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Night at the Museum

 
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Night at the Museum

  • Director: Shawn Levy
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Adventure, Adventure Comedy
  • Themes: Curses and Spells, Fathers and Sons, Priceless Artifacts and Prized Objects
  • Main Cast: Ben Stiller, Carla Gugino, Dick Van Dyke, Mickey Rooney, Bill Cobbs, Jake Cherry, Ricky Gervais, Robin Williams
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 108 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

The new night watchman at New York's Museum of Natural History finds that the job comes with more responsibility than he ever dreamed in this wild fantasy comedy directed by Shawn Levy and starring Ben Stiller, Robin Williams, Mickey Rooney, and Dick Van Dyke. Larry Daley (Stiller) is a kind-hearted dreamer who always knew that he was destined for greatness, he just never quite knew how. None of his ideas or inventions has panned out, so with a heavy heart, he takes a regular job as a lowly graveyard-shift security guard at the Museum of Natural History in order to provide a more stable life for himself and his ten-year-old son. His first night on the job, however, he finds that guardianship of the museum is far from stable -- at nightfall, an Egyptian spell brings the artifacts and wax figures to life! With Attila the Hun charging to war through the hallways, the diorama miniatures embroiled in a deadly feud, and a two-ton Tyrannosaurus Rex nagging to play fetch, Larry has half a mind to turn tail and run. On top of cleaning up after two million years of historical chaos every night, he also has to make sure that not a single museum piece leaves the building -- from the bratty Capuchin monkey in the African exhibit, to the life-sized Neanderthal in the prehistoric display -- because if morning light falls on an escaped artifact, it will turn to dust. Larry turns to a wax replica of President Roosevelt (Williams) for a little advice on keeping things in tact, but Teddy seems to think that a man of Larry's greatness needs little help. Larry isn't sure if the former commander in chief is right; this is hardly what he signed up for, but he can't pass up the chance to care for a museum where history really does come to life. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

It's pretty rare for a movie to evoke laughter and delight for audiences both young and old, but Night at the Museum pulls it off. The film stars Ben Stiller as Larry, a divorced dad who's reluctantly given up his dream of entrepreneurial stardom to take a position as the night watchman of the New York Natural History Museum so he can provide more stability for his son. If the sound of an inanely sweet family-oriented comedy makes you want to wretch, however, you have nothing to fear. Night at the Museum occupies itself with Larry's personal story just enough for you to follow him on his wild ride.

This film doesn't kid itself: you don't see a movie about a museum where the dinosaurs and mummies spring to life at night because you want to learn a heartwarming lesson. What you want from this kind of fantastical adventure is a couple hours of fun, and this is Night at the Museum's brilliantly simple secret to success. It skips many of the sappy and contrived clichés of the PG realm and doesn't spend too much time revisiting Larry's home life. Instead, the film lets Stiller (along with straight-man co-stars Carla Gugino and Jake Cherry) bring Larry to life through his reactions to what you came to the movie for in the first place: the magic.

