After destroying the city of Townsville in a game of tag, a trio of super-powered little girls must redeem themselves by stopping a vengeful monkey's plot for world domination.After destroying the city of Townsville in a game of tag, a trio of super-powered little girls must redeem themselves by stopping a vengeful monkey's plot for world domination.After destroying the city of Townsville in a game of tag, a trio of super-powered little girls must redeem themselves by stopping a vengeful monkey's plot for world domination.
Cathy Cavadini
- Blossom
- (voice)
- (as Catherine Cavadini)
Tara Strong
- Bubbles
- (voice)
Elizabeth Daily
- Buttercup
- (voice)
- (as E.G. Daily)
Roger Jackson
- Mojo Jojo
- (voice)
- (as Roger L. Jackson)
Tom Kane
- Professor Utonium
- (voice)
Jennifer Hale
- Ms. Keane
- (voice)
- …
Jennifer Martin
- Sara Bellum
- (voice)
Jeff Bennett
- Ace
- (voice)
- (as Jeff Glen Bennett)
- …
Grey Griffin
- Linda
- (voice)
- (as Grey DeLisle)
- …
Phil LaMarr
- I.P. Host
- (voice)
- …
Rob Paulsen
- Hota Wata
- (voice)
- …
Frank Welker
- Whole Lotta Monkeys
- (voice)
- …
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe first Cartoon Network movie to have a theatrical release.
- GoofsThe crater that Buttercup makes during the tag scene moves from under her to behind her before the street is moved.
- Crazy creditsThere is a statement in the closing credits: "No apes, monkeys, or talking dogs were injured during the making of this film".
- ConnectionsEdited into The Powerpuff Girls Movie: Deleted Scenes (2002)
- SoundtracksThe Powerpuff Girls (End Theme)
Performed by Bis
Written by Thomas Chase, John Clark, Steve Clark (as Steven Clark), James L. Venable, Steve Rucker (as Steven Rucker) and Amanda MacKinnon (as Amanda McKinnon)
Published by Ten Fifty Music (BMI), Techwood Music, Inc. (ASCAP), Universal Music Publishing Ltd. (PRS)
© Cartoon Network
Featured review
The animation is so fast-paced it's actually like the staff is hyper-high on...well, sugar and spice. And the way the Girls fly around SO FAST it makes you think of those mini-M&Ms you see on TV commercials that are out for trouble and mischief-making. Just like tiny, tiny little elves with BIGGG eyes that can drive any adult hopping crazy and desperately reaching for aspirins!
At least that's how someone outside the PPG fandom sees this movie...if he or she doesn't get too giddy from all the startling, dizzying sequences first, that is. But like the kindergarten-going superheroines themselves, the movie itself can be far "more than meets the eye". So, it carries a pretty interesting story that reveals the very origin and birth of Townsville's littlest crimefighters and of course, it's not a pretty sight to behold. Still in their infancy, the alien-like Girls suddenly lose their scientist-parent (who's a real mouth-watering hunk!) and thus are doomed to wander the dark, lonely streets as everyone detest their very existence. And then a homeless lab monkey with distended brains picks the wee tots up and gets them to join forces with him to DO EVIL IN THE WORLD! No wonder so many parents are spooked away from this pretty bizarre film in the first place!
The use of many different kinds of monkeys (with distended brains, of course!) as a part of evil force is a very interesting concept indeed and some CGI effects are fascinating to witness, like a whole army of gigantic monkey robots ravaging the innocent little city of Townsville. And the graphics aren't so bad, either. But whewww...what a ride!
So this curious little movie is best made for those who like the world's oddest-looking female toddlers with eyes the size of moons and the weird, strange little world that they inhabit...for whatever reason, that is.
At least that's how someone outside the PPG fandom sees this movie...if he or she doesn't get too giddy from all the startling, dizzying sequences first, that is. But like the kindergarten-going superheroines themselves, the movie itself can be far "more than meets the eye". So, it carries a pretty interesting story that reveals the very origin and birth of Townsville's littlest crimefighters and of course, it's not a pretty sight to behold. Still in their infancy, the alien-like Girls suddenly lose their scientist-parent (who's a real mouth-watering hunk!) and thus are doomed to wander the dark, lonely streets as everyone detest their very existence. And then a homeless lab monkey with distended brains picks the wee tots up and gets them to join forces with him to DO EVIL IN THE WORLD! No wonder so many parents are spooked away from this pretty bizarre film in the first place!
The use of many different kinds of monkeys (with distended brains, of course!) as a part of evil force is a very interesting concept indeed and some CGI effects are fascinating to witness, like a whole army of gigantic monkey robots ravaging the innocent little city of Townsville. And the graphics aren't so bad, either. But whewww...what a ride!
So this curious little movie is best made for those who like the world's oddest-looking female toddlers with eyes the size of moons and the weird, strange little world that they inhabit...for whatever reason, that is.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Powerpuff Girls: The Movie
- Filming locations
- Burbank, California, USA(Cartoon Network Studios)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $11,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,412,414
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,583,114
- Jul 7, 2002
- Gross worldwide
- $16,426,471
- Runtime1 hour 13 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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