Uma Aventura no Tempo | |
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Directed by |
Maurício de Sousa Rodrigo Gava André Passos Clewerson Saremba |
Produced by | Diler Trindade Bruno Bluwol (associate producer) Wilson Borges (co-producer) Felipe Pinto (production manager) |
Written by | Emerson Bernardo de Abreu Flávio de Souza Didi Oliveira Maurício de Sousa Airon Barreto de Lacerda (story) Manoel Barreto de Lacerda (story) Elisabeth Mendes (story) |
Starring | Marli Bortoletto Angélica Santos Paulo Camargo Elza Gonçalves Rodrigo Andreatto Bianca Rinaldi Maurício de Sousa |
Music by |
Márcio Araújo Danilo Adriano |
Edited by | [João Paulo Carvalho Rafael Gomes |
Distributed by | Buena Vista International |
Release date
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February 16, 2007 |
Running time
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80 minutes |
Country | Brazil |
Language | Portuguese |
Box office | $2,186,657 |
An Adventure Through Time (of Portuguese, Uma Aventura no Tempo) is a 2007 Brazilian animated film based on the Monica's Gang comic books. The film was directed and co-written by Mauricio de Sousa, creator of over two hundred characters featured in the comic books.
The film begins with Franklin finishing up his time travel machine. He explains to his dog Blu that it works with the synthesis of the four elements. Just outside, Jimmy Five and Smudge concoct an "infallible plan" to steal Monica's blue toy rabbit, Samson. The plan eventually fails when Monica, while on a picnic with Maggy, discovers it. Jimmy Five and Smudge hide in Franklin's office. Monica and Maggy follow them there, where Monica accidentally throws her rabbit on Franklin's machine, causing the elements to travel to different periods in time. Franklin sends each child into a different time after the elements in order to bring them back. If they fail, time will slow down and eventually stop. Monica and Blu end up in Prehistoric times to recover the element of fire. Jimmy Five is sent to the 30th century to recover the element of air. Maggy is sent to a few years back (when the kids were babies) to recover the element of earth. Smudge is sent to an indigenous tribe in Colonial-era Brazil to recover water.