Stiller is a delight in this regard, at long-last finding a comedic balance between his squeamish, embarrassment-comedy side (à la Meet the Parents) and his over-the-top, bombastic-farce side (à la Dodgeball). With just enough restraint to play the foil for the funny and enchanting special-effects ensemble, he conjures up an average guy we can both laugh at and cheer for -- all while exercising a great skill at physical comedy, of which there is plenty. Stiller throws himself into dives, pratfalls, and chases with impressive energy and deft control (suggesting that he must be in seriously good shape). But along with all the slapstick you'd expect from an adventure comedy, Night at the Museum also benefits from the ironic wit and smart satire of screenwriter Ben Garant (Reno 911!). The result is a clever trick: while your grown-up side is sated with the kind of dry humor that marks Stiller's collaborations with Owen Wilson (who co-stars as a miniature cowboy from an Old West diorama, but spends most of his screen time feuding with Steve Coogan, a miniature Roman Emperor from the warring display next door), the kid in you is free to revel in childish wonder and excitement so completely that when the requisite dorkily happy ending appears in the distance, you probably won't even notice. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Kim Raver - Erica Daley; Patrick Gallagher - Atilla The Hun; Rami Malek - Ahkmenrah; Pierfrancesco Favino - Christopher Columbus; Charlie Murphy - Taxi Driver; Steve Coogan - Octavius; Mizuo Peck - Sacajawea; Kerry Van Der Griend - Neanderthal #1; Owen Wilson; Dan Rizzuto - Neanderthal #2; Matthew Harrison - Neanderthal #3; Jody Racicot - Neanderthal #4; Paul Rudd - Don; Anne Meara - Debbie; Martin Christopher - Lewis; Martin Sims - Clark; Randy Lee - Hun #1; Darryl Quon - Hun #2; Gerald Wong - Hun #3; Paul Chih-Ping Cheng - Hun #4; Teagle F. Bougere - Teacher (Mike); Pat Kiernan - TV News Anchor; Nico McEown - Friend #1; Meshach Peters - Friend #2; Matthew Walker - Politician; Jason McKinnon - Irish Worker; Jonathan Lee - Chinese Rail Worker; Jason Vaisvila - Vikings; Cade Wagar - Vikings; Cory Martin - Chinese Terra Cotta Solidier; Brad Garrett - Easter Island Head; Jason Glass - Blind Driver; Brent Woolsey - Larry Riding Double; Blaise Corrigan - Stunt Driver; Adam Bryant - Teddy Stand-In; Kimberly Bailey; Gil Birmingham; Robby Bruce; Doug Burch; Alexander J. Castillo; Catherine Cavadini; Paul Chen; Alex Cong; Jessie Flower; Pedro U. Garcia; Aaron Hendry; Barbara Iley; Erica Jones; Cohl Kenneth Klop; Daamen Krall; Tommy Lamey; Mirayda Levi; Raymundo Magana; Zahn McClarnon; Roberto Medina; Arlin Miller; Khanya Mkhize; Abdoulaye N'Gom; Vivianne Nacif; Benjamin A. Onyango Ochieng; Maggie Palomo; Martin Poz Perez; Michael Ralph; Noreen Reardon; Richard Scobie; Craig Ricci Shaynak; Gubbi Sigurdsson; Stefan Karl Stefansson; Mark Sussman; Joel Sweto; Regina Taufen; Travis Quentin Young; Ruth Zalduondo

