- Around the World in 80 Days (1988 film)
Infobox Film
name = Around the World in 80 Days
image_size =
caption =
director =
producer =Roz Phillips
writer = Leonard Lee,Jules Verne (original author)
narrator =
starring =
music = Simon Walker
cinematography =
editing = Peter Jennings,Caroline Neave
distributor =NuTech Digital
released = 1988 (Australia )
runtime = 48 minutes
country = flagicon|AustraliaAustralia
language = English
budget =
gross =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website =
amg_id = 1:212048
imdb_id = 0849426"Around the World in 80 Days" is an
Australia n 48-minutedirect-to-video animated film fromBurbank Films Australia . It was originally released in 1988cite web | work=The Internet Movie Database | title=Release dates for "Around the World in 80 Days"|url=http://imdb.com/title/tt0849426/releaseinfo| accessdate=29 March|accessyear=2008] . The film is based onJules Verne 's classic French novel, "Around the World in 80 Days ", first published in1873 , and was adapted byLeonard Lee . It was produced by Roz Phillips and featured original music by Simon Walker. The film imitatedBRB Internacional 's Spanish 1981 series, "La vuelta al mundo de Willy Fog", in its use ofanthropomorphic animals in the human roles. Thecopyright in this film is now owned byPulse Distribution and Entertainment [ [http://www.copyright.gov/ US Copyright Office] Document No V3285P205 1996-09-25] and administered by digital rights management firmNuTech Digital [ [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2004_June_23/ai_n6086255/ BTECH] article on NuTech and Pulse distribution agreement.] .Plot summary
The young French Passepartout arrives in
London in1872 to become Mr.Phileas Fogg 'svalet on the very same day his master makes a bet that changes both of their lives. Mr. Fogg assures the men at his club that it is now possible to travel the world in 80 days or less; they disagree and so he challenges himself to set off and prove them wrong. He bets £20,000 that he will sail away, tour the world, and return to that very spot in eighty days or less. The men accept the bet, bid him farewell and wish him luck on his long voyage across the world. Passepartout takes an immediate liking for his new determined master, but even so, the young valet isn't too enthusiastic about sailing away from London aboard ahot air balloon . One day before their departure, theBank of England had been assaulted and robbed by a man who's physical appearance resembled that of Mr. Phileas Fogg. A detective named Fix investigates the crime and declares Phileas Fogg guilty ofbank robbery , hiding behind the identity of a noble gentleman. Mr. Fogg and Passepartout fly on the balloon over France,Italy and theSwiss Alps . Sure that he will win his bet, Mr. Fogg has no second thoughts about spending whatever money he needs in order for his voyage to continue uninterrupted, even if it means the purchase ofelephants . During a ride aboard an elephant fromBombay toCalcutta , Mr. Fogg and Passepartout come across asuttee procession, in which a young woman named Auoda is to be sacrificed by worshippers ofThuggee . They rescue the young girl and carry her away safely to live with a distant relative. More adventures and misadventures follow the two companions as they cross thePacific Ocean and theUnited States of America , closely watched and followed by Fix. Upon returning toLondon on the 79th day of travel, Phileas Fogg is arrested by the detective and accused of robbery, then he is placed inside a cell. Passepartout is bewildered because if Mr. Fogg doesn't show up at the club, it will mean that he has lost his bet. When they believe all is lost, a local newspaper informs them that they were mistaken about the date, and it is in fact one day earlier than they had thought. Mr. Fix runs to the cell where Fogg is being kept and tells him that he has made a terrible mistake, that the man trully responsible for the robbery had just been captured. Mr. Fogg punches Mr. Fix on the nose and the detective falls to the ground unconscious. Phileas Fogg and Passepartout present themselves at the club where the men cheer for Fogg's success and all admit that he had been right and had proven so. Mr. Fogg then assures his friends that a trip around the world can really be made in no more than sixty-six days, to the dismay of Passepartout who fears another adventurous trip around the world.See also
* "Around the World in Eighty Days"
*Jules Verne
*Burbank Films Australia References
External links
*
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