How directors Nick Park and Merlin Crossingham combine comedy, heart and a light commentary on our 'love affair with ...
The "Wallace and Gromit" team unpack how they designed and animated the happy, nifty Norbot from "Vengeance Most Fowl." ...
Joining me today for this week's episode of my Deadline video series Behind the Lens is the brilliant team behind one of the ...
Now, two decades after the release of the pair’s maiden full-length effort (Wallace & Gromit: Curse of the Were-Rabbit) in 2005, man and dog have returned in a new feature film that premiered on ...
Feathers McGraw is, arguably, one of the most iconic screen villains of all time – and without speaking a single word. The character, a penguin disguising himself as a rooster, fist appeared in Nick ...
Wallace is an inventor, Gromit his loyal (and smarter ... And the winner is... Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005) The best of the best. Aardman’s first full-length film took them decades to ...
Vengeance Most Fowl” directors Nick Park and Merlin Crossingham discuss their Best Animated Feature Film Oscar nomination and the popularity of the film’s villain, Feathers McGraw.
The return of evil penguin Feathers McGraw from Academy Award-winning short The Wrong Trousers, is up for the best animated feature.
Everyone’s favourite eccentric inventor and his canine companion are heading to Hollywood on the back of the success of their Christmas comeback.
The first Wallace and Gromit feature film, The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005) was also nominated, and went on to win the Best Animated Feature. Director Merlin Crossingham tweeted: “Oscar ...
After their first film appearance in more than 15 years, Wallace and Gromit returned in Vengeance ... a character who was also in The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit, while Everybody’s Talking About ...
Wallace & Gromit: A Close Shave won the same award in 1996, and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit won best animated feature in 2005. The latest Oscar nod for Wallace & Gromit ...