: A massive earthquake destroys the family's cave, forcing them onto a "road trip" through a landscape filled with fantastic, never-before-seen creatures. New Inventions : The introduction of Guy (Ryan Reynolds)
strict rule of "never not be afraid," which is challenged by his adventurous daughter Eep (Emma Stone) The Catalyst
Rewatching the 2013 trailer now, it’s a time capsule of early 2010s animated trailers: loud, fast, but unexpectedly tender. It sold a film about leaving the cave — by first making you laugh inside it.
The genius of lies in its opening voiceover. We hear Nicolas Cage (voicing Grug) grunt: "Curiosity. It's what got our ancestors eaten by saber-toothed tigers. Never not be afraid."
In the vast landscape of animated cinema, few films have managed to capture the chaotic, vibrant, and terrifying beauty of prehistoric life quite like DreamWorks Animation’s The Croods . Released in 2013, the film became a surprise box office juggernaut, grossing over $587 million worldwide. But long before audiences fell in love with the overprotective Grug and the curious Eep, the world got its first look at this Stone Age family through a piece of marketing that is now a decade old:
: A massive earthquake destroys the family's cave, forcing them onto a "road trip" through a landscape filled with fantastic, never-before-seen creatures. New Inventions : The introduction of Guy (Ryan Reynolds)
strict rule of "never not be afraid," which is challenged by his adventurous daughter Eep (Emma Stone) The Catalyst the croods 2013 trailer
Rewatching the 2013 trailer now, it’s a time capsule of early 2010s animated trailers: loud, fast, but unexpectedly tender. It sold a film about leaving the cave — by first making you laugh inside it. : A massive earthquake destroys the family's cave,
The genius of lies in its opening voiceover. We hear Nicolas Cage (voicing Grug) grunt: "Curiosity. It's what got our ancestors eaten by saber-toothed tigers. Never not be afraid." The genius of lies in its opening voiceover
In the vast landscape of animated cinema, few films have managed to capture the chaotic, vibrant, and terrifying beauty of prehistoric life quite like DreamWorks Animation’s The Croods . Released in 2013, the film became a surprise box office juggernaut, grossing over $587 million worldwide. But long before audiences fell in love with the overprotective Grug and the curious Eep, the world got its first look at this Stone Age family through a piece of marketing that is now a decade old: