Slappy and the Stinkers

Slappy and the Stinkers

DVD cover art
Directed by Barnet Kellman
Produced by Martha Chang
Written by Robert Wolterstorff
Mike Scott
Starring B. D. Wong
Bronson Pinchot
Jennifer Coolidge
Joseph Ashton
Gary LeRoi Gray
Music by Craig Safan
Cinematography Paul Maibaum
Edited by Jeff Wishengrad
Production
company
Distributed by TriStar Pictures
Release dates
  • January 23, 1998 (1998-01-23)
Running time
78 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Slappy and the Stinkers is a 1998 adventure/comedy film directed by Barnet Kellman. The film stars B. D. Wong and Bronson Pinchot. The film revolves around a group of children who try to save an abused sea lion from a greedy circus owner.

Plot

At prestigious private school, Dartmoor Academy, the principal, Morgan Brinway is forcing the second-graders to study opera appreciation. Five feisty kids (leader Sonny, contraption making Loaf, movie loving Domino, sympathetic albeit tough Lucy, and the reluctant participating Witz), nicknamed the "Stinkers" by Mr. Brinway, are secretly skipping class to create chaos on the school grounds. Witz becomes the test pilot for a flying chair, one of Sonny's newest ideas. The Stinkers go to Groundskeeper Roy's shed and steal his leaf blower. Before that, they stole Mr. Brinway's desk chair. The Stinkers fail to notice that the leaf blower was not entirely duct taped onto the desk chair. When turned it on, the leaf blower flew off the contraption but left Witz sitting in the chair. The leaf blower was heading straight for Mr. Brinway's new convertible, but the leaf blower ran out of gas before it destroyed the car. Roy accidentally obliterates the car's side door with his lawn mower blade. Mr. Brinway warns the Stinkers they will be expelled if they mess up one more time, they soon rebel while trying to keep a low profile and are involved in even more misadventures.

When the kids discover sea lion Slappy during an aquarium field trip, Sonny and the others decide to free him by smuggling him back onto the school bus and hide him in Mr. Brinway's hot tub; as a form of celebrating their success, they have a party. After Mr. Brinway arrives home earlier than usual, the Stinkers retrieve Slappy and hide him at Witz's house. Roy mistakes the sea lion for a giant gopher and sets out to kill him. Animal thief Anthony Boccoli plans to steal Slappy and sell him to a Bulgarian circus.

The next day, the Stinkers take Slappy with them to the beach so they can set him free, but Slappy refuses to leave. The kids discover there was an orca swimming nearby and that's why Slappy didn't want to go in the water. Sonny decides they should return Slappy to the aquarium. Roy tries to dispose of Slappy which causes the festival attractions to get ruined. Assuming this was caused by the Stinkers, Mr. Brinway expels them. The Stinkers discover that Boccoli kidnapped Slappy, which prompts the kids to set off on a rescue mission.

The group locates Boccoli's hideout and disposes of him by squirting him with water, blowing sawdust onto his body and shooting him with Roy's gopher bomb gun. After saving Slappy, the Stinkers get chased by Boccoli. Mr. Brinway and the class go on a hiking field trip to look at birds, which gets interrupted when the Stinkers crash through and Mr. Brinway becomes part of the getaway. After being chased to a log flume, the Stinkers and Mr. Brinway escape Boccoli by going down it; Boccoli tries to drown the group by turning on the flume, but the water is blocked by a beaver's nest and once he removes it, the water splashes him and he slides down the spillway. The Stinkers, Slappy and Mr. Brinway safely land into the lake below, whereas Boccoli falls onto a floating log. Roy, who is also the school bus driver, ties a rope around Boccoli. Slappy is returned to the aquarium, Mr. Brinway withdraws the Stinkers' expulsion and the Stinkers become heroes.

Cast

Reception

Slappy and the Stinkers was panned by critics. As of July 2014, the film holds a 0% "rotten" rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.[1]

References

  1. Rotten Tomatoes, "Slappy and the Stinkers (1997)". Accessed July 24, 2014.
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