Rickey the Wicked Witch of the City

Rickey the Wicked Witch of the City is a 2002 American animated dark fantasy horror black comedy film directed by Brad Bird based on the animated series Rickey the Wicked. The film is directed by Brad Bird, who also created the series and features the voices of Candi Milo, Charlie Adler, June Foray, B.J. Ward, Tony Jay, Scott Menville, Frank Welker, Jennifer Hale, Jim Cummings, and Jesse Douglas reprising their roles from the series along with newcomers Jodi Benson, Dan Aykroyd, with Richard Kind, and John Goodman. In the film, Rickey who masters his supernatural powers, must stop Osran Gnash an evil witch god from destroying and taking over his town after discovering an evil spell that can give him immortal power.

Rickey the Wicked was initially set to be released as a direct-to-video film, but was instead released theatrically on October 18, 2002 by Warner Bros. Pictures, and received generally positive reviews from critics with most calling it a good bittersweet ending to the beloved series. The film also was a box office success, outperforming it's projections grossing over $313 million against its $60 million budget. It also served as the series finale of the original Rickey the Wicked series, as no further episodes were made to continue from where it left off.

A revival was later announced in 2020 along with a sequel with the former being released in 2021 while the latter has a slated release for October 13, 2023 in the United States.

Plot
Coming soon!

Cast

 * Candi Milo as Rickey Diablo / Rickey the Wicked, an apathetic yet smart teenage male witch.
 * Charlie Adler as Wade Diablo, the father of Rickey.
 * June Foray as Grandma Diablo, the grandmother of Rickey.
 * B.J. Ward as Merril Diablo, Rickey's mother.
 * Tony Jay as Beck Diablo, the grandfather of Rickey.
 * Scott Menville as Noah Wilcox, Rickey's mortal best friend who is aware that Rickey is a witch.
 * Frank Welker as Cerberus, Rickey's pet black cat who can talk.
 * Jennifer Hale as Becky Williams, a teenage cheerleader and Rickey's love interest.
 * Jim Cummings as Rickey's pet dog who can talk.
 * Jesse Douglas as Wendy Diablo, the younger witch sister of Rickey.
 * Brad Dourif as Osran Gnash, an evil genocidal witch god.
 * Willem Dafoe as Grinsnot, the proclaimed "legendary witch" who is apathetic but helps Rickey.
 * Jodi Benson
 * Dan Aykryod
 * Richard Kind
 * John Goodman
 * Chris O'Donnell

coming soon!

Production
Rumors about a possible Rickey the Wicked film started since the beginning of the series. Creator Brad Bird wrote a treatment for a Rickey feature film midway through the series' fifth season production in late 1994. It was to center on a dilemma for Rickey, but it was never pitched. However, in 1998, Bird and the rest of the animation team began working on a feature-length film based on Rickey by putting their finances into Script Development. In September 1999, Warner Bros. officially announced that Rickey the Wicked was to star in his own feature film.

Release
Rickey the Wicked Witch of the City was originally set to be released as a direct-to-video film in Fall 2002, but in February 2001, Warner Bros. announced that the film would be released theatrically.

Box office
Rickey the Wicked Witch of the City grossed $136.4 million in North America and $187.1 million in other territories for worldwide total of $313.5 million. Before film release, there were concerns that film will have underwhelming results and be box office failure due to possible factor of family audiences not turning out because of the horror element. However, film end up grossing $47.1 million being the biggest opening for a TV show adaptation at the time.

Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 73% based on 173 reviews, with an average rating of 7.8/10. The site's consensus reads: "Rickey the Wicked Witch of the City is one of those TV adaptations that you either love or hate, but either way this adaptation is entertaining as well as scary for the kids as well as adults." Another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score to reviews from mainstream critics, gave the film an average score of 58 out of 100, based on 31 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.

Sequel
After various troubles as well as script issues, Brad Bird announced that a sequel would be made. The sequel is scheduled to be released on October 13, 2023.