Monsters, Inc. - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Monsters, Inc."
Monsters, Inc. (2001)
Timing: 1:32 (92 min)
Monsters, Inc. - TMDB rating
7.849/10
19639
Monsters, Inc. - Kinopoisk rating
8.131/10
574251
Monsters, Inc. - IMDB rating
8.1/10
1100000

Actors and characters

Photo John Goodman #16396Photo John Goodman #16397Photo John Goodman #16398Photo John Goodman #16399

John Goodman

John Goodman
Character Sullivan (voice)
Photo Billy Crystal #16400Photo Billy Crystal #16401Photo Billy Crystal #16402

Billy Crystal

Billy Crystal
Character Mike (voice)
Photo Mary Gibbs #16403

Mary Gibbs

Mary Gibbs
Character Boo (voice)
Photo Steve Buscemi #16404Photo Steve Buscemi #16405Photo Steve Buscemi #16406Photo Steve Buscemi #16407

Steve Buscemi

Steve Buscemi
Character Randall (voice)
Photo James Coburn #16409Photo James Coburn #16410Photo James Coburn #16411Photo James Coburn #16412

James Coburn

James Coburn
Character Waternoose (voice)
Photo Jennifer Tilly #16416Photo Jennifer Tilly #16417Photo Jennifer Tilly #16418Photo Jennifer Tilly #16419

Jennifer Tilly

Jennifer Tilly
Character Celia (voice)
Photo Bob Peterson #1954Photo Bob Peterson #1955

Bob Peterson

Bob Peterson
Character Roz (voice)
Photo John Ratzenberger #1968Photo John Ratzenberger #1969Photo John Ratzenberger #1970Photo John Ratzenberger #1971

John Ratzenberger

John Ratzenberger
Character Yeti (voice)
Photo Frank Oz #8757Photo Frank Oz #8758Photo Frank Oz #8759Photo Frank Oz #8760

Frank Oz

Frank Oz
Character Jeff Fungus (voice)
Photo Daniel Gerson #8777

Daniel Gerson

Daniel Gerson
Character Needleman / Smitty (voice)

Steve Susskind

Steve Susskind
Character Floor Manager (voice)
Photo Bonnie Hunt #16424Photo Bonnie Hunt #16425Photo Bonnie Hunt #16426Photo Bonnie Hunt #16427

Bonnie Hunt

Bonnie Hunt
Character Flint (voice)
Photo Jeff Pidgeon #1993Photo Jeff Pidgeon #1994

Jeff Pidgeon

Jeff Pidgeon
Character Bile (voice)
Photo Samuel Lord Black #16430
Samuel Lord Black
Character George (voice)
Photo Jack Angel #2002Photo Jack Angel #2003Photo Jack Angel #2004

Jack Angel

Jack Angel
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Bob Bergen #1976Photo Bob Bergen #1977Photo Bob Bergen #1978

Bob Bergen

Bob Bergen
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Rodger Bumpass #15340

Rodger Bumpass

Rodger Bumpass
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Gino Conforti #16431

Gino Conforti

Gino Conforti
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Jennifer Darling #1995

Jennifer Darling

Jennifer Darling
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Patti Deutsch #16432

Patti Deutsch

Patti Deutsch
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Pete Docter #4822Photo Pete Docter #4823Photo Pete Docter #4824

Pete Docter

Pete Docter
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Bobby Edner #16433

Bobby Edner

Bobby Edner
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Ashley Edner #16434Photo Ashley Edner #16435

Ashley Edner

Ashley Edner
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Katie Scarlett
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Paul Eiding #1979

Paul Eiding

Paul Eiding
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Bill Farmer #15185Photo Bill Farmer #15186Photo Bill Farmer #15187

Bill Farmer

Bill Farmer
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Keegan Farrell
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Pat Fraley #16436

Pat Fraley

Pat Fraley
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Teresa Ganzel #16437Photo Teresa Ganzel #16438

Teresa Ganzel

Teresa Ganzel
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Taylor Gifaldi
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Marc John Jefferies #2024
Marc John Jefferies
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Joe Lala #16439

Joe Lala

Joe Lala
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Noah Luke
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Sherry Lynn #1999

Sherry Lynn

Sherry Lynn
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Danny Mann #1986

Danny Mann

Danny Mann
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Mona Marshall #7245

Mona Marshall

Mona Marshall
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Mickie McGowan #2001

Mickie McGowan

Mickie McGowan
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Laraine Newman #2015Photo Laraine Newman #2016Photo Laraine Newman #2017

