Open Season premiered at theGreek Theatre on September 25, 2006, and was released in theaters in the United States on September 29. It received mixed reviews from critics and was a box office success, earning $201 million against an $85 million budget. The first in theOpen Season film series, it was followed byOpen Season 2 (2008),Open Season 3 (2010), andOpen Season: Scared Silly (2015). Avideo game based on the film was released, and a television series,Open Season: Call of Nature, was released in 2023.[6]
In asmall town called Timberline,Colorado, a domesticatedgrizzly bear named Boog lives with his adoptive caretaker, apark ranger named Beth, who has raised him since he was a cub, and spends his days as the star attraction of the town's nature show. One day, hunting fanatic Shaw drives into Timberline with a one-antleredmule deer named Elliot tied to the hood of his truck. After Beth confronts Shaw, Boog frees Elliot, who becomes convinced that they are friends, and that night, Elliot finds Boog sleeping in the garage and convinces him to sneak out, and the two end up raiding PuniMart, a local convenience store in town. Eventually, Elliot runs away while Boog is caught by Gordy, the town's sheriff and Beth's best friend, who returns Boog to Beth and tells her that Boog's feral instincts may be emerging and it may be time to release Boog into the wild.
The next morning, Elliot is being chased by Shaw, and goes to Boog for help at the nature show. Boog tries to get rid of him, but the audience mistakes him for attacking Elliot and goes into a panic. Beth tranquilizes them both just before Shaw fires his own gun, then flees before Gordy can arrest him, and taking Gordy's advice, Beth relocates Boog and Elliot into the TimberlineNational Forest two days beforeopen season. They are relocated above the waterfalls, where they will be legally safe from hunters.
Boog is initially enraged to have lost his home, but lacking outdoor survival skills, he reluctantly takes Elliot as his guide to get him back home to reunite with Beth. They encounter unwelcoming forest animals, including aScottish-accentedsquirrel named McSquizzy and his gang of fellow acorn-throwing squirrels,beaver Reilly and his construction worker team, and Elliot's estranged herd, led by Ian, and Giselle, a doe that Elliot has a crush on. Eventually, Boog and Elliot start to bond after realizing they are both outcasts, and Boog considers letting Elliot stay with him when they get back home.
The next day, Elliot attempts to help Boog leave the forest, but it becomes evident he has no clue where they are going. The two are confronted by Shaw and accidentally destroy Reilly's dam trying to get away, causing aflash flood which sends the animals and Shaw plummeting down the waterfall into the hunting grounds. Everyone at first blames Boog for sending them into the hunting grounds but Elliot manages to defend Boog from them. Boog then accuses him of lying about knowing the way, leading him to confess that he thought if Boog spent time with him, he would befriend him. Realizing Elliot has betrayed him, Boog ends his friendship with him and angrily storms off, but ends up in Shaw's log cabin. Upon discovering Shaw's taxidermy collection and Shaw returning and discovering him, Boog escapes and finds a nearby road leading back to Timberline. Realizing the danger the animals are in and seeing a few hunters pass by in their trucks, Boog returns to the woods, reconciles with Elliot, and rallies the animals to defend themselves against the hunters. They scavenge supplies from an RV owned by a traveling couple named Bob, who ismute and Bobbie, who are looking forBigfoot, while their petdachshund Mr. Weenie joins the forest animals.
The next day, Boog leads a revolution against the hunters, ending with them running away after McSquizzy blows up their trucks with a large propane tank. Shaw returns for a final showdown with Boog, but before he can shoot Boog, Elliot throws himself in front of Boog and takes the shot, prompting Boog to confront Shaw and tie him up with his own gun. Afterwards, Boog discovers that Elliot survived, only losing his other antler. The forest animals thank Boog for his help and take out their vengeance on Shaw bysmothering him with honey and pillow feathers, sending him fleeing into the woods. Beth later returns in a helicopter to take Boog back home, but, having learned to appreciate his new home, he decides to stay in the forest with Beth's blessing.
In a pre-credits scene, Shaw, still tarred and feathered, emerges from the woods that night, and gets run into by Bob and Bobbie, who humorously mistake him for Bigfoot.
The ideas forOpen Season came from cartoonistSteve Moore, who is known for his comic stripIn the Bleachers.[8] Moore and producer John Carls submitted the story to Sony in June 2002, and the film immediately went into development.[9] On February 29, 2004,Sony Pictures Animation announced the beginning of the production onOpen Season, its firstCGI-animated film.[10]
The Sony animation team developed a digital tool called shapers that allowed the animators to reshape the character models into stronger poses and silhouettes and subtle distortions such as squash, stretch, and smears, typical of traditional, hand drawn animation.[11]
To choose the voice cast, Culton blindly listened to audition tapes, unknowingly picking Lawrence and Kutcher for the lead roles.[12] Their ability to improvise significantly contributed to the creative process. "They really became meshed with the characters", said Culton.[12] Until the film's premiere, Lawrence and Kutcher never met during production.[13]
OnRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 48% based on 102 reviews with an average rating of 5.4/10. The site's consensus reads: "Open Season is a clichéd palette of tired jokes and CGI animal shenanigans that have been seen multiple times this cinematic year."[14] OnMetacritic, the film has a score of 49 out of 100 based on 18 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[15] Audiences polled byCinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.[16]
Kevin Smith gave the film a thumbs up during an appearance as a guest critic onEbert and Roeper, saying: "If your kids like poop jokes as much as I do,Open Season will put a big smile on their faces". However,Richard Roeper gave the film a thumbs down, saying, "It's just okay, the animation is uninspired".[17]
Open Season opened number one with $23 million on its opening weekend. It grossed $88.6 million in the United States and $112.2 million in foreign countries, making $200.8 million worldwide.[4] The film was released in the United Kingdom on October 13, 2006, and opened at number three, behindThe Departed andThe Devil Wears Prada.[18]
The film was nominated for sixAnnie Awards, including Best Animated Feature (lost toCars), Best Animated Effects, Best Character Design in a Feature Production, Best Production Design in a Feature Production, and Best Storyboarding in a Feature Production.[19]
Open Season was released onDVD,Blu-ray, andUMD Video on January 30, 2007.[20] It includes an animated short calledBoog and Elliot's Midnight Bun Run. The short film was later released to3D Blu-ray on November 16, 2010.[21]
Open Season—Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (10″ LP) includes three songs that did not appear on the soundtrack CD: An alternative version of "I Belong", Paul Westerberg's own version of "Wild as I Wanna Be", andReyli's "Tú eres el amor", which played during the credits in the Latin American Spanish dubbed version of the film. In the dubbing of the same language, Reyli also performed the voice of Boog.[27]
The theme song of the Japanese version is called "Tookage" byChemistry.[28]
^Hopewell, John; Lang, Jamie (June 15, 2017)."Why Sony Pictures Animation Still Needs a Big Hit – and Where It Might Come From".Variety.Archived from the original on April 15, 2019. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2018.Producing animated features since 2006's "Open Season," Sony Pictures Animation has still to fire up a "Despicable Me" size franchise which can, as Belson out, provide a transformational moment, defining a studio's style.
^"Open Season". British Board of Film Classification. Archived fromthe original on January 28, 2020. RetrievedMarch 29, 2014.