

However, the development of the film was still faced with financial problems the movie thus was born into development hell.

During pre-production, the movie was also given a barcode.

He also bought a picture of a child that jumped excitedly in the sky.Īfter the positive reception of his pitch cover, Reagal Films offered to help him by uploading it to Amazon to see if there is any demand via pre-orders. He requested Jorge Pacheco, an illustrator, to produce a drawing similar to the famous pineapple house. Orange set out to create the pitch cover for suppliers and manufacturers after speaking with his attorney. It would also help if it were live-action and acknowledged that it was entirely unofficial. However, after a consultation with a lawyer, he was told to make the film if it were a parody. Orange also initially refused to make the film out of fear of Nickelodeon and Viacom's legal concerns. Nevertheless, after talks with Salami and many others at Reagal, it was decided that the film was going well beyond the budget that would be given to Mr. He wrote a script and approached various filmmakers, including Jonathan Salami, who was involved in several of Reagal's films. Orange" for privacy reasons) wanted to create a family movie that pays tribute to the John Hughes films he watched as he grew up. However, the day becomes a roller coaster ride as things do not go quite the way they planned." Production The lucky winner is Seth, and he is ecstatic about his day with SpongeBob. The contest makes SpongeBob the talk of the town, as thousands of kids enter to win. Afraid that SpongeBob is becoming old news, his boss runs a contest called "Spend a Day with SpongeBob". "In this mockumentary, SpongeBob lives above ground like all Hollywood superstars. The official website of Reagal Films (via retellings in specific YouTube videos and web archives) gives a premise to the film:
