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2/02/2011

Hop 2011 Computer Animated Film

Hop Movie Poster


I WANT CANDY!, 'Hop' From The Creators Of DESPICABLE ME Comes A Comedy About CANDY, CHICKS AND ROCK 'N' ROLL

Get More Animated:-
Trailers:- Hop Movie Trailers
Wallpapers:- HOP Movie Wallpapers
Clips:- Hop An 2011 Live Action CGI Movie - Clips
Pictures:- Hop Animated Film Pictures
But It Online:- Coming Soon

Introduction:-
It is an 2011 Easter - Life Action Computer Animated Film, It hit the Cinema Halls on '1st April 2011' in USA. This animated movie is full of Comedy.

This film is directed by 'Tim Hill' (Tim Hill is the same guy who has directed the movie 'Alvin and the Chipmunks' 2007 film) and produced by 'Chris Meledandri'. This animated film is created in 'Illumination Entertainment and Relativity Media' studios, The distribution section in under 'Universal Pictures' company.

Official Information:-
Title:- Hop
Director:- Tim Hill
Producers:- Chris Meledandri
Writers:- Ken Daurio, Brian Lynch and Cinco Paul
Music:- Christopher Lennertz
Studio:- Illumination Entertainment and Relativity Media
Provider:- Universal Pictures
Film Length:- 1 Hour and 35 Minutes
Date Of Release:- 1st April 2011
Budget:- $63 Millions (According To Wikipedia)
Language:- English
Country:- USA
Previous Film:- First Film In Hop Series
Next Film:- Unknown
Official Website:- HOP Movie | Official Site Of HOP

Story:-
Blending state of the art animation with live action, Hop is a comedy about E.B. (Voice by Russell Brand), the teenage son of the Easter Bunny. On the eve of taking over the family business, E.B. leaves for Hollywood in pursuit of his dreams of becoming a drummer. He encounters Fred (James Marsden), an out-of-work slacker with his own lofty goals, who accidentally hits E.B. with his car. Feigning injury, E.B. manipulates Fred into providing him shelter, and Fred finds himself with the world's worst houseguest.

The film is helmed by Tim Hill, director of the blackbuster Alvin and the Chipmunks and produced by Chris Meledandri's Illumination Entertainment (Despicable Me).

Trailer:-


Characters and Cast Voice:-

• Fred - Voice by 'James Marsden'
Having appeared in a wide range of films over the course of his career, JAMES MARSDEN (Fred) continues to carve out a distinctive place in Hollywood with both comedic and dramatic roles.

Later this year, Marsden will appear, opposite Kate Bosworth, in Screen Gems’ remake of Straw Dogs, for director Rod Lurie. In the film, Marsden plays Los Angeles screenwriter David Sumner, who relocates with his wife (Bosworth) to her hometown in the deep South. Soon after they arrive, tensions build and a brewing conflict with locals becomes a threat to them both. He will also star, opposite Jessica Biel, Jake Gyllenhaal, Catherine Keener and Tracy Morgan, in David O. Russell’s upcoming film Nailed. Marsden will play the Biel character’s small-town boyfriend. Biel stars as a naive waitress who gets a nail shot into her head, causing erratic and outrageous behavior, and heads to Washington, D.C., to fight for better health care.

Most recently, Marsden appeared as a guest star in an episode of the award-winning comedy Modern Family. He played Mitchell and Cameron’s mysterious neighbor who was quite the charmer. He also recently appeared in Neil LaBute’s Death at a Funeral. He received a 2010 Teen Choice Award nomination for Choice Movie: Male Scene Stealer for his role as the Zoe Saldana character’s boyfriend, who finds himself a fish out of water at a family funeral.

He previously starred, opposite Cameron Diaz, in Richard Kelly’s psychological thriller The Box. In 2008, he starred alongside Katherine Heigl in the box-office hit 27 Dresses, a romantic-comedy for Fox 2000 Pictures and Spyglass Entertainment. In 2007, Marsden received rave reviews for his singing and dancing in Disney’s box-office smash Enchanted, opposite Susan Sarandon, Amy Adams and Patrick Dempsey, and in Adam Shankman’s box-office hit musical Hairspray, opposite John Travolta, Queen Latifah, Michelle Pfeiffer and Christopher Walken. Marsden played Corny Collins, the host of a television dance show.

Marsden was also seen in Bryan Singer’s Superman Returns as Richard White, a new rival for the affections of Lois Lane. Kevin Spacey, Kate Bosworth, Brandon Routh and Frank Langella also starred in the film.

Marsden’s diverse film credits include the X-Men trilogy, as Cyclops; the Nick Cassavetes romantic drama The Notebook; Merchant Ivory’s Heights; Sex Drive; Disturbing Behavior; 10th and Wolf; and Sugar & Spice.

