Tag Archives: Aardman Animations

Interview: Nick Park talks Aardman stop-motion comedy ‘Early Man’

For a movie about cavemen, the new Aardman Animations stop-motion animation feature “Early Man” is, ironically, quite evolved. In technical terms, it’s a far cry from writer-director Nick Park’s early “Wallace & Gromit” shorts from the late 1980s and 1990s, when Park himself shot the stories on film and even had a big hand, so to speak, in making the characters move.

And while digital technology has eased the burden of the ever-so-precise medium of stop-motion filmmaking, Park found himself taking a step backward to create the opening scene of “Early Man.” Beginning in prehistoric times, the opening scene is a tribute to stop-motion pioneer Ray Harryhausen that features dinosaurs appropriately named Ray and Harry.

“The whole movie was shot with digital cameras, so it looked immaculate when we shot the whole dinosaur sequence,” Park said in a recent phone conversation from San Francisco. “The sad thing is, we had to distress the footage to make it look like film shot in 1970. So, ironically, we had to put digital dust and grain on the scene and had to make the colors look a bit more like slightly old Technicolor. It seemed criminal to do that since the scene looked so wonderful at the beginning, but that’s what we needed to do to make it look like a Ray Harryhausen movie.”

“Early Man” tells the story of Dug (voice of Eddie Redmayne), who along with his pet warthog Hognob (Park) and tribe, have their primitive existence interrupted by progress, as the villainous Lord Nooth (Tom Hiddleston) and his minions from the Bronze Age City begin to expand his kingdom into the forest. Before he can do so, though, Dug lays down a challenge: If he and his tribe can defeat the Bronze Age City’s formidable soccer club in a match, Nooth must let his primitive neighbors live in peace. The problem is, Dug and company don’t know a thing about soccer, even though his ancestors by happenstance invented the sport.

Dug (voice of Eddie Redmayne) and Hognob (Nick Park) in 'Early Man' (photo Lionsgate

Opening in theaters nationwide on Friday, “Early Man” also stars Maisie Williams (“Game of Thrones”) as the voice of Goona, a spunky citizen of the Bronze Age City who helps Dug’s tribe find their full potential as soccer players.

Given the lighter tone of previous Aardman hits like “Chicken Run,” the Wallace & Gromit adventure “Curse of the Were-Rabbit” and “Shaun the Sheep Movie,” Park, who has won four Oscars for his stop-motion work, knew he had a great way in to lightening the proceedings of “Early Man.” The story is inspired by the beloved worldwide sport of soccer — better known as football outside of the U.S.

“It just struck me as idea — I’m always waiting for the ‘lighting strikes’ ideas that make me stand up and want to make me make the film,” Park said. “I didn’t want to just make a caveman epic. It had to have some sort of different, off-the-wall idea that makes it a bit quirky and a bit Aardman. That’s when I had the idea of, ‘What if cavemen played sports?’ Then I began to think that maybe playing sports was a way of civilizing insolence. If you think about it, it’s true that primitive aggression is channeled into the tribalism that surrounds a sport like soccer.”

Of course, the aggression we see in the family-friendly “Early Man” is very playful and done in a comedic sort of way, which is a hallmark of every Aardman Animations production to date. Rooted in cheeky British humor, Aardman’s films separate themselves from other stop-motion works not only in tone, but in style, given that the characters are molded from clay (hence the reason the company’s films are often referred to as “claymation”).

“Why I love stop-motion with clay, is that it’s done in this sort of style that has kind of humor and charm that comes with it,” Park said.

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And if Aardman keeps that sense of humor and charm that separates itself from most movies, Park is confident that the art of stop-motion will endure, despite ever-burgeoning technological advancements in the field of computer-generated animation.

“I remember 20, 30 years ago with the rise of CGI, we would think, ‘How many days do we have left?'” Park said. “But today, there’s a great flourishing of stop-motion, still, with studios out there like Laika, and filmmakers like Tim Burton and Wes Anderson — who is getting ready to release another stop-motion film — it’s incredible. As for Aardman, I know our style stands out against all those CG films, and there are some great CG films out there.”

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for The KQ92 Morning Show,” “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC), “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere.

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Movie reviews: ‘Fantastic Four,’ ‘Ricki and the Flash,’ ‘Shaun the Sheep’

Fantastic Four (photo -- 20th Century Fox)

By Tim Lammers

“Fantastic Four” (PG-13) 1 1/2 stars (out of four)

An origins story tailored to attract the teen demographic, the Fox-produced Marvel superhero reboot of “Fantastic Four,” unlike the Disney-owned Marvel properties “The Avengers” and most recently, “Ant-Man,” takes itself way too seriously. As a result, “Fantastic Four” comes off as a clunky, overwrought melodrama that could very well be the worst superhero movie in years.

