The film was a critical and commercial failure, grossing $28 million, against its $30 million production budget.
Plot
Mr. Quincy Magoo, a wealthy but extremely near-sighted canned vegetable factory owner, goes to the museum to attend a party. While there, Waldo, Mr. Magoo's nephew, spies a woman named Stacey Sampanahoditra, on whom he develops a crush. Later that night, jewel thieves Luanne LeSeur and Bob Morgan steal the museum's beautiful ruby "The Star of Kurdistan" and escape on a boat to Austin Cloquet, Bob's boss.
Meanwhile, Mr. Magoo and his dog Angus go fishing in the same area as the jewel thieves' boat. Luanne picks a fight with Bob and in the scuffle, they lose the ruby which lands in Mr. Magoo's boat unbeknownst to Magoo. Bob goes after the ruby but fails by falling onto the paddle wheel of a paddle boat.
At the museum, the curator and Stacey send two agents: Gustav Anders of the CIA and Chuck Stupak of the FBI to track down the ruby and spy on Mr. Magoo, who they believe stole the ruby. Stacey mentions she was invited to the opera where the Magoos go that night. Anders and Stupak also visit the opera to look for Mr. Magoo who is in the show. At the opera Mr. Magoo meets Luanne who pretends to be a magazine reporter and uncover FBI agent named Prunella Pagliachi. She wishes Mr. Magoo luck at the opera, who immediately takes a liking to her. Stupak sneaks on the stage and fails to find any clue about Mr. Magoo with Mr. Magoo accidentally hitting Stupak with a big tool.
The next morning, Luanne tricks Mr. Magoo into taking her to his house with an injured ankle. Stupak finds a notebook with Luanne's fingerprints on it and realizes who Mr. Magoo is with. He and Anders go to Mr. Magoo's house where Stupak sneaks in looking for the ruby. Mr. Magoo and Luanne arrive at the house and Stupak hides from them. Bob sneaks into Mr. Magoo's house and finds the ruby. Upon being caught in the act, he steals Mr. Magoo's prized Studebaker with the Magoos and Luanne chasing after him in Magoo's Eggplant-mobile. Bob loses them and brings the ruby to Austin.
Austin plans an auction for his criminal friends from around the world and shows them the ruby. Mr. Magoo disguises himself as Ortega Peru, a thief from Brazil who never goes anywhere and joins the auction which is taking place in a communal indoor pool. However, he is discovered when the fake tattoo on his chest is washed away by the water. Luanne breaks up the auction, steals the ruby, and escapes on a snowmobile away from the lair. The government arrests Austin and his friends while Mr. Magoo gives chase on an ironing board and winds up in the middle of a women's skiing competition. Waldo and Angus sneak out of the lair, catch up with Magoo, and track down the ruby.
Angus sees Luanne in disguise as an old woman and spills her purse which gives Mr. Magoo and Waldo a clue about where Luanne is going. The Magoos follow Luanne to Brazil where Waldo spies on the real Ortega and his friends. Mr. Magoo steals a bride dress from Ortega's girlfriend Rosita and is led to the wedding. Mr. Magoo steals the ruby from Ortega and finds himself being chased by Peru's men, the government agents and Luanne. Magoo then is trapped on a raft just before it goes over a waterfall but manages to invert the raft like a parachute so he can gently float to safety. He and Waldo return the ruby to the museum with the government arresting Ortega, Luanne and the people from Brazil.
Mr. Magoo and Angus go home after returning the ruby back to the museum.
In the late 1980s, Henry G. Saperstein of UPA, the original owners of Mr. Magoo, announced that the film was set for development at Warner Bros. Pictures, with Steve Tisch producing, acquiring the rights to produce its first feature.[3] In October 1995, it was announced Disney was in talks with Leslie Nielsen to star in a live-action adaptation of Mr. Magoo.[4] However, it was stuck at development limbo once that never came into reality. It would be in development again once he entered negotiations with Sony Pictures (which its subsidiary Columbia Pictures had originally distributed UPA cartoons to theatres during the '40s through '60s) producers Cary Woods and Robert N. Fried. Once Sony backed out in favor of an American Godzillafilm remake, Disneypurchased the film rights from Sony.[5]
Producer Ben Myron had been negotiating with Stanley Tong on doing an unrelated John Woo-type action film until Saperstein caught a screening of Tong's Rumble in the Bronx with Saperstein liking the inclusion of action and comedy and feeling Tong's style would work well with Mr. Magoo.[6] Tong agreed to direct as he wanted to make a film that wasn't heavily reliant on violence and could be enjoyed by families and felt, as a Disney production, it would give him that opportunity.[6]
Mr. Magoo was released to theatres by Walt Disney Pictures on Christmas Day (December 25) 1997. It was then released on VHS and DVD on July 7, 1998, and later available to stream on Disney+.
Reception
Box office performance
Mr. Magoo grossed $28.9 million worldwide against a $30 million budget, making it a box office bomb.[1][2]
Critical reception
On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 9%, based on reviews from 32 critics, with an average rating of 2.7/10. The site's consensus states: "Leslie Nielsen's affability can't save this dunderheaded update of Mr. Magoo, which delivers a stream of slapstick gags so lame that audiences will feel like they've stepped on a rake."[8]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 18 out of 100, based on 21 critics, indicating "overwhelming dislike".[9] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[10]
Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times gave Mr. Magoo half a star out of four in his newspaper review, and called the film "transcendently bad. It soars above ordinary badness as the eagle outreaches the fly."[11] Marc Savlov of the Austin Chronicle gave it 0 out of 5 and said "It's a mess best left to the nitrate ashes of forgotten film and television history."[12] Later reviewing Wrongfully Accused, another Leslie Nielsen film, Savlov said "I was wrong: There are worse things than Mr. Magoo."[13]
Controversy
Criticism for the film singled out the seemingly mocking portrayal of people with disabilities, although Disney placed a disclaimer right before the closing credits stating Mr. Magoo was not intended as an accurate portrayal of near-sighted or blind people.[14][11] On Siskel and Ebert, both critics gave the film a thumbs down. They both claimed the disclaimer was funnier than anything in the movie, and thought it was unnecessary and that the film was not offensive towards near-sighted people.[15]
Disney wanted Mr. Magoo to become an "international franchise", but following the critical and commercial failure of the film, no sequels were ever produced.[17]