Beverly Hills Family Robinson

Beverly Hills Family Robinson is a 1997 American Walt Disney television film based on the 1812 novel Swiss Family Robinson by Johann David Wyss. The film features Dyan Cannon, Martin Mull, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Ryan O'Donohue as the main cast and was aired on ABC.

Beverly Hills Family Robinson
GenreComedy
Family
Based onSwiss Family Robinson
by Johann David Wyss
Written byT.C. Smith
Screenplay byLowell S. Hawley
Directed byTroy Miller
StarringDyan Cannon
Martin Mull
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Ryan O'Donohue
Theme music composerPhil Marshall
Country of originUnited States
Australia
Original language(s)English
Production
Executive producer(s)Les Mayfield
George Zaloom
Producer(s)Jeffrey Lampert
Irwin Marcus
Production location(s)Beverly Hills, California
Honolulu
New South Wales
Queensland
CinematographyRoger Lanser
Editor(s)Duane Hartzell
Running time88 min.
Production company(s)ZM Production
Walt Disney Television
DistributorABC
Release
Original networkABC
Picture formatColor
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseJanuary 25, 1997

This Disney film was shot in the Far North of Queensland, Australia from 25 January to 23 February 1996.[1]

Plot

Marsha Robinson (Dyan Cannon) is a famous TV personality and has her own lifestyle and cooking show. Together with her husband Doug (Martin Mull), a dentist, her daughter Jane (Sarah Michelle Gellar) and her son Roger (Ryan O'Donohue) she lives in Beverly Hills. Marsha's TV show takes her and her family to Hawaii. When the Robinsons arrive in Honolulu their yacht is captured by 'modern pirates' at night and when they wake up in the morning they find themselves and their unbidden guests on the open sea. But being the Robinsons they trick the pirates and leave them behind in a lifeboat.

When things finally seemed to be good and the Robinsons try to sail to the next harbor, the yacht gets into a storm and the family shipwrecks on a deserted island. Of course, Marsha Robinson - being a socialite - freaks out and threatens her husband with a nervous breakdown if they aren't saved within the next 45 minutes and the rest of the family isn't fond of their situation either. But nobody saves them and nobody knows where they are. So there's nothing to do but settle in, survive and build a tree house.

Life on the island turns into routine, although Marsha films herself while giving statements about her family's miserable situation after the shipwreck - just in case they'll be saved and she has footage for TV shows.

Meanwhile the pirates have been stranded on the island, too, which the Robinsons do not know. The island also has an inhabitant, a shipwrecked surfer named Digger, who secretly eats all of Marsha's chocolates. The Robinsons get to know him when Doug has an underwater-accident and needs to be saved by a good swimmer. Jane falls in love with him. He helps the Robinsons finish their treehouse and becomes a member of the family.

The pirates discover the Robinsons and now the Robinsons need to struggle with the unbidden guests once again.

gollark: You did turn it on, right?
gollark: It might just be the uo button.
gollark: Did you use one of the *reflection* ones? Don't do that. There are chirality issues.
gollark: There are some rotation matrices in the user manual.
gollark: The computer is the right way up. You are not.

See also

List of television films produced for American Broadcasting Company

References

  1. Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p13
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