The Rugrats Movie

An adventure for anyone who's ever worn diapers.

6.2
19981h 20m

Based on the popular Nickelodeon TV series Rugrats, this is the first full-length feature animated movie to star the little tots. It's the story of diaper-clad kids, told from a baby's point- of-view, and they were one of the hottest-selling toy franchises of the late '90s.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Rugrats Movie trailer

The Rugrats Movie trailer

Cast

Photo of Whoopi Goldberg

Whoopi Goldberg

Ranger Margaret (voice)

Photo of David Spade

David Spade

Ranger Frank (voice)

Photo of E. G. Daily

E. G. Daily

Tommy Pickles (voice)

Photo of Tara Strong

Tara Strong

Dilan "Dil" Pickles (voice)

Photo of Christine Cavanaugh

Christine Cavanaugh

Chuckie Finster (voice)

Photo of Kath Soucie

Kath Soucie

Phil / Lil / Betty DeVille (voices)

Photo of Cheryl Chase

Cheryl Chase

Angelica Pickles (voice)

Photo of Tim Curry

Tim Curry

Rex Pester (voice)

Photo of Jack Riley

Jack Riley

Stuart 'Stu' Pickles (voice)

Photo of Busta Rhymes

Busta Rhymes

Reptar Wagon (voice)

Photo of Michael Bell

Michael Bell

Charles 'Chaz' Finster Sr. / Grandpa Boris Kropotkin / Drew Pickles (voice)

Photo of Joe Alaskey

Joe Alaskey

Grandpa Lou Pickles (voice)

Photo of Phil Proctor

Phil Proctor

Howard DeVille / Igor (voice)

Photo of Cree Summer

Cree Summer

Susie Carmichael (voice)

Photo of Tress MacNeille

Tress MacNeille

Charlotte Pickles (voice)

Photo of Melanie Chartoff

Melanie Chartoff

Didi Pickles / Minka Kropotkin (voice)

Photo of Hattie Winston

Hattie Winston

Lucy Carmichael (voice)

Photo of Andrea Martin

Andrea Martin

Aunt Miriam (voice)

Photo of Tony Jay

Tony Jay

Dr. Lipschitz (voice)

Photo of Abraham Benrubi

Abraham Benrubi

Serge (voice)

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Reviews

K

Kamurai

4/10

Weak watch, won't watch again, and can't recommend except for HUGE Rugrats fans.

As the origin story for Dill Pickles, it very clearly is going to deal with "Where do babies come from?", but I think this is the closest the Rugrats franchise has come to addressing death with its audience.

I don't think the nostalgia I had for Rugrats was strong enough. I'm seeing all these characters I loved, and just feeling nothing. I'm hearing these (fantastic, voice-acting) ladies doing baby voice, and I've seen other movies where ladies do baby voice and they're just not nearly as long as this one.

I might have been able to get into the movie as it actually has a decent story (thought it focuses on the parents more than I'm used to), but they decided to play with rules that involve how babies talk. They clearly present new-born babies that not only talk, but talk eloquently about "Missing their old womb" (sounds like a baby saying "room"). Dill, barely talks. in fact, he talks to the babies like the babies would talk to the adults, and they refer to him as a baby.

While they should be toddlers and speaking a lot more than they should, part of the premise is that they're babies that talk to each other, but not adults. It almost paints the picture that Dill was born retarded, but refuses to address it, even if it applies it directly.

It really broke the movie for me, as it's the chief mechanic behind the babies' A story line that is the basis for the parents' B story line.

You've reached the end.