Rugrats in Paris: The Movie

2000 "France never had a chance!"
6.2| 1h18m| G| en| More Info
Released: 17 November 2000 Released
Producted By: Paramount
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A group of rambunctious toddlers travel a trip to Paris. As they journey from the Eiffel Tower to Notre Dame, they learn new lessons about trust, loyalty and love.

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Reviews

Solemplex To me, this movie is perfection.
Claysaba Excellent, Without a doubt!!
Bea Swanson This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
Jonah Abbott There's no way I can possibly love it entirely but I just think its ridiculously bad, but enjoyable at the same time.
nkpb1607 This movie was officially released in 2000. I first saw it in 2003- 2004, when I was only a young child. I enjoyed it a lot but since I was so young I couldn't remember anything from it, until i watched it again a few years later in 2009, and it brought me back to it. I've been watching Rugrats since I was 2 so I grew to love this movie. I watched it again a few weeks ago, and I cried so much. The scene at the start of the movie when Chuckie had to stand out from a mother-and-child dance because he had no mother of his own (and the lovely song "When You Love" playing in the background) literally had me in tears. Even more so the scene on the plane, with the song "I Want A Mom That'll Last Forever" playing whilst Chuckie is looking out the plane window, sad and lonely about having no mother when he sees a picture of his late mother and him in a cloud. That scene hit me even more.The movie in general though, is extremely entertaining, cute, beautiful, well written, and in some cases funny. It is definitely one of my favourite movies and I recommend it to anyone who is a hardcore Rugrats fan from any time of their life. It is also a fantastic family film. However, the two sad Chuckie-mom scenes will always make me cry, no matter how old. I have to say that watching this film for the third time in December 2015 was really a great feeling. It brought me back to my Rugrats filled childhood and it felt sweet and happy at the same time.Personal rating: 10/10. An absolutely brilliant film. I love it. After 15 years of its release, they definitely need to show this movie on Nickelodeon or something again. It will definitely bring back the nostalgia that either 90's kids or Nick/Rugrats fans dream of. And I'm not even a 90's kid, and I still love this movie! It's because, like I said before, my love for the Rugrats. :)
Steve Pulaski After a successful, entertaining Rugrats film I was expecting this one to be an interesting sequel. Think about it, most TV shows that are adapted to films are basically and more often than not just longer episodes. Some films like The Simpsons Movie, when thought about, could just be half and hour episodes. With the first Rugrats film it would have been next to impossible to chop it down to a half hour episode. With this one though, the babies (or rugrats) I was excited because I thought now their really changing it up. Way different, unexpected setting, a fine plot, this should be memorable and way more entertaining than the first. I was off.The plot is recycled and just modified to fit the characters. Stu Pickles gets a late night call from Paris to go to EuroReptarland, a theme park, to fix the broken Reptar mechanical robot. He brings Tommy, Chuckie, Phil, Lil, Angelica, the baby Dil, and all of their parents to have fun in Paris while Stu works. Soon and ironically, Coco LaBouche is looking to run EuroReptarland and must find someone with a "heart of a child". When Angellica overhears her talking about this, she comes up and tells her about Chuckie's lonely father, Chaz in exchange for her own princess float at EuroReptarland. So Coco is determined to win over Chaz.Not a bad plot, but it's not really unique in anyway. Is that the best they could do? Its better than if they recycled the babies getting lost like they did in the first. But still, that plot might have worked in a big city like Paris. I must also note Grandpa Pickles doesn't make an appearance at all in this movie, unless I missed him. I didn't recall him appearing once in this entire movie. I was disappointed because he was one of my favorite characters.In sequel terms, it's fine, but the first like 80% of the time, is better. The idea of the babies in Paris could've spawned numbers of ideas. The babies visiting the Eiffiel Tower, running ramped through the town, anything. But the idea they went with just didn't grab me in really at all. There were parts that the film felt original, fresh, and funny. But the comparison it has on the original film is small. Could Rugrats Go Wild be any better than this? Don't count on it.Starring: Elizabeth Daily, Tara Strong, Cheryl Chase, Christine Cavanaugh, Dionne Quan, and Kath Soucie. Directed by: Stig Bergqvist and Paul Demeyer.
saint405 Rugrats in Paris is another animated family film about the whole gang of babies going to Paris because of Stu's robot in a big show blowing up so he must fix it. When in Paris the babies enjoy the sites, Spike runs away with a pup, and an evil business woman tries to marry Chuckies dad to get a promotion from her boss. Can the babies save Chaz? Rugrats in Paris is like the last Rugrats film, predictable and family friendly. The babies are cute, the story is squeaky clean, and there are plenty of diaper jokes to go around. But it's thanks to this film that the character Kimi is introduced and, spoilers ahead, Chuckie's dad Chaz marries Kimi's mom and so Kimi becomes part of the gang. That started the fall of the show. But overall this film is good for a rental. Rugrats gets the big 6, fun for the whole family.
Victor Field "The Rugrats Movie" was diverting enough, but "Rugrats in Paris: The Movie" is dangerously close to being a sequel too far - the animation is again more expensive than that of its source, and the movie's fine when it sticks to Chucky's desire for a mother, or when the avaricious, angular, child-hating Coco La Bouche (the head of EuroReptarLand, the woman who says "Nei-zer" for "Neither," and arguably the real star of the movie) is on screen.But when it focuses on the shrill, grating antics of the other kids (Angelica sums it all up: "What is it with you babies and poop?")... or when it pads out its fairly slim storyline with too many pop songs... or when the movie really has no good reason to bring the whole bunch to Paris other than Stu and his family (with a total of ten writers credited, including five punch-up writers, you'd think they could have come up with something better)... simply put, any given episode of "The Fairly OddParents" beats this movie hands down. And is this really the best place for a "Godfather" parody?The aforementioned Coco (give it up for Susan Sarandon!), Chucky's kung fu dream sequence and the get-me-to-the-church-on-time climax keep this movie from being a total waste, but it's to be hoped that "Rugrats Go Wild" (Tommy Pickles and Co. meet Eliza Thornberry and the rest... what next, SpongeBob SquarePants visits Jimmy Neutron?) is the last in the series.