" Purpose: Imagination " is a special television of the animated television series <<> Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends . A special storyline follows Frankie, who is caught in a big mysterious world where he is treated like a noble but is forced not to go. Bloo, Mac, Coco, Eduardo, and Wilt travel through the world to save him, face dangers and challenges along the way.
Written by Lauren Faust and Tim McKeon, "Destination: Imagination" directed by Rob Renzetti and creator of the Craig McCracken series. The plot was conceived after the crew decided that they wanted to make an episode with an adventure, displaying characters that came out on a large search of sorts. Due to the dark and serious story-telling approach used, specifically out "edgier" from most of the episodes of
The special broadcast was broadcast on Cartoon Network on November 27, 2008, on Thanksgiving Day. It was well received and won the Emmy Primetime Prize for the Extraordinary Animation Program (for One Hour or More Programming). It was also nominated for two Annie Awards - one for Animated Production Best Production for Kids and another for directing McCracken and Renzetti.
Video Destination: Imagination
Ringkasan plot
During heavy rains, a boy helps his mother and father leave a heavy toy box at the door of Foster's House for Imaginary Friends with instructions not to open. The next day, Frankie had grown upset about her work as a house keeper; Mr. Herriman has given an endless task to take care of it day after day without thanking him for all that. When Frankie finds the box left in the doorway, Herriman orders him to leave it in the attic. In anger against Herriman, he deliberately ignored the instructions given in the box and peered inside. He falls in, only to discover it is a vast world filled with anthropomorphic toys and delicious food. He hears and sympathizes with the boy's voice (Max Burkholder), later revealed to be a fantasy friend named World (named after the show crew), who has lived alone in the toy box since his family left the box at Foster.
Frankie worships the world and goes to visit him every day, treated like royalty by that voice. But one day, when he went to leave, the friend refused to allow him and locked every exit in the castle they lived in. Bloo, Mac, Coco, Eduardo, and Wilt became curious about his sudden departure. They climbed into the attic and entered the toy box, discovering the world of their own. They asked around the town if anyone saw the description of the Frankie woman but no one answered. A group of weeble policemen found they had entered the world and pursued them, but the gang was saved by a heroic man. He tries to warn them that chasing Frankie will lead them through a very dangerous environment, but they are determined to save him. Mr. Herriman, meanwhile, was furious by Frankie's loss and attempts to find a replacement for him, but to no avail.
After failing to cross the musical bridges and colors, the gang fell into a hole where the sticky material became their zombie doppelganger and moved after them. They escape through environments such as Super Mario World and go to dog house toys, where they are set to trap eating crumpets with sleeping powder. Mac does not eat crumpets (because the sleeping powder is considered a sugar powder, and he can not eat sugar without losing his mind temporarily) and is able to save the others. As they try to escape, they discover that the heroic men and several others whom they encounter on their journey are all controlled by a single face - the World - that can animate and control whatever it sees. The world is caught in an apple and the gang leaves it in the desert; but stuck to the horse, really the Mac's guise and gang ride, and the World can move once more. It jumps into the castle, where the gang finds Frankie and tries to save her. However, Frankie reveals that the World never kidnaps her, she lives with her own wishes and is happy to be away from work at Foster's scolding and Mr. Herriman constantly. The friends then begged Frankie to go home and insisted that they needed him to take care of them. He believes in their request to be selfish and stormy because he is "sick of taking care of everyone and everything without ever receiving a thank-you note, an ounce of help, or a little bit of respect". They tried to comfort her, but the World aborted them and they fell asleep. When they wake up, they find themselves in a fake version of Foster made by the World, which shrinks them into it.
Frankie starts hearing their small voices calling him and, though the World tries to distract him from him, he finally finds his friends. The world finally gets angry and scolds Frankie plans to leave her alone in the toy box forever. He comforts her enough to be friends and let go of the gang, but Mr Herriman bursts in, after entering the toy box and somehow passes through the gang's barriers, and loudly scolds the World before preparing to take home the gang and leave the World. The world was shattered to nothing but a white void. The world becomes angry and unstable and turns into a chimera-like creature to attack them all (made from the remains of the world). The gang managed to escape from the toy box. Frankie climbs as well and tries to convince everyone to let the World out of the box. Herriman finally produces and releases the World from the box, due to the realization of a long judgment mistake about Frankie and a new appreciation for him as long as he does not exist. The world is happy and shouting that he's free and everyone is really confused, Frankie's answer is: "Well, think like this: Imagine if you can have anything you want, except one thing, but that's the one thing you want more from anything.For him, it was a friend, that's what he wanted, that's what he was trying to protect, so I brought him here.Here he can have all the friends in the world! I mean, come, not what kind of friendship is Foster? "Spontaneously Bloo shouted," No, it's all about me! " Soon Herriman slaps her with gloves, to please others.
The world adapts to new environments and lives as dolls at home. Herriman, having learned a valuable lesson from that experience, created a new Fair Chore Act to divide the task between imaginary friends and thus give Frankie a decent break from his job. All imaginary friends at home are free to travel and out of the toy box, where they have fun (they go to a toy box in a style similar to the theme of the show), with the last to enter the World and Frankie, the last one who shouts "BOOYAH! "
During the post-credit scene, Madame Foster returned from her vacation just to be greeted by an empty house and wondered where everyone was.
Maps Destination: Imagination
Production
"Purpose: Imagination" is co-authored by Friends of the Imaginary Friends one of the creators of Lauren Faust along with Tim McKeon. Co-founder of the other series, Craig McCracken directed it along with Rob Renzetti. The special is conceived by four, along with Darrick Bachman, Edward Baker, Vaughn Tada, and Alex Kirwan, as a means of creating an adventure story, to "send gangs on fantastic quests."
The Character of the World is created as a means to have imaginary friends who are the whole world, not "ordinary living things you associate with." Baker suggested that the character should be portrayed as a young man, which McCracken approved for bringing originality to the story, and allowing him to "become more emotional, not to understand the bigger picture, to be confused and vulnerable and like a child, to throw away when they do not get their way. "
Special writing is written with the aim of "telling the story in the most honest and sincere way." The authors sought to continue the tense and unpleasant relationship between Frankie and Mr. Herriman, which they began to develop since the series began, but approached it in a credible and reasonable way. With a large plot that flows through the specials, the authors try to use Bloo and his friends as a means to add humor into it. They write Bloo to be more irritating and demanding than ever, but do not want him to be cruel or evil.
Many of the specials are more "edgy" and dark than what has been done before at Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends . The main reason behind this is the dangers, dangers, and conflicts that build the plot very hard. McCracken explains, "When we start the show, one of the first things we think about is the tone, is it ridiculous, is it serious, whatever it may be we stick to that tone, this one has a higher bet so" We let it in naturally revealed like that. This is the first/special show on Cartoon Network to receive PG-TV ratings. "
Reception
"Destination: Imagination" was originally aired on Thanksgiving Day, November 27, 2008, on Cartoon Network, at 8:00 pm. EST. It follows a long afternoon marathon of the Chowder's animated series and My Gym Partner's A Monkey Special Thanksgiving titled "A Carol Thanksgiving". The first special for the series, titled "Good Wilt Hunting," also aired on Thanksgiving, back in 2006. At the 61st Primetime Emmy Awards, the specials won the award for "Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming One Hour or More)", won Spike TV's Afro Samurai: Resurrection. It was nominated for two Annie Awards for Production of Best Animated Television Produced for Kids and Directs for Animated Television Production or Short Form. Special missing for both Nickelodeon's Avatar: The Last Airbender.
"Purpose: Imagination" received generally positive reviews from television critics. Reporter
References
External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia