The Frog Kingdom

The Frog Kingdom
Chinese theatrical release poster
青蛙王国
Directed by
Written byMychal Simka
Produced byZheng Liguo
Production
company
Vixo
Release dates
Running time
90 minutes
CountryChina
Languages
  • Chinese
  • English
BudgetCN¥50,000,000
Box officeCN¥21,951,474.01

The Frog Kingdom (Chinese: 青蛙王国) is a 2013 Chinese animated adventure drama film directed by Nelson Shin and Melanie Simka.

Premise

The story centers on the Frog Princess, who runs from home after her father, the Frog King, announces that she will marry whomever can win the most medals in a sporting event called the Froglympics. She dresses as a commoner and befriends a vendor named Rain and Little Ken, his tadpole sidekick. Rain trains the Princess for the Froglympics, and she falls in love with him. Because the Frog King is embarrassed that his daughter is not present, he trains a doppelgänger as her stand-in. Little Ken soon discovers that four contestants in the Froglympics are actually spies for Snake King, a ruthless leader planning to invade the Frog Kingdom.[1]

Production

The Frog Kingdom was produced by the Jilin Animation Institute and its in-house animation company, Vixo. The film took five years to produce, and had a production team of 300 members, 80% of which were graduates from the Jilin Animation Institute. Additionally, hundreds of students contributed to the film's production.[2] The film was directed by Nelson Shin and Melanie Simka, and produced by Zheng Liguo.[1] It had a budget of CN¥50,000,000.[2] The film was released in China on December 28, 2013.[3]

Reception

The film grossed CN¥21,951,474.01 worldwide.[4] It was nominated for Best Animated Feature Film at the 2014 Asia Pacific Screen Awards.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Frog Kingdom (Qingwa Wangguo)". Asia Pacific Screen Awards. Retrieved 2025-06-23.
  2. ^ a b Zhangyu, Deng; Liu, Mingtai (29 January 2014). "Ribbib... Move over, Kermit". www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2025-06-23.
  3. ^ "Weekly box office 30/12/2013 - 05/01/2014". english.entgroup.cn. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  4. ^ "Frog Kingdom - Financial Information China". The Numbers. Retrieved 2025-06-23.