Richie Rich (film) (Johnsonverse)

Richie Rich (stylized as Ri¢hie Ri¢h) is a 1977 American comedy-drama film written, produced, and directed by Timothy Hill (in his directorial debut), based on the comic book series of the same name produced by Harvey Comics. It stars Eli Nelson as the title character, Melissa Gilbert, Robert Downey, Jr., John Cleese, René Auberjonois, Florence Henderson, William Shatner, and Robert Loggia. The film follows Richie, who must get his parents' fortune back after it was lost in an elaborate heist conducted by media mogul Lawrence Van Dough and his son Reggie.

The film was released by Johnson Studios on December 20, 1977, and was praised for its adherence to the comics, as well as its acting, direction and effects. Auberjonois would reprise the role of Richard in the animated series from its 1993 debut until his death in 2019.

Plot
Richie Rich (Eli Nelson) is a 12-year-old boy living in Richville, a town in the West Coast. He is the heir to the Rich fortune and the only son of Richard (René Auberjonois) and Regina Rich (Florence Henderson). He has a girlfriend, Gloria Glad (Melissa Gilbert), and best friends in Freckles (Sheldon Johnson, Jr.) and Pee-Wee Friendly (Jay Nelson), as well as another friend named Mayda Munny (Jodie Foster), who wants to steal Richie's heart from Gloria. His rival in school is his snobby cousin Reggie Van Dough (Robert Downey, Jr.), son of media mogul Lawrence Van Dough (Robert Loggia).

One night, Lawrence and Reggie come to the Rich mansion. They meet Cadbury (John Cleese), Irona (Joan Rivers), Chef Pierre (Marlon Brando), Professor Keenbean (William Shatner), and Bascomb (Christopher Lee). While this happens, large trucks head to the Rich vaults, and several people come out to blow up the vault doors and steal all their contents; money, gold coins, jewelry, as well as deeds to every piece of real estate the Rich family owns. After Lawrence and Reggie leave, Richard comes to check on the vaults, only to find that there was nothing inside, except a little note inside the first saying, "Remember, Rich, I'll do anything to expand my fortune. Signed, Lawrence Van Dough.". The next day, the IRS comes to repossess Richard's house, and several repo men come to repossess every piece of furniture in the house. A crestfallen Richard is forced to lay off all his employees and move the family to a run-down apartment in Los Agradable, an ironically-named, gang-ridden town directly next to Richville.

Richie, however, is determined to reclaim the Rich family fortune and expose Van Dough Media. He gathers his friends (who are still in Richville) and reveals his plan. While Gloria and others are hopeful this will succeed, Mayda demands that her plan be used, in which she will save Richie from an explosion. She and Gloria argue over this until Richie stops it by screeching his nails on a chalkboard, and assigns everyone; Freckles and Pee-Wee to keep the guards distracted, Gloria to disguise herself as a Van Dough employee, Mayda to watch, and himself to lead the plan. He also calls on Cadbury and Keenbean, who were among those laid off, to help him, the former having fought in World War II for the Allies, and the latter having a bachelor's degree in science.

One evening, Gloria, under the alias "Gertrude Green", comes to Van Dough Media 's corporate headquarters. She claims to a receptionist that she's applying for a job as a "hygiene technician", and the receptionist tells her that the job is available. While cleaning a restroom, "Gertrude" phones Cadbury, notifying him that she had the receptionist fooled. Freckles and Pee-Wee walk up to two guards, putting on their best "puppy-dog" faces and awing the guards. Cadbury then knocks them unconscious, and breaks in to the vault door. Richie and his friends get back the money, only to be caught by Reggie, who phones his father. Lawrence then calls the cops on them, and they're put in jail.

Meanwhile, Richard and Regina are looking for Richie, feating that he ran away. They put up "Missing" posters in every pole in Los Agradable, and contact the police, who tell them that Richie and his friends committed a bank robbery.

After three days, Richie and his friends decide to try to escape. After Richie, Gloria, Freckles, and Pee-Wee saw the jail doors, the gang succeeds, only to be caught by guards. The guards, however, realize they're innocents needlessly put in jail. They come back to the Van Dough building and meet Lawrence Van Dough, who straps a 10-minute bomb on Gloria. Keenbean tries to remove the bomb, to no avail. Van Dough says, "You will be blown to bits, and your boy will be living in the poorhouse for life! You won't deactivate!", which causes the bomb to deactivate. Cadbury calls the cops on Van Dough, and he gets arrested. During this time, the press comes to the Van Dough building, asking questions.

The next day, the Rich fortune is reclaimed, and Richard is reading a newspaper saying, "Billionaire Caught! Van Dough Media Stock Drops To All-Time Low" while Richie, Gloria, Freckles, Pee-Wee and Mayda celebrate their victory in a party. Reggie comes in, explaining that he's been transferred to foster care and claims to have been reformed. He gives Richie a present, and Richie opens it, only to find rubber worms coming out. Richie remarks that at least some things remain the same in the Van Dough family. The credits sequence depicts an animated version of Richie and his friends (all depicted just like in the comics) in a recap of the film's events.

A post-credits scene shows Van Dough in jail, reading the same newspaper that Richard is reading, before ripping it in several pieces and swearing revenge on "those meddling punks".

Development
Production for the film began in 1973. Timothy Hill, an up-and-coming director who read the comics during his childhood, was signed on to direct in 1975.

Music
The music score was done by Cal Johnson and the Johnson Philharmonic Orchestra.

Credits seqience
The animated credits sequence was animated by Richard Williams and a team of nine other animators. Williams considered it a "fun experience".

Box office
Upon release, the film grossed over $120,983,649 ($534,186,464.23 in 2020) at the box office against a $75 million budget.

Home video
The first-ever home video release of the film was on November 19, 1978, in time for the holiday season.