Credit

John Wright Stevens - Art Director, Michael Diner - Art Director, Bridget Mcguire - Art Director, Helen Veronica Jarvis - Supervising Art Director, Ellen M. Somers - Associate Producer, Jerry Yuen - Boom Operator, Peter Fonda - Boom Operator, Michael Hibberson - Boom Operator, Ilene Starger - Casting, Coreen Mayrs - Casting, Heike Brandstatter - Casting, Carrie Hilton - Casting, Josh McLaglen - Co-producer, Renee April - Costume Designer, Josh McLaglen - First Assistant Director, Marty Eli Schwartz - First Assistant Director, Shawn Levy - Director, Brian Smrz - Second Unit Director, Don Zimmerman - Editor, Mark A. Radcliffe - Executive Producer, Ira Shuman - Executive Producer, Thomas M. Hammel - Executive Producer, Dean Choe - Fights Choreographer, Jeffrey C. Robinson - Fights Choreographer, Cheri Minns - Hair Styles, Nina Paskowitz - Hair Styles, Sherry Gygli - Hair Styles, Neil Robertson - Location Manager, Mike Kriaris - Location Manager, Alan Silvestri - Composer (Music Score), Cheri Minns - Makeup, Victoria Down - Makeup, Kate Biscoe - Makeup, Francois Gauthier - Makeup Special Effects, Maestro Studio FX Incorporated - Makeup Special Effects, David Crone - Camera Operator, Kyle C. Rudolph - Camera Operator, Michael Green - Camera Operator, Glen Dickson - Camera Operator, Claude Pare - Production Designer, Guillermo Navarro - Cinematographer, Shawn Levy - Producer, Chris Columbus - Producer, Michael Barnathan - Producer, Dennis S. Sands - Recording, Matt Patterson - Recording, Tim Gomillion - Recording, Dennis Rogers - Recording, Tim Lauber - Recording, Mike Desabrais - Singer, Glenn Bydwell - Set Designer, Grant Smith - Special Effects, Ian Korver - Special Effects, Dennis Briest - Special Effects, Teresa Wilkinson - Special Effects, Andre Dominguez - Special Effects, Scott Treliving - Special Effects, Stephen Hepworth - Special Effects, Andrew Sculkthorpe - Special Effects, John Wilkinson - Special Effects, Paul Massey - Sound Mixer, Dennis S. Sands - Sound Mixer, David Giammarco - Sound Mixer, Rob Young - Sound/Sound Designer, Paul Rutledge - Stunts, Alex Green - Stunts, John Scott - Stunts, Darren Shahlavi - Stunts, Yves Cameron - Stunts, Greg Schlosser - Stunts, Rob "Sluggo" Boyce - Stunts, Lauro Chartrand - Stunts, Chad Cosgrave - Stunts, Tom Glass - Stunts, Dave Hospes - Stunts, Ken Zilka - Stunts, Mike Vezina - Stunts, Heath Stevenson - Stunts, Blaise Corrigan - Stunts, Randy Lee - Stunts, Kit Mallet - Stunts, Reg Glass - Stunts, Simon Burnett - Stunts, Sonny Suroweic - Stunts, Greg Fitzpatrick - Stunts, Raymond Chan - Stunts, Dan Rizzuto - Stunts, Shawn Beaton - Stunts, Gerald Wong - Stunts, Trevor Addie - Stunts, Aaron Au - Stunts, Loyd Bateman - Stunts, Mike Desabrais - Stunts, Jon Kralt - Stunts, Jovan Nenadic - Stunts, Todd Scott - Stunts, Clay Virtue - Stunts, Mike Mitchell - Stunts, Charlie Attrill - Stunts, Clint Carleton - Stunts, Alexander Chiang - Stunts, Bill Lawrence - Stunts, Roger Lewis - Stunts, Eli Zagoudakis - Stunts, Kimberly Chaing - Stunts, Joe A. Dodds - Stunts, Troy Dorchester - Stunts, Tom Eirickson - Stunts, Chris Gordon - Stunts, Kirk Jacques - Stunts, Leo Byusa Teta - Stunts, J.J. Makaro - Stunts Coordinator, Ira Shuman - Unit Production Manager, Thomas M. Hammel - Unit Production Manager, Ray Quinlan - Unit Production Manager, Michael Williams - Unit Production Manager, Anne Simonet - Unit Production Manager, Thomas Lennon - Screen Story, Robert Ben Garant - Screen Story, Scott Frank - Screenwriter, Thomas Lennon - Screenwriter, Robert Ben Garant - Screenwriter, Rayan Charlton - Production Assistant, Allison Clarke - Production Assistant, Cristina Lois - Production Assistant, Eric Rau - Production Assistant, Jim Rygiel - Visual Effects Supervisor, Dan Deleeuw - Visual Effects Supervisor, Birds & Animals UK - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Michael Alexander - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Tom Gunderson - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, David Kulczycki - Special Effects Editor, Gloria Davies - Unit Publicist, Jacey Taub - Unit Publicist, Dean Zimmerman - Associate Editor, David Lee - Gaffer, Steve Jackson - Gaffer, Collin Quinlan - Gaffer, Shane Kjar - Grip, Kevin McCloy - Grip, Dale Vrba - Grip, Neil Novich - Grip, Michael Lemmers - Grip, Michael Yurich - Grip, Rocco Proscia - Grip, Robert Little - Grip, Stan Dim - Grip, Tom Ainsworth - Grip, Troy Bassett - Grip, Jonathan Bosse - Grip, Julien Bosse - Grip, Miguel Gelinas - Grip, Rick Guenther - Grip, John Harkin - Grip, Gavin Hill - Grip, Todd Munn - Grip, Richard Nelless - Grip, Ralph Rutherford - Grip, Ronald Waters - Grip, Ernest Yurich - Grip, John Scott - Head Animal Trainer, Rick Stribling - Key Grip, Matt Almas - Key Grip, George Patsos - Key Grip, William Patsos - Key Grip, Steven Fratianni - Key Grip, Sean Gowrie - Production Coordinator, Fawn McDonald - Production Coordinator, Ilka Rivard - Production Coordinator, Andrea Boorman - Production Supervisor, Ellen Freund - Properties Master, Bobby Griffon - Properties Master, Diane Durant-Kelly - Script Supervisor, Christo Morse - Second Assistant Director, Misha Bukowski - Second Assistant Director, Steve Kirshoff - Special Effects Coordinator, William H. Orr - Special Effects Coordinator, Michael Bird - Special Effects Coordinator, Michael Green - Steadicam Operator, Phillip V. Caruso - Still Photographer, Doane Gregory - Still Photographer, John A. Larsen - Supervising Sound Editor, Craig Henighan - Supervising Sound Editor, Karen Patch - Costume/Wardrobe, Robert Mata - Costume/Wardrobe, Susan O'Hara - Costume/Wardrobe, Christine Coutts - Costume/Wardrobe, Rose Marie Polansky - Costume/Wardrobe, Andre Brouwer - Costume/Wardrobe, Mildred Iatrou Morgan - ADR Editor, Charleen Steeves - ADR Mixer, R.J. Kizer - ADR Recordist, David Lucarelli - ADR Recordist, Courtney Andersen - Assistant Costumer Designer, Autumn Saville - Assistant Costumer Designer, Christine Grenier - Assistant Costumer Designer, Brian Barnes - Assistant Location Manager, Matthew E. Kania - Assistant Location Manager, Kris Schackman - Assistant Location Manager, Toni Bullock - Assistant Production Coordinator, Peter J. Lapres - Assistant Production Coordinator, Tara Mews - Assistant Production Coordinator, Gwen Laura Schmitt - Assistant Production Coordinator, John McDonnell - Assistant Properties, Ea Birkett - Assistant Properties, Brent Godek - Assistant Properties, Tiara Motem - Assistant Properties, Skip Longfellow - Assistant Sound Editor, Jon Marilley Bodner - Best Boy Electric, Bruce Beaulac - Best Boy Grip, Constantine G. Magalios - Best Boy Grip, Zoë Jirik - Buyer, Scott Cozens - Camera Loader, Dana Turken - Camera Loader, Trica Thompson - Casting Assistant, Valerie Lindquist - Casting Assistant, Zoe E. Rotter - Casting Associate, Deanna Brigidi - Casting Associate, Jan Kobylka - Construction Coordinator, Joseph S. Alfieri - Construction Coordinator, Blanche-Danielle Boileau - Costumes Supervisor, Winsome McKoy - Costumes Supervisor, Helen Luttrell - Dialogue Editor, Susan Dawes - Dialogue Editor, James Gerald Salberg - Dolly Grip, Keith Bunting - Dolly Grip, Neil McBride - Dolly Grip, Chuck Reid - Electrician, Rick Dean - Electrician, Terry Calhoun - Electrician, Dennis Jones - Electrician, Scott Clark - Electrician, Philippe Lacroix - Electrician, Dave Roughley - Electrician, Andy Tollasepp - Electrician, Vincent A. Uytdehaag - Electrician, Jason Velez - Electrician, James Forsyth - Extra Casting, Sylvia Fay Casting and Associates - Extra Casting, Jessica Gihon - First Assistant Accountant, Shannon Harron - First Assistant Accountant, Karen March - First Assistant Accountant, Nerissa McCormack - First Assistant Accountant, Beth M. Schniebolk - First Assistant Accountant, H. Dwight Raymond IV - First Assistant Editor, John Cucci - Foley Artist, Dan O'Connell - Foley Artist, Kevin Faherty - Key Costumer, Michelle Johnson - Key Hairstylist, Maryann Marchetti - Key Make-up, Edith Hagigi - Personal Assistant, Judd Cherry - Personal Assistant, Regina Taufen - Personal Assistant, Kennedy Davey - Personal Assistant, Helen Harlan - Personal Assistant, Liz Mahoney - Personal Assistant, Jeremy Smith - Personal Assistant, Daniella Wells - Personal Assistant, Josée Brodeur - Production Accountant, Andrew Wheeler - Production Accountant, Nell Drake - Second Assistant Accountant, Peden Young - Second Assistant Accountant, Richard Sinclair - Second Assistant Camera, Amie Gibbins - Second Assistant Camera, Deanna Leslie Kelly - Second Second Assistant Director, Chris Vogt - Set Dresser, Eric Lewin - Set Dresser, Joseph M. DeLuca - Set Dresser, Rodney Sterbenz - Set Dresser, Julio Daniel Rodriguez - Set Dresser, Jason Booth - Set Production Assistant, Patrick Bevilacqua - Set Production Assistant, Michelle Sladinski - Set Production Assistant, Amy Spiegel - Set Production Assistant, Angelique Villegas - Set Production Assistant, Tracey Wilson - Storyboard Artist, Peter Clores - Transportation Captain, Steven R. Hammond - Transportation Captain, Wayne Power - Transportation Captain, Christina Schaich - Transportation Coordinator, Rob Vreugde - Transportation Coordinator, Rhythm & Hues Studios - Visual Effects, Weta Digital - Visual Effects, Pacific Title & Art Studio - Visual Effects, Rainmaker Animation and Visual Effects UK - Visual Effects, LOLA VFX - Visual Effects, Sandbox F/X - Visual Effects, Visual Effects & Animation By The Orphanage - Visual Effects, Lin MacDonald - Set Decorator, Lydia Marks - Set Decorator, Zoë Jirik - Set Decorator, Milan Trenc - Book Author, Karen Schell - Cable Person, Chris Regan - Color Timing, Johnny Dale - Construction Foreman, Premiere Caterers - Craft Service/Catering, Cinema Scenes - Craft Service/Catering, David Dreishpoon - Craft Service/Catering, Timothy James Kane - Focus Puller, Greg Beaton - Focus Puller, James Ashwill - Foley Mixer, John Murray - Foley Supervisor, Donald Sylvester - Foley Supervisor, James Walsh - Generator Operator, Kevin Michael Walsh - Generator Operator, Gary Burritt - Negative Cutter, Kyle Villegas - Production Secretary, Gary Alper - Production Sound Mixer, Bob Young - Production Sound Mixer, Gilbert H. Gersten - Special Effects Foreman, Rhonda Taylor - Third Assistant Director, Kevin McKenna - Video Playback, Lance White - Video Playback, Miller Drake - Visual Effects Editor, The Looping Group - Voice Casting, The Picture Mill - Title Design, Scarlet Letters - Title Design, Melody Gehrman-Cook - Assistant Editor, Warren Hendriks - First Assistant Sound Editor, Allison Chretien - Assistant Director, Michael A. Billings - Assistant Set Decorator, Jennifer Starke - Assistant Set Decorator

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Wikipedia: Night at the Museum
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Night at the Museum

First promotional poster for the film
Directed by Shawn Levy
Produced by Shawn Levy
Chris Columbus
Michael Barnathan
Written by Screenplay:
Thomas Lennon
Robert Ben Garant
Book:
Milan Trenc
Starring Ben Stiller
Robin Williams
Paul Rudd
Dick Van Dyke
Carla Gugino
Mickey Rooney
Bill Cobbs
Ricky Gervais
Owen Wilson
Steve Coogan
Patrick Gallagher
Rami Malek
Kim Raver
Pierfrancesco Favino
Brad Garret
Music by Alan Silvestri
Cinematography Guillermo Navarro
Editing by Don Zimmerman
Studio 1492 Pictures
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 22, 2006
Running time 108 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $110,000,000
Gross revenue Domestic:
$250,863,268[1]
Worldwide:
$574,480,841[1]
Followed by Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian

Night at the Museum is a 2006 American adventure comedy film based on the 1993 children's book with the same name by Milan Trenc. It follows a divorced father trying to settle down, impress his son, and find his destiny. He applies for a job as a night watchman at New York City's American Museum of Natural History and subsequently discovers that the exhibits, animated by a magical Egyptian artifact, come to life at night.

Released on December 22, 2006 by 20th Century Fox, the film was written by Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon of Comedy Central's Reno 911! and MTV's The State and directed by Shawn Levy. The cast includes Ben Stiller, Robin Williams, Dick Van Dyke, Mickey Rooney, Bill Cobbs, Paul Rudd, Ricky Gervais, Carla Gugino, Steve Coogan, and Owen Wilson. A new novelization of the screenplay by Leslie Goldman was published as a film tie-in.

A sequel titled Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian was released on May 22, 2009.

Contents

Plot

Larry Daley (Ben Stiller) is a divorced father who is unable to keep a stable job, the bulk of his career consisting of failed business ventures. He is desperate to win the support of his son Nick (Jake Cherry), whom he fears is beginning to look up to his more successful future stepfather, Don (Paul Rudd), a bond trader on Wall Street. Larry goes to a job agency and is sent to the American Museum of Natural History, where he is hired as a night guard. The three elder (soon to be retired) night guards, Cecil (Dick Van Dyke), Gus (Mickey Rooney), and Reginald (Bill Cobbs), give him a quick tour, advise him to leave some of the lights on, and warn him not to let anything "in...or out", which Larry meets with humorous skepticism. Once night comes, Larry discovers that the museum exhibits come to life, including a living Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton, a mischievous capuchin monkey named Dexter, miniatures led by cowboy Jedediah (Owen Wilson) and Roman General Octavius (Steve Coogan), an Easter Island head obsessed with "gum-gum" and a wax model of Theodore Roosevelt (Robin Williams).

Roosevelt explains to Larry that an Egyptian artifact — the Tablet of Akmenrah — was brought to the museum in 1952, and on that night, everything in the museum came to life, and each night since. However, if the exhibits are outside of the museum during sunrise, they turn to dust. Roosevelt helps Larry by restoring order (insisting it is the only time he will help), and while unnerved, Larry decides to remain as a guard. On Cecil's advice, Larry begins to study the history of the events and people in the exhibits to prepare himself better for their animation. He introduces himself to the museum tour guide, Rebecca Hutman (Carla Gugino), who is writing a dissertation on the life and times of Sacagawea (Mizuo Peck). Larry learns much of the history of the various exhibits from Rebecca. The next night, Larry uses what he has learned to better control the exhibits, but again fails when four Neanderthals set fire to a display, and one is turned to dust when he leaves the museum at the dawn. Larry barely manages to keep his job after the museum's director, Dr. McPhee (Ricky Gervais), discovers the mess. Larry tries to tell Rebecca about what happens to the exhibits at night, even offering to let her meet Sacagawea to help with Rebecca's dissertation, but she does not believe him and leaves in tears, convinced that Larry was making fun of her.

Larry brings Nick to the Museum, but fails to impress him when nothing comes to life. They find Cecil, Gus, and Reginald stealing the Tablet of Ahkmenrah, as well as multiple other priceless objects. They discover that to stop the creatures from coming to life, they turned the center piece (the tablet consits of nine gold squares) sideways. Larry tells Nick, who is holding the tablet, to reposition the square. Wanting to believe his dad for once in his life, he turns it. The tablet then glows, and a tremendous trumpeting sound is heard, coming from the T-Rex skeleton in the museum's lobby. Cecil then reveals that, like the museum exhibits, the guards receive enhanced vitality and energy from the tablet. Unwilling to forsake it, the three intend to steal the tablet, along with various other museum artifacts to fund their retirement, and frame Larry for the theft. Cecil then locks the two in the Egyptian room and flees with the tablet. Larry releases the mummy of Pharaoh Ahkmenrah (Rami Malek) from his sarcophagus: surprisingly Akmenrah speaks English, having spent many years as an exhibit in the Egyptology Department at Cambridge University. Akmenrah then tells his jackal-headed "guards" to let them out. The three find the other exhibits fighting, and Larry, after the Easter Island head manages to get their attention, convinces them to work together to reclaim the tablet or else lose their ability to be animated.

Though the exhibits manage to capture Gus and Reginald without difficulty, Cecil escapes with the tablet by stagecoach, whereupon Larry, Nick, Akmenrah, Jed, Octavius, and Attila the Hun pursue him through Central Park, eventually capturing him thanks to Larry's quick thinking of halting the horses with a secret word, "Dakota". The exhibits rush to return to the museum before sunrise, and Rebecca sees them crossing the road in front of her and realizes that Larry was telling the truth. Entering the museum, Larry introduces her to Sacagawea. The next day, Dr. McPhee fires Larry despite his effort to clean up the museum; but readmits Larry when the reports issued by the news media (i.e., cave paintings in a subway station, dinosaur footprints in Central Park and cavemen waving torches) end up increasing the museum's popularity. Some time later, Larry appears in Nick's classroom during Career Day. Later that night, Larry returns with Nick and all the exhibits celebrate. Cecil, Gus, and Reginald, meanwhile, are allowed to retain the vitality the tablet gives them at the cost of their retirement, as they are rehired at the museum as janitors. Larry does a final check of the museum and flips his flashlight into his holster, turning it off using his "Snapper" device (mentioned earlier in the film.)

