "Mexican tradition". Toward the end of the movie, however, everyone snaps out of the past and into the present. To that end, Kip searches the Internet for LaFawnduh and subsequently a new style, Rico's ex returns to him, Deb dons a new hair style, Pedro wins over his new classmates, and the popular crowd becomes integrated with those previously considered unpopular.
Although presented subtly, diversity is a common theme in the film: Kip finds love in African-American culture; Pedro, a Mexican, triumphs over the stereotypical blonde-haired American cheerleader. The uniting nature of diversity is more clearly expressed in a scene after the end credits in which Kip and LaFawnduh are married, where people of all backgrounds come together to celebrate within the predominantly white town.
The movie also focuses on Napoleon's inability to fit in, even amongst his family. He is shown being put down by his grandmother, brother and uncle, and also shown being bullied by students at school. Kip and Napoleon had been shown to be almost close, but as soon as Uncle Rico moves in (which Napoleon is upset about, and Kip isn't), Kip and Rico bond and start raising money together, through a number of shady deals, and they don't talk when Napoleon is in the room. The film shows the "popular" characters all playing basketball and talking together, as Napoleon plays tether ball on his own; this shot is used numerous times. It is also worth noting that alone, Napoleon is shown running places, even if there is nowhere to go. Examples of this are shown when he runs the first few steps to go feed Tina, and as he decides to turn around before picking Trisha up for the school dance.
Cultural effect and criticism
Critically, Napoleon Dynamite was very divisive. Some praised the movie for its unconventional humor, while others decried the film for much the same reason. Many other critics voiced that, while the film's humor was unique, the movie's target audience and apparent intentions met too ironically, forming an ultimately useless plot. Keith Phipps of The Onion A.V. Club states "a seemingly ill-considered run for class president that provides Napoleon Dynamite's only semblance of a plot. It also allows the film to score some unearned points by taking a stand against the inevitable, dull tyranny of the popular kids. If this didn't seem so much like a film made to make those same kids bust a gut laughing at nerds, the plot might even have worked."
Soundtrack list
An * denotes a song that is not in the soundtrack album.
- "We're Going to Be Friends" by The White Stripes*
- "A-Team Theme"
- "Forever Young" by Alphaville
- "Larger than Life" by Backstreet Boys*
- "Design" by Fiction Company
- "Canned Heat" by Jamiroquai
- "So Ruff, So Tuff" by Zapp and Roger*
- "Time After Time" by Cyndi Lauper
- "The Rose" by Bette Midler*
- "Light In Your Eyes" by Sheryl Crow*
- "Music for a Found Harmonium" by Patrick Street*
- "The Promise" by When In Rome
See also
- Peluca
- Napoleon Dynamite Festival
- Liger
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Napoleon Dynamite
- Fox Searchlight: Napoleon Dynamite
- Napoleon Dynamite Fan Club
- Napoleon Dynamite at the Internet Movie Database
- NapoleonStuff.com
- Napoleon's Town
- Idaho's resolution commending Jared and Jerusha Hess
- Tina Majorino Fan Site (Deb)
- Neal's Napoleon Dynamite Dance on aeonity.com
- Napoleon Dynamite quoted at the Spelling Bee on IFILM
- Review of Napoleon Dynamite from a Christian Perspective.
- Napoleon Dynamite sound clips (Flash required) on albinoblacksheep.com
- Napoleon Dynamite sound clips (Flash required) on collegehumor.com (Site may contain adult content)
- Napoleon Dynamite sound clips (Flash required) on Conversationswithmyself.com
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleon_Dynamite"
Categories: Bravo's 100 Funniest Movies | Articles with unsourced statements | 2004 films | Fictional nerds | Fictional people from Idaho | Teen films | Comedy films | Coming-of-age films | Idaho films | 2004 Sundance Film Festival | American films | Independent films | Teen comedy films | Fox Searchlight films | Paramount films | 1980s Retro Movement |
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