OKLAHOMA CITY (BP)–A gourd, a grape and a cucumber who risk limbless life on the 17th Century high seas to save a princess are the featured characters in a new Veggie Tales movie, “The Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything,” appearing in movie theaters Jan. 11.
Following “Jonah: A Veggie Tales Movie” released in 2002, the new story tells of heroism in the beloved Veggie Tales world. It follows the comic misadventures of three animated veggie pals who reluctantly set sail and discover that real heroes don’t have to be tall, strong or handsome … or even human. In fact, the three wannables learn to believe in themselves by believing in someone beyond themselves.
The latest in a franchise that has sold more than 50 million DVDs and videos since its 1993 inception, The Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything continues the hit series’ values-based lessons in teaching kids what it really means to be a hero.
The Veggie Tales series came about when co-founders Phil Vischer and Mike Nawrocki, a couple of college friends, teamed up to make animation history.
Vischer said the idea for the latest movie came out of a song that Nawrocki wrote more than 10 years ago.
“Mike wrote this silly song, so we used the characters in it in ‘Jonah’ when we had to figure out that Jonah was running away from God and getting on somebody’s boat,” Vischer told the Baptist Messenger. “Whose boat did he get on that would be funny?”
Vischer said Jonah got on the boat of the Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything.
“We had so much fun writing and performing with those characters, we started talking about giving them an adventure of their own,” he said. “They really longed to do something. What they really want to be is heroes, but like so many people today, they just don’t have a clue how to go about doing it.”
As he looks at kids and at his childhood, Vischer said it seems like as soon as they can walk children are trying on capes, picking up swords and wanting to save somebody from something.
“But then, as we get older we lose that drive and we watch other heroes –sports stars, pop stars and fake heroes — on TV because we’ve lost the ability to see ourselves as heroes,” he said.
“But God has called us all to adventure, and if we respond to that call, He will equip us,” Vischer added. “We can accomplish it not through our strength but through His. If we respond to the adventure He’s prepared us for, we will be the heroes we’ve always wanted to be. That’s what the film is all about.”
In the film, a hero is defined as someone who does what’s right even when it’s really, really hard.
“We all look for some kind of stage or platform where we can feel like we’re accomplishing something,” Vischer said. “The three guys in the movie end up working in a pirate-themed dinner theater because that’s as close as they can get to real adventure. They learn that God has something much bigger for them. I’m hoping kids walk away with that lesson.”
Vischer said in creating the Veggie Tales videos, he and Nawrocki consider not only what kids think is funny but also what grownups think is funny.
“It’s been fun to see whole families involved in Veggie Tales,” Vischer said.
He told of a letter he received from a parent who put on a Veggie Tales video to keep the kids entertained at a family reunion, and by the end of the video all 80 family members were crowded in the living room watching the kids’ video.
Nawrocki said they are careful about making the lessons in the videos something children can understand.
“They can walk away knowing what the story was about and also have something concrete they can take away from the story,” Nawrocki said.
Vischer said there is a misconception that all Veggie Tales videos are Bible stories.
“About half of them are literal retelling of Bible stories and the other half, we may have been spoofing ‘Gilligan’s Island’ or ‘Star Trek,'” he said. “Or we may come up with an original story, not to retell a Bible story but to teach a biblical principle through a fun, engaging story.”
Vischer said The Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything is a parable.
“It’s the equivalent of how Jesus taught when He wanted to explain something about God,” Vischer said. “He didn’t talk about God. He talked about the owner of a vineyard or a judge. It was His way of engaging the broader culture with a story, yet they may not have wanted to hear a lesson directly about God. He told it in a different way, and they could pick it up and discover it on their own pace.
“So what we’re really doing with this movie is trying a different style of Christian movie making, telling a parable, a story that communicates a Christian message but in a more subtle way — a sort of ‘For him who has ears to hear’ for the broader world.
“They can say, ‘Wow, that’s a great story about being a hero,’ but as it sinks in, they realize there’s something deeper in there that is specifically Christian,” Vischer said.
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Dana Williamson is associate editor of the Baptist Messenger in Oklahoma, online at www.baptistmessenger.com.