“Fantastic Four” picks up with boy genius Reed Richards in middle school, where he befriends a young Ben Grimm, who helps supply the budding scientist with the parts he needs for his teleporting experinment from his family’s scrap yard. Fast forward to their teen years, Reed (Miles Teller) is recruited to join the Baxter Institute by Dr. Franklin Storm (Reg. E. Cathey) and Sue Storm (Kate Mara) to help implement his ideas into a machine that will teleport objects into alternate universe. This so-called fourth dimension apparently holds the promise of energy and the key to the survival of Earth in the future.

In the company of Victor Von Doom (Tobey Kebbell), Sue’s brother, Johnny Storm (Michael B. Jordan), and Ben (Jamie Bell), Reed takes a test run to the alternate dimension, where the experiment goes horribly awry and alters their physical makeup. Reed suddenly has the ability to stretch his limbs, while Johnny can quickly burst into a ball of flames, and Ben  takes the form of rocks.  Sue, who manages to get the crew back to safety, is contaminated by the teleporting craft upon its disastrous return to Earth, giving her the ability to turn invisible and create force fields. Despite detesting their new abilities, the team will need them to fight off Doom, who harnessed the greatest powers of all of them by absorbing electricity.

While fanboys groused about the 2005 version of “Fantastic Four” and its sequel, “Rise of the Silver Surfer” in 2007, at least the films – which starred Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, Michael Chiklis and Ioan Gruffudd as the “First Family of Superheroes – were entertaining. The tone was lighter and there was a real playfulness to the films, unlike this new reboot, which completely lacks a sense of humor.

On top of that, there’s just no real chemistry between the actors, and the special effects come off as something you’d see in a Roger Corman film from the 1970s. Add in some bad acting and the same old, lame-o storyline where the team fights Dr. Doom yet again, “Fantastic Four” is really lacking in  inspiration. There has to be reason co-creator Stan Lee suspiciously doesn’t turn up in a cameo for this. He’s probably embarrassed.

“Ricki and the Flash” (PG-13) 3 stars (out of four)

Meryl Streep wields a might axe in “Ricki and the Flash,” a tale of redemption about an aging musician who tries to reconnect with her adult children years after she abandoned her family to pursue her rock ‘n’ roll dreams. Scripted by Diablo Cody and directed by Jonathan Demme, “Ricki and the Flash” has a surprisingly weak narrative, yet what it lacks in story it makes up with some stellar performances.

Streep stars as Ricki, a California-based musician by night and grocery cashier by day struggling to get by. Her life is completely turned upside down, though, when she gets a call from her ex-husband, Pete (Kevin Kline), who wants her to return home to Indiana because the couple’s only daughter (Mamie Gummer) was jilted by her new husband and is going through a crisis. Also reuniting with her two estranged adult sons (Sebastian Stan and Nick Westrate), Ricki seeks forgiveness from her family for her past misgivings, even though their wounds run deep.

Streep proves once again that she can virtually nail any role with “Ricki and the Flash,” and from the get-go she comes off like a seasoned rock guitar player and singer. Of course, she has the benefit of being backed by some expert studio musicians like Joe Vitale, as well as Rick Springfield, who is impressive both as Ricki’s sideman on-stage and boyfriend off.

If there’s any problem with Streep’s performance, she comes off as so damn likable that you feel guilty rooting for her, especially considering that Ricki selfishly left her family for her own benefit. Audra McDonald, thankfully, crashes the feel-good party as Pete’s longtime wife and step-mom who raised  the kids, reminding the audience just how much of a lout Ricki really is.

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“Shaun the Sheep Movie” (PG) 4 stars (out of four)

Aardman Animations has molded a new classic with “Shaun the Sheep,” a bleating brilliant stop-motion adventure comedy that easily ranks among the best films of the summer if not the year. Making his big screen debut after a number of years as a hit BBC series,  “Shaun” follows the title character and his fellow flock members on a big city adventure to rescue their owner, Farmer, who is suffering from a bout of amnesia.

Like the TV series, “Shaun the Sheep Movie” doesn’t have any dialogue, yet it. Smart, funny and even a bit poignant, “Shaun” is a shoo-in for a Best Animated Feature Oscar nomination come awards season.

“Dark Places” (R) 2 1/2 stars (out of four)

The page has unfortunately turned in the wrong direction for “Gone Girl” author Gillian Flynn with “Dark Places,” a murder mystery thriller that starts out with a load of potential, but unravels in the film’s third act. Charlize Theron stars as Libby Day, a woman who is forced to confront her past 25 years after the brutal murders of her mother and two sisters in a Kansas farmhouse.  Theron feels one note as the ice-cold Libby, who because of her dwindling finances is forced to take part in the morbid investigation of the murders, which were pinned on her older brother (Tye Sheridan as a teen, Corey Stoll as an adult) but likely committed by someone else.