Marsden currently resides in Los Angeles with his wife and two children.

• EB - Voice by 'Russell Brand'
In 2008, RUSSELL BRAND (E.B.) shot to fame in the U.S. when he was seen as the rocker Aldous Snow in the Judd Apatow-produced comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall. The film, which was written by and starred Jason Segel, grossed $63 million at the domestic box office. That same year, Brand also starred in the Disney film Bedtime Stories, which also featured Adam Sandler and Keri Russell. It was in September 2008 that Brand cemented his fame in the U.S., when he hosted the MTV Video Music Awards (VMA).

The year 2009 saw the U.S. release of Brand’s writing debut, “My Booky Wook: A Memoir of Sex, Drugs and Stand-Up.” The autobiography, already a huge success in the United Kingdom, went on to stay on The New York Times best-seller list for five weeks in a row. In continuation of his stand-up tour in the U.S., Brand’s third live DVD was released after originally airing on Comedy Central. The year 2009 ended on an even brighter note for Brand when he assumed the role as host of the MTV Video Music Awards for the second year in a row and garnered the biggest VMA audience since 2004, with nearly nine million viewers.

The year 2010 was a busy year for Brand with the release of the hit comedy Get Him to the Greek in June. Reunited with producer Judd Apatow, Brand starred, opposite Jonah Hill, and reprised his iconic role as Aldous Snow. In July, Brand also lent his voice to the role of Dr. Nefario in the hit animated feature film Despicable Me, which included the vocal talents of Steve Carell and Jason Segel. Brand also starred, alongside Helen Mirren, in Julie Taymor’s adaptation of The Tempest. His upcoming roles include the title character in the remake of Arthur.

In addition to acting, Brand released his second book, “Booky Wook 2: This Time It’s Personal.”

• SAM - Voice by 'KALEY CUOCO'
KALEY CUOCO (Sam) has made a name for herself starring in hit television series since age 17. Cuoco starred as Bridget Hennessey, the late John Ritter’s daughter, in the ABC sitcom 8 Simple Rules, and currently stars in CBS’ highly rated comedy The Big Bang Theory, from producer Chuck Lorre (Two and a Half Men). She recently completed production on the independent feature The Last Ride.

Cuoco also starred as a recurring character on The WB’s Charmed, alongside Alyssa Milano, Rose McGowan and Holly Marie Combs. She has made guest appearances on Ladies Man, Complete Savages, My So-Called Life and Northern Exposure. Cuoco was the lead in the ABC Family telefilms Crimes of Fashion and The Hollow, and was seen in NBC’s television miniseries 10.5, a seismic thriller about an earthquake that ravages the state of Washington and Northern California. Cuoco’s other made-for-television movie credits include Alley Cats Strike, Toothless, Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman and Growing Up Brady, and she appeared in and the ABC miniseries Mr. Murder. Additionally, Cuoco lent her voice to Disney Channel’s animated series Brandy & Mr. Whiskers and the Kids’ WB’s Loonatics Unleashed.

Cuoco began her acting career at a young age, appearing in commercials and modeling. Her first television role was 1992’s Quicksand: No Escape, with Donald Sutherland. She landed her first feature film role at the age of eight in Virtuosity, starring Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe. Her additional theatrical film credits include Killer Movie, Picture Perfect, Can’t Be Heaven and Lucky 13. She also appeared onstage in community theater productions of Fiddler on the Roof and Annie.

In her spare time, Cuoco is a gifted tennis player and enjoys hiking, running, horseback riding, going to the gym and spending time with her rescue dogs. She is also involved in charities such as the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, Animal Avengers and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Cuoco currently resides in Los Angeles.

• Carlos and Phil - Voice by 'HANKAZARIA'
A Tony Award nominee and four-time Emmy Award winner, HANKAZARIA (Carlos and Phil) is a multifaceted performer in film, television and on the stage, as well as a respected director and comedian.

Azaria will next be seen starring as the infamous Gargamel in Sony Pictures’ live-action/ animation hybrid The Smurfs, opposite Neil Patrick Harris and Sofía Vergara. The film is set for release on August 3, 2011. Azaria also lends his voice to Warner Bros.’ Happy Feet 2 in 3D, scheduled for release on November 18, 2011.

Most recently, Azaria appeared in the film Love and Other Drugs, opposite Jake Gyllenhaal and Anne Hathaway, and in Year One, opposite Jack Black and Michael Cera. He also starred in the box-office hit Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, which grossed more than $415 million worldwide.

In 1997, Azaria played the scene-stealing Guatemalan housekeeper Agador Spartacus in Mike Nichols’ The Birdcage. The role catapulted Azaria’s film career and earned him a Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Award nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role, and he shared a win for Outstanding Performance by a Cast with the film’s ensemble. He had previously won critical acclaim as television producer Albert Freedman in the 1994 Academy Award®-nominated film Quiz Show.