During the film's closing credits, the three new janitors are shown briefly, including Dick Van Dyke dancing with his broom. He is every bit as limber and supple as he was in the 1960s.

Production

Primary filming was set to take place in Montreal[citation needed], but Ben Stiller was reportedly unhappy about working there[citation needed], and is fond of Vancouver, hence prompting a move to British Columbia. Originally, Stephen Sommers was the director of the project[citation needed]. He eventually left due to creative differences[citation needed].

Larry's inability to remember Christopher Columbus's (Pierfrancesco Favino) name may be a wink and a nod to producer Chris Columbus[original research?]. This idea is supported by Shawn Levy's DVD commentary, in which he mentions that Columbus advised him to concentrate on storyboarding any visual effects scenes prior to shooting, just like he had done on his two Harry Potter films.

The building featured in the film, which was constructed on a sound stage in Burnaby, is based on the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, external shots of which were used in the movie.[2] Trainers spent several weeks training Crystal, who plays the troublemaking monkey Dexter, to slap and bite Stiller in the film. Director Shawn Levy credited Ben Stiller for the ensemble cast: "When actors hear that Ben Stiller is in a movie they want to work with him. It['s] a high-water mark and it absolutely draws actors in and I'm convinced that's a big part of why we got this cast."[3]

Cast

  • Ben Stiller - Larry Daley, a sporadically unemployed man and the protagonist of the film. He often has trouble keeping a job, but eventually gets a job as a night guard at the Museum of Natural History. He ultimately helps to save the museum when three night guards conspire to steal the Tablet of Ahkmenrah.
  • Robin Williams - Theodore Roosevelt
  • Dick Van Dyke - Cecil Fredericks, the main antagonist of the film. He, Gus and Reginald plot to steal the aforementioned item so that they can become young again.
  • Jake Cherry - Nicky Daley, Larry's son
  • Carla Gugino - Rebecca Hutman, a docent at the Museum of Natural History. She is particularly fervent about Sacagawea, to such an extent that she has written a voluminous report on the subject. Towards the end of the film, she does meet her in person.
  • Mickey Rooney - Gus, one of the night guards
  • Bill Cobbs - Reginald, the third of the night guards
  • Owen Wilson - Jedediah Smith (uncredited)
  • Steve Coogan - Octavius
  • Patrick Gallagher - Attila the Hun
  • Rami Malek - Ahkmenrah, the good-hearted Pharaoh who is finally awakened from his tomb during the climax of the film. He helps Larry and Nicky save the museum and befriends them.
  • Mizuo Peck - Sacagawea
  • Ricky Gervais - Dr. McPhee
  • Crystal the Monkey - Dexter
  • Kim Raver - Erica Daley, Larry's ex-wife and Nicky's mother. She is currently married to Don, a bond trader.
  • Pierfrancesco Favino - Christopher Columbus
  • Brad Garrett - The Easter Island Head (voice)
  • Charlie Murphy - Taxi Driver
  • Paul Rudd - Don, a bond trader and Nicky's step-father
  • Anne Meara (Ben Stiller's real-life mother) - Debbie
  • Ian Campbell - Painter

Music

Songs

Ben Stiller claimed that he watched Tom Cruise in the three Mission Impossible films to learn how to imitate his running technique, shown here as Stiller portraying his film character running for dear life from the Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton (Rexy).[3]
  • "Friday Night" - performed by McFly, not featured in American version of the film, but heard in some international cuts, used during the end credits. It can be heard on the American DVD on the Spanish dub.
  • "September" - performed by Earth, Wind & Fire, used before the end credits where everyone in the museum is partying.
  • "Weapon of Choice" - performed by Fatboy Slim, used in the scene where Larry returns to the museum for his second night and is preparing for the chaos.
  • "Tonight" - performed by Keke Palmer and Cham, used for the end credits.
  • "Eye of the Tiger" - performed by Ben Stiller, used in the scene where Larry is bored and messes around with the telephone at the front desk beatboxing the music.
  • A Muzak version of "Mandy" by Barry Manilow is used when Larry is standing in the elevator, while escaping from Attila the Hun.
  • "Ezekiel Saw Them Dry Bones" is the tune Larry whistles as he passes the empty T. Rex exhibit on his first night.
  • "Camptown Races" by Stephen Foster is sung by the townspeople of the American West miniature diorama. This is a period-correct song.

Score

Reception

Night at the Museum was the highest grossing film in its opening weekend, grossing $30.8 million in 3,685 theaters. For the four-day Christmas holiday weekend, it took in $42.2 million.[1] The movie was also released in IMAX large screen format, often on site at museums of science or natural history such as the Pacific Science Center in Seattle.

In its second weekend, Night at the Museum expanded into eighty-three more theaters and took in approximately $37.8 million at the box-office, out-grossing its opening weekend. It maintained its #1 position in its third week, with an additional $24 million. In total, as of Monday, April 30, 2007, the film had grossed $571,069,550, comprised of $250,224,440 in the U.S. and Canada, and $320,845,110 in the rest of the world.[4]

The film received mixed reviews from movie critics, receiving a 44% rating from noted critics and a 39% "Top Critics" rating, both meaning "rotten" at Rotten Tomatoes and a 48/100 rating on Metacritic indicating mixed or average reviews.[5] James Berardinelli of Reelviews gave it 2 stars out of 4, and commented on Stiller's performance by stating "It might be fair to give Ben Stiller an 'A' for effort, but to call what he does in this movie "acting" is a misnomer. He does a lot of running around, occasionally falling down or bumping into things."[6] One positive review by William Arnold of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, gave it a B-, and stated that the film was "Out to impress and delight a family audience with the pageantry of human and natural history, and that's a surprisingly worthy ambition for a Hollywood comedy."[7] However, it received a "fresh" 65% from the RT community.[8] In a case of life imitating art, museum officials at the American Museum of Natural History have credited the film for increasing the number of visitors during the holiday season by almost 20%. According to a museum official, between December 22, 2006, and January 2, 2007, there were 50,000 more visitors than during the same period the prior year.[9]

DVD release

The film was released on a 2-Disc DVD edition in the United Kingdom on April 2, 2007. It was released on 1-Disc and 2-Disc DVD editions and Blu-ray Disc format on April 24, 2007 elsewhere.

The film became the first non-Disney film to be reviewed by Ultimate Disney, due to the website dealing with other studios besides Disney.[10][11]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Night at the Museum (2006)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=nightatthemuseum.htm. Retrieved 2009-11-05. 
  2. ^ "MovieLocationsGuide.com". Night at the Museum Filming Locations. http://www.movielocationsguide.com/Night_at_the_Museum/filming_locations. Retrieved January 8, 2007. 
  3. ^ a b "Sun2Surf.com". Stiller shifts to the Museum. http://www.sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=16582. Retrieved January 8, 2007. 
  4. ^ Box Office Mojo - Movie Index, A-Z
  5. ^ "RottenTomatoes.com". Night at the Museum (2006). http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/night_at_the_museum/. Retrieved January 7, 2007. 
  6. ^ "Reelviews.com". Night at the Museum. http://www.reelviews.net/movies/n/night_museum.html. Retrieved January 7, 2007. 
  7. ^ "SeattlePI.com". Shallow 'Museum' exhibits some appealing qualities. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/movies/296769_museum22q.html. Retrieved January 7, 2007. 
  8. ^ Night at the Museum - Movie Reviews, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes
  9. ^ "msnbc.com". Movie boosts Natural History Museum visits. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16549060/. Retrieved September 11, 2007. 
  10. ^ "UltimateDisney.com". Non-Disney films to be reviewed by Ultimate Disney.. http://www.ultimatedisney.com/archives-0407b.html. Retrieved April 20, 2007. 
  11. ^ "UltimateDisney.com". "Night at the Museum" at UltimateDisney.com. http://www.ultimatedisney.com/nightatthemuseum-560.html. Retrieved April 24, 2007. 

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