Laraine Newman

Laraine Newman
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Kay Panabaker #16440Photo Kay Panabaker #16441

Kay Panabaker

Kay Panabaker
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Bret Parker #2046Photo Bret Parker #2047
Bret Parker
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Phil Proctor #1980Photo Phil Proctor #1981

Phil Proctor

Phil Proctor
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Josh Qualtieri #16442
Josh Qualtieri
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Guido Quaroni #16443
Guido Quaroni
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Jan Rabson #2022

Jan Rabson

Jan Rabson
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Lisa Raggio #16444
Lisa Raggio
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Joe Ranft #1946Photo Joe Ranft #66570

Joe Ranft

Joe Ranft
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Sophia Ranft
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Katherine Ringgold
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Bob Scott
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo David Silverman #16445Photo David Silverman #16446

David Silverman

David Silverman
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Jim Thornton
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Lee Unkrich #2026Photo Lee Unkrich #2027

Lee Unkrich

Lee Unkrich
Character Additional Voices (voice)
Photo Wallace Shawn #15155Photo Wallace Shawn #15156Photo Wallace Shawn #15157

Wallace Shawn

Wallace Shawn
Character Rex (voice) (uncredited)
Photo Frank Welker #8066Photo Frank Welker #8067Photo Frank Welker #8068