Some of Azaria’s notable film credits include Roland Emmerich’s Godzilla; the 1998 adaptation of “Great Expectations,” opposite Ethan Hawke and Gwyneth Paltrow; Tim Robbins’ Cradle Will Rock; Woody Allen’s Celebrity; America’s Sweethearts, with Julia Roberts and Billy Crystal; and Shattered Glass, with Peter Sarsgaard and Hayden Christensen. His additional film credits include Along Came Polly, Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story, Grosse Pointe Blank, Heat, Now and Then and Pretty Woman.

Azaria is also well known for his portrayal of psychiatrist Dr. Craig “Huff ” Huffstodt on the critically acclaimed Showtime series Huff. The show ran for two seasons, from 2004 to 2006, and garnered seven Emmy nominations in 2005, including a nomination for Azaria for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series. He earned a SAG Award nomination that same year. Azaria served as an executive producer on the series and directed an episode during the show’s second season. He also earned Emmy Award nominations for his notable recurring gueststarring roles on Friends and Mad About You.

In 1999, Azaria starred as Mitch Albom, alongside the legendary Jack Lemmon, in the television film Tuesdays With Morrie, and took home the Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie. His other made-for-television films include the Jon Avnet-directed Uprising and the 2005 film Fail Safe, directed by Stephen Frears.

As a vocal artist, Azaria is noted and highly regarded as one of the best, with more than 20 years as one of the principal voice actors on the animated television series The Simpsons. Azaria brings to life a list of characters too numerous to mention, though he may be best known as the voices of Moe Szyslak, Apu, Police Chief Wiggum and Comic Book Guy. He has been nominated for five Emmy Awards and has won three for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for his work on The Simpsons, and he brought many of his beloved characters to the big screen in 2007’s The Simpsons Movie. His additional voice-over work includes multiple appearances as Venom/Eddie Brock, from 1994 to 1996, on the animated series Spider-Man, and as Bartok in the animated feature Anastasia.

In the theater, Azaria has appeared in several productions including a 2003 production of David Mamet’s Sexual Perversity in Chicago, opposite Matthew Perry and Minnie Driver, on London’s West End. In 2005, Azaria originated the role of Sir Lancelot in Spamalot, the musical-comedy adaptation of Monty Python and the Holy Grail. The show was a huge success and earned 14 Tony Award nominations, including one for Azaria for Best Actor in a Musical. In 2007, he returned to Broadway and starred as RCA head David Sarnoff in Aaron Sorkin’s The Farnsworth Invention.

As a filmmaker, Azaria wrote, directed and produced the 2004 short film Nobody’s Perfect, which won the Film Discovery Jury Award for Best Short at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival and the award for Best Narrative Short at the Ojai Film Festival.

• Mr. O’Hare - Voice by 'GARY COLE’s'
GARY COLE’s (Mr. O’Hare) early career includes working with the famed Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago. His recent film credits include the upcoming film The Chicago 8, Conspiracy, Say Hello to Stan Talmadge, the Judd Apatowproduced Pineapple Express and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby and Ben Stiller’s Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story. His additional film credits include American Pastime, Universal Pictures’ Breach, DreamWorks’ The Ring Two, Crazy in Love, Win a Date With Tad Hamilton!, I Spy, One Hour Photo, The Gift, Mike Judge’s cult classic Office Space, Disney’s I’ll Be Home for Christmas, Sam Raimi’s A Simple Plan, Kiss the Sky, Paramount Pictures’ The Brady Bunch Movie and Clint Eastwood’s In the Line of Fire.

His television credits include NBC’s Midnight Caller, CBS’ American Gothic, NBC’s The West Wing, FOX’s Arrested Development, ABC’s Desperate Housewives,

NBC’s Chuck, CBS’ The Cleaner, HBO’s Entourage, CBS’ Numb3rs, CBS’ The Good Wife and FOX’s The Good Guys. He also starred in the television movies The Switch (CBS), Seduction of Innocence (ABC) and The Lies He Told (ABC), and in the miniseries Fatal Vision (NBC), Echoes in the Darkness (CBS), Son of the Morning Star (ABC), When Love Kills: The Seduction of John Hearn (CBS) and Fall From Grace (CBS).

• Mrs. O’Hare - Voice by 'ELIZABETH PERKINS'
ELIZABETH PERKINS (Mrs. O’Hare) has distinguished herself with an eclectic mix of roles over the span of her career. Her critically acclaimed performance in Weeds earned her Golden Globe and Emmy Award nominations for Best Supporting Actress in 2006 and 2007.

Perkins made her theatrical debut in Neil Simon’s Brighton Beach Memoirs. She subsequently worked with Playwrights Horizons, The Ensemble Studio Theatre, New York’s Shakespeare in the Park and the Steppenwolf Theatre Company. She also appeared in John Patrick Shanley’s acclaimed black comedy Four Dogs and a Bone at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles.

