Within the first minute of Aardman’s latest feature, there
is a shot featuring a shop named Milliway’s. Thirty seconds after that, a sign
for H.G. Wheel’s Auto. This sets the pace for the 87 minutes to follow, as the
studio’s usual penchant for visual gags, both foreground and background, takes
on a rather niche dimension, filling pretty much every moment with some form of
tribute or reference to the older sci-fi canon. This seriously makes Ready
Player One look like amateur hour for films designed to make film nerds look
through every frame with a fine-toothed comb, and it certainly got me more
attentive than usual to spot as many as I could.
Showing posts with label mark burton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mark burton. Show all posts
Wednesday, 15 January 2020
A Shaun The Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2020) - Movie Review
Labels:
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sci-fi,
shaun the sheep,
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Sunday, 5 April 2015
Shaun The Sheep Movie (2015) - Movie Review
When I was a kid, a friend of the family gave me a CD-ROM containing an Aardman showreel with a bunch of their commercials, a couple of Angry Kid shorts and even a scene from Chicken Run. Over the next year or so, I would just watch everything on that CD over and over again; I think I’d still be doing that now, if I hadn’t unfortunately lost it some years back. Along with giving me a better appreciation for the artistry behind animation and a mind state that viewed advertising as a means of entertainment more than anything else, it also cemented in my brain that Aardman was a force to reckoned with.
Between their more family friendly works like Wallace & Gromit and The Pirates: Band Of Misfits, their darker material like Chicken Run and Angry Kid and even their commercials like the classic Chevron talking cars and that one condom PSA 'Nobs In Space' (yeah, check that one out here), Aardman have maintained a consistent track record that very few production companies, animated or otherwise, can lay claim to. The only possible contender for their position at the top is Laika, but they’re still relative newcomers so only time will tell on that front. So, when the trailers hit for Aardman’s new feature film… no question, even if I wasn’t doing reviews, I had to see this thing.
Labels:
2015,
aardman,
bitzer,
goleszowski,
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hazel,
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mark burton,
meryl,
movie,
nick park,
omid djalili,
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shaun the sheep,
sheep in the big city,
shirley,
slip,
the twins,
timmy,
wallace and gromit
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