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Also pirates! Everybody loves pirates! But whew boy is this a slog.
#Aardman animations series
The Pirates! Band of Misfits (titled The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! overseas), based on the beloved series of children’s books by Gideon Defoe (who also wrote the screenplay), has a winning voice cast that includes Hugh Grant, David Tennant, Martin Freeman, and Salma Hayek, and was directed by the hugely talented Peter Lord, who co-founded the studio. It’s unclear what, exactly, went wrong here.
#Aardman animations movie
Behold, every Aardman Animation movie ranked thus far. It’s with this sense of celebration that we look back at Aardman’s feature output – to the movies that worked brilliantly and the ones that didn’t quite stick the landing. And each one should be treasured as such.

They shimmer and sparkle depending on how you look at them (and for how long).
#Aardman animations full
Their movies are tiny, handcrafted jewels, full of character, detail and personality. And it began the company on a somewhat rocky path through Hollywood – in the years since the DreamWorks split they have worked with Sony, Lionsgate and now Netflix, who rescued the second Shaun the Sheep movie from the crumbling Lionsgate deal.Īardman was never going to make movies that appealed to the most people possible. Reportedly Katzenberg was unhappy with how British the Aardman productions were, and the two companies ended up splitting prematurely. After their first big hit Chicken Run, the relationship began to sour. They had been courted by other American studios (including Disney) but chose to go with Jeffrey Katzenberg, the brash executive who had turned Disney Animation around in the late 1980s. In the years that followed, he would take the characters elsewhere, with the Hitchcockian “The Wrong Trousers” (another Oscar winner and a favorite of Gore Verbinksi, whose climactic train chase in The Lone Ranger was modeled after the one at the end of the short) and the Termintor-ish “A Close Shave” (another Oscar winner).Īfter “A Close Shave,” Aardman entered into an uneasy alliance with DreamWorks Animation. That initial short, “A Grand Day Out,” is a little rough around the edges but very clearly brilliant it too was nominated for an Oscar, the same year that “Creature Comforts” was nominated. In 1989 Park would also introduce his most famous characters – absent-minded inventor Wallace (voiced by Peter Sallis) and his dog Gromit. It established Park as a singular talent his sense of design and comedic timing was staggering. Park took “man on the street” interviews with non-professionals and turned them into animals in the zoo. By the late 1980s they had broken through to the mainstream with “Creature Comforts,” a short film by star animator Nick Park. They had wanted to direct an animated feature, but instead wound up working on shorter form content for the BBC and on several music videos (most notably Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer”). Note: Rights to the Aardman films produced with DreamWorks Animation are now owned by Universal Pictures, following NBCUniversal's purchase of DreamWorks in 2016.Aardman (or Aardman Animation) was founded by Peter Lord and David Sproxton in 1972. The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit


#Aardman animations tv
Aardman Animations is an animation studio in Bristol, England that produces stop motion and computer-animated features, shorts, TV series and adverts.įilmography Feature films Released films #ĭreamWorks Pictures (International (except for Europe))