Perkins made her feature film debut in Edward Zwick’s About Last Night…. Her breakthrough performance was opposite Tom Hanks in the smash hit Big, directed by Penny Marshall, and she received critical acclaim for her performance in Barry Levinson’s Avalon. In 1991, she starred opposite William Hurt in the touching drama The Doctor, and with Kevin Bacon in He Said, She Said. She then went on to star in Indian Summer, before bringing cartoon character Wilma Flintstone to life in the blockbuster motion picture The Flintstones. Perkins portrayed Dorey Walker in John Hughes’ remake of the 1947 holiday classic Miracle on 34th Street, with Sir Richard Attenborough. She also co-starred, opposite Kathleen Turner, Gwyneth Paltrow and Whoopi Goldberg, in Moonlight and Valentino.

Her other credits include From the Hip; Sweet Hearts Dance, with Jeff Daniels and Susan Sarandon; Alan Rudolph’s Love at Large; Enid Is Sleeping; Lesser Prophets; Bruce Wagner’s independent film I’m Losing You, co-starring Frank Langella, Rosanna Arquette and Amanda Donohoe; Crazy in Alabama, directed by Antonio Banderas and co-starring Melanie Griffith, Paul Mazursky and Cathy Moriarty; the independent feature Under the Mimosa, co-starring Brad Renfro and directed and written by Bo Brinkman; 28 Days, opposite Sandra Bullock; Cats & Dogs; Finding Nemo, as the voice of Coral; Jiminy Glick in Lalawood; The Ring Two; and Must Love Dogs and Fierce People, both in which she starred opposite Diane Lane.

Perkins made her television debut in For Their Own Good. Her other television projects include Cloned; Showtime’s Rescuers, What Girls Learn and Speak; the series From the Earth to the Moon; and the Hallmark Hall of Fame production of “My Sister’s Keeper,” opposite Kathy Bates.

• E.B.’s Dad) - Voice by 'HUGH LAURIE'
Known for possessing a keen eye for the complex characters he creates as an actor and a writer, HUGH LAURIE (E.B.’s Dad) currently brings that talent to his work on the critically acclaimed FOX series House M.D.

Now in its seventh season, the innovative and uncompromising series features Laurie as Dr. Gregory House, an antisocial and brutally honest doctor who combines an unconventional approach to his cases with flawless instincts. His performance has garnered him two Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards and five Emmy Award nominations. FOX’s hit medical drama also stars Omar Epps, Robert Sean Leonard and Olivia Wilde.

This spring, Warner Bros. Records will distribute Laurie’s upcoming New Orleans blues album worldwide. The album, produced by two-time Grammy Award winner Joe Henry, will feature both musical and vocal collaborations. Laurie, who has played piano for much of his life, is predominantly selftaught and has been singing, performing and writing music throughout his career.

Laurie will be seen, opposite Catherine Keener and Leighton Meester, in the independent film The Oranges and in the Sony Pictures Animation feature Arthur Christmas, with James McAvoy and Bill Nighy, to be released Thanksgiving 2011.

In 2009, Laurie lent his voice to Jeffrey Katzenberg’s 3D-animated hit Monsters vs Aliens, alongside Reese Witherspoon and Seth Rogen. His other film credits include director David Ayer’s Street Kings, opposite Keanu Reeves and Forest Whitaker; Flight of the Phoenix, opposite Dennis Quaid; Peter’s Friends, directed by and co-starring Kenneth Branagh; Sense and Sensibility, with Emma Thompson and Kate Winslet; Cousin Bette; The Man in the Iron Mask; 101 Dalmatians; Stuart Little; and Stuart Little 2.

Laurie previously starred in a number of groundbreaking British television comedy series including four seasons of A Bit of Fry and Laurie, which he cowrote for the BBC with Stephen Fry; three seasons of Blackadder, written by Richard Curtis and Ben Elton; and three seasons of Saturday Live. In addition, four seasons of Jeeves and Wooster, based on the novels of P.G. Wodehouse, aired on PBS’ Masterpiece Theatre from 1990 to 1995.

On American television, Laurie portrayed Vincente Minnelli, opposite Judy Davis, in the network telefilm Life With Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows. He also appeared in Tracey Takes On… and Friends.

In addition to acting, Laurie has directed television programs and commercials, composed and recorded numerous original songs and written articles for London’s The Telegraph. Mandarin Publishing has printed four volumes of A Bit of Fry and Laurie scripts and his first novel, “The Gun Seller,” was published in both the U.K. and the U.S. to critical acclaim and has been adapted into a screenplay for MGM.

When he films House, Laurie lives in Los Angeles.

Credit:-
HOP Movie | Official Site Of HOP
HOP - Wikipedia

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