Frank Welker

Frank Welker
Character Theodore Pauley (voice) (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • In the original version of the script, Sulley was not a frightening monster, but a regular corporate employee named Johnson, and his fur was brown. In addition, Mike was Randall's assistant (who was named Ned). In another version of the script, Sulley was Randall's assistant. George Sanderson (the monster constantly caught by CDA due to code 2319 emergencies) was supposed to be the main character, based on the film's original concept – a clumsy and inept monster who couldn't scare anyone until a timid girl, bullied by her brothers, decided to teach him how to be scary. In the final version, George even remained a monster of the same color and type as he was in the original script.
  • Marry Gibbs, who voiced Boo, was so small that she didn't have a script during recording. They played with her and wrote lines for her to say.
  • The van Randall falls into first appeared in "A Bug's Life" (1998).
  • Bill Murray was considered for the role of Sulley. Director Pete Docter said that when the filmmakers decided to offer him the role, they couldn't get in touch with him and took that as a rejection.
  • The control panel for the doors at Monsters, Inc. has a button labeled FIZT. At the time the film was made, Fiz-T (Physics-Tool) was the latest software developed by Pixar Animation Studios for realistically processing complex physical models. In the film, it was used for Sully's fur and Boo's clothing. Another button on the panel is IKT. This is also a Pixar software product called Inverse Kinematics Tool.
  • In the original, the Yeti describes the children from the Himalayan village as “tough kids, sissy kids, kids who climb on rocks.” This line is taken from an old jingle for Armour hot dogs.
  • The film features retro Disneyland posters in Monstropolis and some children's bedrooms.
  • The restaurant that Mike and Celia go to is called Harryhausen (translated as 'At Godzilla's' in the Russian version). This is a tribute to Ray Harryhausen – the man who made the stop-motion monsters for the film 'Jason and the Argonauts' (1963). Also, the octopus behind the restaurant bar has only six legs – a nod to 'It Came from Beneath the Sea' (1955), in which Harryhausen created an octopus with six limbs due to budget constraints.
  • The Hidden City cafe, which Mike and Sully pass at the beginning of the film, got its name from a real restaurant in San Francisco that has been one of the favorite spots of Pixar animators, as well as Pete Docter, since the early 1990s.
  • In the background of the scene where the monster in the form of a drop falls through the grate in the sidewalk, you can see the sign for the art shop Gallerie du Dominique. This shop is named after Dominique Louis, Pixar's art director.
  • On the leaderboard, immediately after Sully and Randall, is the name Renft. This is a nod to Joe Ranft, who was a Pixar screenwriter for a long time.
  • In the original, in the sushi restaurant “At Godzilla’s,” the employees shout “Get a paper bag!” every time someone passes through the entrance. In Japan, it is common practice for employees of any store to shout “irasshaimase!” And the monsters’ cry is likely a reference to this fact.
  • John Goodman and Billy Crystal recorded their voices for this film together. This is an unusual move for animated films, where actors usually work individually. Steve Buscemi and Frank Oz (Randall and his assistant) also recorded together for the bathroom scene.
  • The list of ingredients on the cereal that Sully feeds Boo is as follows: tentacles (including suckers), sugar pods, gelatin, artificial flavors, artificial colors (Yellow 53 and 54, Red 400, Blue 21, Purple 16, Reddish-Brown 30), salt, seawater, naturally occurring mercury, barium, sulfuric acid, lead, bile, blood, sweat, tears, zinc oxide, Vitamins D and F, anemones, shrimp, coral, plankton, deadly pufferfish, depleted uranium (to maintain freshness).
  • In early versions of the script, the character Boo was six years old. But the screenwriters decided to make her even younger, because that would make her more dependent on Sully.
  • At the very beginning of the film, when the simulation ends and the monster reaches for the handle on the panel to review the video recording, there's a small indicator 510-752-3000 just below and to the left of the handle. That's Pixar's phone number.
  • All the digital displays in Monstropolis (Sully's alarm clock radio, the consoles at the station, the 'Days Without An Accident' sign) are iconic indicators of gas discharge, neon digital technology from the 1960s.
  • In Sully's apartment, there's a hole in the back of his large armchair to allow his tail to pass through.
  • The DVD includes three bonus clips: Put That Thing Back Where It Came From, Or So Help Me! (in the Russian version – “Put it back right now or don't bother me!”), We've got the important things covered, and Pete's Barber Shop.
  • Typically, rendering a single frame with Sulley took 11–12 hours due to his 2.3 million individually drawn hairs (the exact number of hairs was 2,320,413).
  • The animators had the idea to give Sulley tentacles instead of legs and to put glasses on him. However, they ultimately decided to leave him with legs because they thought the audience would focus more on the tentacles than on his face. They also wanted to make Mike armless.
  • According to sketches available on the DVD, the name of Fungus (Randall's assistant) is Jeff, and his last name was originally Frungus.
  • When Sulley and Mike walk to work and pass by Tony's Grossery, blood oranges (a real variety of orange) are among the items for sale.
  • In the German dub of the film, the Yeti speaks in Swabian dialect, which is primarily spoken in southwestern Germany, and mentions in conversation that he would rather be exiled to the Swabian Alps, where his friends live.
  • Bob Peterson, the story supervisor for this film, temporarily voiced Roz during production. This nasal, drawn-out voice proved to be such a successful option that it was retained in the final version of the film.
  • The plush bear Boo is exactly the same as the bear on the shelf in the bedroom simulator.
  • The numbers 2319 may be a reference to the 23rd and 19th letters of the English alphabet (W and S). These letters may stand for White Sock – the first item belonging to people that was destroyed by CDA employees.
  • John Goodman insisted that Steve Buscemi voice Randall.
  • Jennifer Tilly, who voiced Celia, was married to Sam Simon, the creator of the animated series “The Simpsons” (1989). She told Pixar employees about a script she had read, written by the director of “The Simpsons” for an animated film. That director was Brad Bird, and the script was for “The Incredibles” (2004), which Pixar released three years later.
  • Billy Crystal was originally offered the role of Woody in *Toy Story* (1995), and he agreed. After Tom Hanks expressed his desire to voice the role, Crystal was offered a role in a future Pixar film. He responded: "Do whatever is best for your film, but if anything comes up, don't forget about me." They didn't forget, and he got a role in that film.
  • An additional short film called *Mike's New Car* (2002) was originally intended to be a scene from *Monsters, Inc*. But it was ultimately released separately and became the first Pixar short film in which the characters speak.
  • The film became the highest-grossing animated film of all time up to its release.
  • When Sully greets Ted (a very large monster of whom only the legs are shown), he was supposed to roar in response like Godzilla. The filmmakers tried to negotiate with Toho studio to use Godzilla’s roar, but Toho refused, so instead Ted responds with a chicken cluck. In one of the post-credit scenes, Rex the dinosaur from *Toy Story* (1995) is shown auditioning for a role in this film.
  • In the opening scene, one of the toys on the shelf in the bedroom is a toy airplane from *Toy Story* (1995), and as Mike and Sully go through the scare floor, you can spot the clown from the same film. Also, when Randall practices camouflage against different backgrounds, one of those backgrounds is the wallpaper from Andy's room in *Toy Story*.
  • When Sulley is about to say goodbye to Boo, she tries to play with him. At that moment, she gives him a Nemo doll. This is the first appearance of a character from the animated film “Finding Nemo” (2003), which the studio began working on even before “Monsters, Inc.,” but only finished two years later (Merlin can be spotted on a portrait behind the chef at “Harryhausen’s,” and Nemo is hanging on the wall of the room where Randall is thrown). Boo also gives Sulley a Jessie the Cowgirl doll, which first appeared in “Toy Story 2” (1999), and a Pixar ball taken from “Luxo Jr.” (1986).
  • At the end of the film, Randall appears in a trailer from “A Bug’s Life” (1998), standing next to the “Pizza Planet” truck from “Toy Story” (1995). The person inside the trailer is the same boy from the simulation bedroom at the beginning of the film. And the boy’s mother is made from the same model, only with a bun added to her hair.
  • After Sulley says goodbye to Boo, he closes the closet door. Then Boo jumps off the bed. By the time she runs to the door, she has grown 7%. The programmers had to do this because she was too small to reach the doorknob.
  • Towards the end of the film, Mike opens a stack of magazines with him and Sulley on the cover. On the back of the magazine is a full-page advertisement for a computer with the slogan “Scare Different…” In the previous scene, the new slogan “Think Funny” can be seen everywhere in the corporation. Both of these slogans are a reference to Steve Jobs, the former CEO of Pixar and Apple (who brought the phrase “Think Different” to advertising).
  • At the end of the scene where the monsters are making children laugh instead of scaring them, one monster walks by with a sledgehammer and a watermelon. This is an obvious reference to comedian Gallagher, who popularized this gag.
  • In the opening scene, when the monster goes through the door, he almost completely blocks it, but when the instructor points out the mistake by showing this moment in the recording, the door is practically wide open.
  • On the scoreboard in the corporation, some monsters sometimes show values lower than they were. For example, when Waternoose talks to Jerry, and also immediately before the first instance of 2319.
  • When Mike leaves, congratulating Celia (at the beginning of the film), he moves towards a stripe on the floor. In the next panoramic shot, he is much closer to it than in the previous one.
  • When Waternoose congratulates Sulley on his successes, various monsters enter the frame, passing behind Sulley. Then Waternoose is shown, and a second later, Sulley again, but the monsters behind him are gone.
  • When Randall goes through his first door in the scare floor, the handle is visible on the left. When he comes out of it, the handle is already on the right.
  • When Sulley rushes into the locker room to hide toys from Boo’s room, it’s visible as he puts them in locker #193 and then slams the door shut with both hands. In the next shot, he removes his hands from locker #190.
  • In some scenes, Boo’s giggling and screams don’t produce any energy bursts (for example, her scream right before the moment Sulley saves her from Randall’s scream extractor, and her laughter when she and Sulley are playing hide-and-seek in the bathroom).
  • On the scare floor leaderboard, all monsters are listed by their last names. However, only one monster is listed by first name – Randall.
  • When Mike and Sulley run through the closet doors around the world, the time of day is inconsistent. It’s daylight in Japan, dark in Nepal (3 hours behind Japan), and daylight again in Paris (7 hours behind Japan). Of course, it’s possible that it’s early morning in Japan, night in Nepal, and very late daylight in Paris in the summer, but then it should be midday on the Gulf Coast of the USA, where Randall ends up, and not late evening.
  • When Mike takes out his contact lens in the locker room, it isn’t visible in the reflection in the mirror on his locker door.
  • After watching a Monsters, Inc. commercial on television, Mike tells Sulley: "You were already jealous of my looks back in fourth grade." However, from the next part of the cartoon, we learn that Mike and Sulley only met in college.
  • The scream canisters at the beginning and end of the film (when they are filled with laughter instead of screams) have the same capacity (judging by the inscription on the side – "8400 SUV"), but the ones at the end of the film are clearly larger in size.
  • At the end of the film, after Mike’s performance where he regurgitates the microphone, a banner reading “Think Funny” hangs behind them while Sulley is talking to Mike. After Celia calls Mike over, the banner is no longer there.
  • Towards the end of the film, when Mike and Sulley meet with CDA agent number 00001, at least three CDA agents have the same number (00112).
  • All the digital displays in Monstropolis (Sully's alarm clock radio, the consoles at the station, the "Days Without An Accident" sign) are iconic indicators of decaying discharge, neon digital technology from the 1960s.
  • After watching a Monsters, Inc. commercial on television, Mike says to Sully, "You were jealous of my looks back in fourth grade." But from a later part of the cartoon, we learn that Mike and Sully only met in college.
  • The scream canisters at the beginning and end of the film (when they are filled with laughter instead of screams) are the same capacity (judging by the inscription on the side – “8400 SUV”), but those at the end of the film are clearly larger in size.
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