Junior and Tulip encounter Jasper, who had followed them from Stork Mountain. In the meantime, Henry and Sarah open up to Nate's desire for a younger sibling and spend time with their son by building a landing platform for the storks. They eventually crash, escape a pack of wolves that fall in love with the baby, and reach civilization, during which Junior and Tulip bond with the baby and name her Diamond Destiny. Afraid Hunter will fire him, Junior agrees to accompany Tulip and secretly deliver the baby to her family using a makeshift flying craft that Tulip invented. Junior injures his wing trying to shut down the machine.
He sends a letter to Cornerstore and it reaches Tulip, who enters the defunct baby factory and inserts the letter into the baby-making machine, causing it to create a pink-haired infant girl. Meanwhile, a young boy named Nate Gardner, who lives with his workaholic parents Henry and Sarah, is feeling lonely and wants a younger sibling. Junior cannot bring himself to do so and instead transfers Tulip to the mail room.
He assigns him to fire Tulip so he may be promoted to boss. Hunter explains to Junior that he's being promoted to chairman, and so he chooses him to take his place as boss, exciting Junior. Hunter declares her to be a severe burden and liability due to this incompetence (the charts also justify this, as every time she tries to help, their profits go down, and when they do make progress, it is when she's absent). CEO stork Hunter discontinued baby delivery in favor of package delivery with .Įighteen years later, Tulip, now a young adult, tries to promote new ideas for Cornerstore, which backfire and cause the company to lose stocks. Unable to deliver the orphaned girl, the storks adopted her under the name Tulip. Jasper accidentally destroyed the infant's address beacon and went into exile. It earned $183 million worldwide against a $70 million budget.įor generations, the storks of Stork Mountain delivered babies to families around the world, until one stork named Jasper attempted to keep an infant girl for himself. The film received generally mixed reviews from critics, who praised the animation, humor and voice acting, but criticized the screenplay. Storks premiered in Los Angeles on September 17, 2016, and was released six days later in 3D, IMAX and conventional formats. In order to protect the baby from the company's manager and ensure Junior's promotion to succeed him, the two set off on a journey to deliver the baby to the boy's family. After a boy sends a letter to the company, the two accidentally create a female baby using the defunct baby factory the storks had formerly used in their original business of making and delivering babies. The film follows a hotshot package delivering stork (Junior) and his female human partner (Tulip), working at the distribution center of an enormous online store,, situated high in the mountains. It was directed by Nicholas Stoller and Doug Sweetland (the latter in his feature debut), written by Stoller and stars the voices of Andy Samberg, Katie Crown, Kelsey Grammer, Jennifer Aniston, Ty Burrell, Keegan-Michael Key, Jordan Peele, Stephen Kramer Glickman, and Danny Trejo. Storks is a 2016 American 3D computer-animated adventure comedy film produced by the Warner Animation Group and distributed by Warner Bros.