Like “Gone Girl,” Flynn has crafted a twisty narrative with “Dark Places,” but the film falls apart in the hands of director Gilles Paquet-Brenner, who also adapted the screenplay. By the time “Dark Places” conveniently wraps up, you can’t help but think how much better it would have been under the direction of somebody like “Gone Girl” director David Fincher. Despite a talented cast (which also includes Christina Hendricks and Chloe Grace Moretz), the film is a real disappointment.

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Interview: ‘Shaun the Sheep’ filmmakers talk character’s movie debut

'Shaun the Sheep' (photo - Lionsgate)

By Tim Lammers

Thanks to the likes of the clay-animated “Wallace and Gromit” short films, the hit feature “Chicken Run” and the feature-length Oscar winner “Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit,” London-based  Aardman Animations has no doubt molded a stellar reputation over the years in the world of stop-motion.

And that reputation is sure to grow this Friday when the animation studio releases “Shaun the Sheep Movie,” a whimsical tale about a the shenanigans of a sheep named Shaun and his fellow flock members, a farmer named Farmer, and his sheep dog Bitzer. In the 85-minute adventure, Shaun and his cohorts spring into action when one of their “free days” in the country goes awry and Farmer inadvertently ends up in the big city, suffering from a bout of amnesia.

While the character is making his big screen debut, “Shaun the Sheep Movie” is hardly a grassroots effort by the film’s co-writers and co-directors, Richard Starzak and Mark Burton. A spin-off character from the 1995 “Wallace and Gromit” short film “A Close Shave,” “Shaun the Sheep” was cultivated as a TV series on the BBC in the U.K. in 2007. The duo knew it was only a matter of time before Shaun made the leap to the feature films, mainly because of the bond that developed between the characters as the series progressed.

“As we went on, the characters, including Farmer, who thinks he’s the boss but isn’t; Bitzer, who’s the middle man between the sheep and Farmer; and of course, Shaun, began to feel like a family. Farmer felt like the father; Bitzer, the older sibling; and Shaun the younger sibling,” Starzak said in a recent call from Los Angeles. “It felt like there a good emotional story there with those three, and we felt like we could make a good film.”

While American audiences might not be as familiar with “Shaun the Sheep” as viewers across the pond, Starzak said there are elements in the film that don’t need translation. Chief among the attributes of the characters that have attracted viewers across the board are the character’s eyes — the windows to the soul — which immediately engage viewers.

“Among the things we study at Aardman is acting, but also neurolinguistic programming,” Starzak said. “It tells us how our eyes to access parts of our brains, all move in the same way, so if you can get that worked out with the characters, the audience will know what they are thinking, even on a subconscious level.”

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Communicating through the eyes is a must, considering that the “Shaun the Sheep” movie (and TV show before it) has no dialogue. That’s not to say “Shaun the Sheep Movie” is silent: You’ll hear animal noises and some indiscernible mumbling by the human characters, and an occasional song will help forward the narrative.

“When we started to make the series, we decided to go with no dialogue — and that was for practical reasons,” Starzak said. “Adding dialogue to the animation just slows the process down a great deal.”

The eyes of characters like Shaun and the homeless dog, slip, are particularly effective in “Shaun the Sheep Movie” because not only do they reflect comedic moments in the movie, but act as mirrors that reflect the film’s more emotional moments. Ultimately, the range of emotions projected in “Shaun the Sheep Movie” gives the film much more depth than your average animated film.

“That’s what we want to do — make ’em laugh, make ’em cry — and with the story in this film, that plan worked out really well,” Starzak said. “In order to cry and laugh, you have to care about the characters, so that’s a good sign when you see that happening with audiences.”

The great thing is, Burton and Starzak have found that the film is resonating with audience members of all ages — and that’s a good thing considering the movie was not only made for young kids, but the kid in all of us.

“When we start out, it’s to make a film that makes us laugh. We don’t think of it as dumbing down to kids. Or maybe it is that we have a stupid sense of humor,” Burton said with a laugh. “Whatever it is, it seems like the audience are picking up on it.”

Amazingly, while Burton and Starzak have been with “Shaun the Sheep Movie’s” characters for three years, one frame at a time, they haven’t grown tired of their company. In fact, they still feel very much attached to likes of Shaun, Farmer, Blitzer and company.

“It gets to stage where you know what these characters are thinking in any situation. Part of them becomes quite real in your head. So if anybody is cruel to them, they’ve got me to answer to,” Starzak said with a laugh.

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