Hoodwinked Trailer 2

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Dimple Belousson

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Aug 3, 2024, 5:53:19 PM8/3/24
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Hoodwinked 5 is a collection of fun, upbeat and swaggery percussion tracks with exhilarating beats, blazing grooves, pumping drums and energetic percussion, drunken chants, claps, snaps, and thundering stomps.Album Cover Art by Darin Leach. Video Creation by Atis Freivalds.For general inquiries and licensing requests, please contact 5 Alarm Music at: (626) 304-1698 - in...@5alarmmusic.comWebsite: : : : : : -trailer-musicVimeo: 2023 All rights reserved. Frontier Trailer Music is released in association with 5 Alarm Music.

Hoodwinked 4 is a collection of fun, upbeat and swaggery percussion tracks with exhilarating beats, blazing grooves, pumping drums and energetic percussion, drunken chants, claps, snaps, and thundering stomps.Album Cover Art by Darin Leach. Video Creation by Atis Freivalds.For general inquiries and licensing requests, please contact 5 Alarm Music at: (626) 304-1698 - in...@5alarmmusic.comWebsite: : : : : : -trailer-musicVimeo: 2022 All rights reserved. Frontier Trailer Music is released in association with 5 Alarm Music.

Video archive for the film Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil, which has a domestic theatrical release in the year of 2011. There are currently fourty-seven videos available for the film, of which one and only one is a trailer, as listed below. Happy viewing!

Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil is a 2011 animated spy comedy film and the one and only sequel to Hoodwinked! (2005). Directed by Mike Disa in his theatrical feature directorial debut, the film was written by Disa, Cory Edwards, Todd Edwards and Tony Leech. It features the voices of Hayden Panettiere, Glenn Close, Patrick Warburton, Joan Cusack, Bill Hader, Amy Poehler, Martin Short, Andy Dick, and David Ogden Stiers. In the sequel, Red and Wolf team up to rescue Hansel and Gretel and Granny from an evil witch.

Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil was released on April 29, 2011 in the United States by the Weinstein Company. Unlike its predecessor, the film received negative reviews from critics and audiences and was a box office bomb. Additionally, Kanbar Entertainment sued the Weinstein Company for multiple reasons surrounding the film.

Wolf, Granny, and Twitchy are on a rescue mission to save Hansel and Gretel from an evil witch named Verushka. However, the plan goes wrong and Granny is kidnapped as well. Meanwhile, Red is in training with a mysterious group called the Sisters of the Hood, where she learns that a secret, all-powerful truffle recipe has been stolen. She is assigned by detective Nicky Flippers, along with Wolf and Twitchy, to find the recipe and save her grandma.

Additional Voices by Kirk Baily, Jack Blessing, Melendy Britt, June Christopher, Brian T. Delaney, Mike Disa, Nicholas Guest, Kyle Herbert, Bridget Hoffman, Sandra Holt, Erin Lander, Wendee Lee, Al Rodrigo, Stephanie Sheh, Keith Silverstein, Marcelo Tubert, Kari Wahlgren, and Lisa Wilhoit.

Hoodwinked! was one of the first fully independently funded computer animated films,[3][4] and was produced on a budget of under $8 million,[5] considerably less than the budget of most studio produced animated films.[6] The film was directed by Cory Edwards, who co-wrote with co-directors Todd Edwards and Tony Leech, and was produced by Kanbar Entertainment and Kanbar Animation, with distribution by the Weinstein Company, which did not sign on until near the end of production.[7] It was released in December 2005 to mixed reviews,[8] and financial success, earning over $110 million worldwide.[9] In January 2006, Cory Edwards confirmed that a Hoodwinked! sequel, titled Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil, was in the works and that a basic treatment had already been completed.[10] The following month, Edwards announced that he, Todd Edwards, and Leech were writing the sequel, though they would not return to direct.[11] Cory Edwards cited many reasons for not returning as a director for the sequel. In addition to wanting to focus on other, particularly live-action films, so as not to be confined to animation,[12][13] he explained that there had been a tense working relationship between him and some of the "key players on the first film".[13] He also questioned the integrity of the fractured fairytale genre of which Hoodwinked is a part, calling it, "a trend I groaned about even as I finished the film."[14] Initially, the film was going to be independently funded by Kanbar, with the Weinstein Company distributing, as had been done with the previous film; however the two companies entered into a co-financing agreement, at the behest of the Weinstein Company.[15]

In March 2007 it was announced that Mike Disa, who had long worked in the animation industry, would make his directorial debut on the film.[17] While Disa had not seen the original film before being approached to direct the sequel,[18] Cory Edwards expressed enthusiasm over his involvement, saying that he "has a real passion for the film and a devotion to maintaining the Hoodwinked world. He wants to do the sequel justice and he really gets what we're trying to do".[17] Disa explained in a 2011 column for The Huffington Post that he was impressed by how the gender roles in the film contrasted to those typically portrayed by Disney.[16]

While most of the cast reprised their roles from the first film, Hayden Panettiere replaced Anne Hathaway in the role of Red, while Martin Short replaced Jim Belushi in the role of Kirk the Woodsman. Cory Edwards explained that the role of Red was recast due to the recent success of Hathaway's career, saying "It's clear to me that her involvement in the first film was a nice favor for Harvey and the last of her "little girl roles."... You can see how a sequel to an animated film is not in her trajectory anymore". Regarding Belushi's departure from the series, Edwards explained, "he was never really comfortable with the accent for the Woodsman. He wanted to help us out and loved the film, but he kept saying, 'I'm not an accent guy'. So he had a hard time connecting to that character".[13]

Whereas in the first film, the voice of the character Twitchy was created simply by speeding up the recording by 50%, various speeds were used in this film and occasionally the dialogue was only pitched higher without being sped up at all. The difference in Twitchy's voice was immediately noticed by fans after the release of the film's trailer, causing Twitchy's voice actor Cory Edwards to relate that while he had explained to the new filmmakers how the voice was created in the first film and would remark on how the character sounded different when invited to screenings, "from the many blank stares and the end result, nobody really cared".[19]

Disa praised Patrick Warburton's reprisal as the Wolf, feeling that he could play subtext, comedy and rhythm while giving real emotion concurrently. He also enjoyed working with Wayne Newton, who voiced Jimmy 10-Strings, for whom Newton took inspiration from the "Mickey and the Beanstalk" segment of Fun and Fancy Free (1947), a Disney package film both Newton and Disa grew up with.[20]

While the first film's animation was produced by a small group of independent animators in the Philippines,[21] this film's animation was produced by Canadian animation and visual effects studio Arc Productions instead.[22] However, like the first film, Maya software was used to create the film's animation. Rendering was done on Mental ray, compositing was done on Fusion, and matte paintings were created on Photoshop. The explosions featured in the film were created using Maya and Houdini.[23]

Disa explained that in designing the locations for the film they considered "the idea of a modern fairy tale in modern times" asking themselves, "what would a fairy tale city look like having evolved for hundreds of years? What would their buildings look like, how would they get around" and saying, "We sat down and worked out the technology and mythology of the world of Hoodwinked that they hadn't really established in the first film."[18]

Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil was originally going to be released on January 15, 2010; however, in December 2009, it was announced that the release date would be pushed back to February at the earliest. A Weinstein Company executive stated that some of the reasons were so that the company could focus its resources on promoting Youth in Revolt which would be released January 8 of that year and so that they could perform some tweaks on the film's animation. He also stated that the Weinstein Company was in the final stages of a marketing deal with a fast food chain.[24]

In March 2010, it was revealed that Kanbar Entertainment was suing the Weinstein Company for delaying the film's release, for not making contributions to monthly production accounts after February 2009, and for not consulting them about a release strategy. Kanbar Entertainment also stated that The Weinstein Company did not respond to proposed changes to the film, even though Kanbar Entertainment had final authority on production decisions.[15]

Two soundtracks were released for Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil. The Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) featured songs from the film,[28] while the Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil (Original Motion Picture Score) featured the film's instrumental tracks composed by Murray Gold.[29]

Once upon a time, fairy tales were told with beauty, wit, simplicity and charm, a tradition that seems increasingly a thing of the past in "Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil." Less a movie than an ill-advised lab experiment in which classic children's stories are injected with Bond-movie stylings, inane wisecracks and martial-arts mayhem, this manic misfire takes storybook revisionism to ever more irritating ends.

Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil received very negative reviews. On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has garnered an approval rating of 11% based on 65 reviews, with an average rating of 3.39/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "It may add 3D to the original, but Hoodwinked Too! is missing the first installment's wit and refreshingly low-budget charm."[37] On Metacritic, another review aggregator website, it holds a weighted average score of 20 out of 100, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[38]

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