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- “Hold on tight.”
- ―Tagline
Gabby's Dollhouse: The Movie is an upcoming live-action/animated musical fantasy comedy road film based on the Netflix series Gabby's Dollhouse created by Traci Paige Johnson and Jennifer Twomey, both of whom serve as executive producers. Ryan Crego, who previously worked at DreamWorks for Home: Adventures with Tip and Oh, will direct the project.
The film is scheduled to be released in the United States on September 26, 2025.[1]
Synopsis[]
Gabby goes on a road trip with her grandma, Gigi, to the urban wonderland of Cat Francisco. But when Gabby's dollhouse, her most prized possession, ends up in the hands of an eccentric cat lady named Vera, Gabby sets off on an adventure through the real world to get the Gabby Cats back together and save the dollhouse before it’s too late.
Cast[]
- Laila Lockhart Kraner as Gabby
- Gloria Estefan as Grandma Gigi
- Kristen Wiig as Vera[2]
- Ego Nwodim as TBA
- Kyle Mooney as TBA
- Melissa Villaseñor as TBA
- Thomas Lennon as TBA
- Jason Mantzoukas as TBA
- Fortune Feimster as TBA
- Maria Bamford as TBA
- Mimi Webb as TBA
- Logan Bailey as Pandy Paws
- Eduardo Franco as DJ Catnip
- Juliet Donenfeld as Cakey
- Donovan Patton as CatRat
- Sainty Nelsen as Pillow Cat
- Maggie Lowe as Baby Box
- Carla Tassara as Carlita
- Tara Strong as Kitty Fairy
- Secunda Wood as MerCat
Production[]
On April 25, 2024, DreamWorks Animation announced a feature-length film based on Gabby's Dollhouse, titled Gabby's Dollhouse: The Movie, set for release on September 26, 2025, with Ryan Crego attached to direct the film with Steven Schweickart producing, while Traci Paige Johnson and Jennifer Twomey would serve as executive producers. Laila Lockhart Kraner would reprise her role as Gabby.[3]
Gallery[]
Videos[]
Trivia[]
- This is the second Netflix film adaptation from DreamWorks since Spirit Untamed. It is, however, the first one to be connected to the original series, rather than be a remake of the series.
- This was going to the first live-action/animated hybrid for DreamWorks since splitting from the live-action division in 2004. However, due to the live-action adaptation of How to Train Your Dragon mentioning that DreamWorks is confirmed to be involved in the production, this makes it the second live-action/animated hybrid film instead.
- This is the third DreamWorks Animation film to be released in September, after Abominable and The Wild Robot.
- This is Eduardo Franco and composer Stephanie Economou's second DreamWorks Animation film, after Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken, released two years prior. Coincidentally, both films star female protagonists.
- This will be DreamWorks Animation's tenth film with a female protagonist, after Chicken Run, Monsters vs. Aliens, Trolls, Abominable, Trolls World Tour, Spirit Untamed, Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken, Trolls Band Together, and The Wild Robot.
- This film is remarkable for being DreamWorks' first animated feature film to not be necessarily classifiable as an original one despite being its franchise of origin's first feature film, as it is meant to be a tribute to its original series. Home doesn't count because the preceding short Almost Home (which was released a year before) is more or less treated like an Easter egg.
- Coincidentally, both mentioned films are 10 years apart from each other.
- It is rather interesting that this film would be released in 2025 after The Bad Guys 2, which will make it DreamWorks' 50th animated feature film, as 50 is divisible by 25.
- This is Kristen Wiig's first DreamWorks Animation project outside of the How to Train Your Dragon franchise.
References[]
- ↑ Anthony D'Alessandro (April 25, 2024). "DreamWorks Animation Dates Big Screen Version Of Netflix Streaming Series Gabby’s Dollhouse For Fall 2025".
- ↑ "Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie Cast". Deadline. Retrieved on April 2, 2025.
- ↑ "‘Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie’ to Get the Big-Screen Treatment in 2025". The Hollywood Reporter (25 April 2024).
External links[]
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