Current:Home > FinanceIt took 23 years, but a 'Chicken Run' sequel has finally hatched-InfoLens
It took 23 years, but a 'Chicken Run' sequel has finally hatched
View Date:2024-12-23 15:26:07
Fans of the movie Chicken Run need wait no longer. Aardman's sequel is finally here after 23 years.
Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget premieres on Netflix on December 15.
The same studio behind Wallace and Gromit and Shaun The Sheep, Aardman is known for its stop-motion, clay animation and its cheeky British humor. Whereas Chicken Run was a spoof of the 1963 movie The Great Escape, Dawn of the Nugget is a Bond-style heist movie with some of The Truman Show's satire.
"A kind of Chicken Impossible," says Nugget director Sam Fell, "and it's kind of comic because you haven't got Tom Cruise. You've got Babs and Bunty. These chickens [are] the most unlikely action heroes."
So why the wait?
"We're just sort of slow filmmakers," says Fell unapologetically. "You've heard of the slow food movement. We're the slow film movement."
While there is some use of CGI, Dawn of the Nugget retains Aardman's trademark stop-motion, clay animation. Sculpting those birds takes time and patience. For crowd scenes, more than 800 chicken wings were made and more than 150,000 feathers were hand painted. Most of the clay puppets each have a set of 14 mouths.
Clay shortage?
The English factory that made the clay Aardman uses recently went out of business. Alarming headlines implied that Aardman was "running out of clay."
Fell says that's not true. Aardman bought the company's "whole supply" and they have enough for the next five years. But he says the consistency of the clay works particularly well with animation, so they're "working on a recipe and figuring out how to make it in bulk."
"It's a very, very slight threat," he jokes, "like an iceberg about 100 miles in the distance, you know. Don't worry. We're not going to crash into it."
Hatching a million dollar masterpiece
Co-written and co-directed by Peter Lord and Nick Park, Chicken Run was Aardman's first, full-length feature film when it came out in 2000. At the time, it was a small company that put everything it had into the movie, which went on to make $225 million worldwide according to the studio.
It became one of those movies that gains fans years after its release. "I probably watched it about five times," says 11 year old Atia Kampstra of Stratford, Wisc. With 21 pet chickens and her role as editor of Chicken Feed News, Kampstra is squarely in the Chicken Run demo. She loves how the chickens in the movie beat the odds. "Even though they have like the worst circumstances, they'll still figure out a way to do anything."
Chicken Run was the first DVD Aron Steinke ever purchased when it came out in 2000. He was 18 at the time and says he was impressed that the heroes in the movie are mostly female. "You might not even remember that this is actually about women's collective power," he says. "You could even, like, parallel it to, you know, a unionized workforce in the modern age." Today Steinke writes graphic novels for kids.
Fell says 23 years ago the Aardman filmmakers were totally unprepared for Chicken Run's success. "So when it came out and it was very popular, you know, the guys at DreamWorks said what's the next one? And they were like, well, we haven't really got one," he explains. Some of the creative team from the first movie are now working on a new Wallace and Gromit movie.
The Truman Show reference
Without giving too much away, the heroic chickens in the sequel must rescue their flock from a chicken factory.
"The reality of what goes on inside an industrial facility, like it's really bleak," notes Fell whose credits include Laika's ParaNorman and Aardman's Flushed Away. He says an early draft of the script depicted the chicken factory as a kind of prison with cages. "And it was just too grim to be honest."
Instead he turned the chicken factory into a kind of creepy, brightly colored Disneyland for chickens. The free-range "Fun-Land Farms" is just a little too happy. The birds are having so much fun bouncing on marshmallows to realize their fate. Fell says he was thinking about The Truman Show, a satire of the kind of fake happiness of reality TV or antiseptic suburbia. He says he wanted the factory to feel "deliberately unreal."
Birds of a feather stick together
Like the first one, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget is "a film about community," says Fell.
That spirit seems to run throughout Aardman. Co-founder Peter Lord told the AFP the company recently became employee-owned.
"We could have sold it to some media giant and made a shed-load of money," Lord said, "But then what? They'd sell it on, and eventually the thing that is so precious to us would become a commodity for other people to asset strip."
This story was edited for digital and broadcast by Rose Friedman. The audio story was produced by Isabella Gomez Sarmiento
veryGood! (497)
Related
- 'Cowboy Carter' collaborators to be first country artists to perform at Rolling Loud
- Jada Pinkett Smith Reveals Why She and Will Smith Separated & More Bombshells From Her Book Worthy
- California taxpayers get extended federal, state tax deadlines due to 2023 winter storms
- EU leaders seek harmony at a virtual summit after cacophony over response to the Israel-Hamas war
- Florida Man Arrested for Cold Case Double Murder Almost 50 Years Later
- Los Angeles hit with verdict topping $13 million in death of man restrained by police officers
- Pan American Games set to open in Chile with many athletes eyeing spots at the Paris Olympics
- EU leaders seek harmony at a virtual summit after cacophony over response to the Israel-Hamas war
- Watch a rescuer’s cat-like reflexes pluck a kitten from mid-air after a scary fall
- Man faces misdemeanor for twice bringing guns to Wisconsin state Capitol, asking to see governor
Ranking
- College football top five gets overhaul as Georgia, Miami both tumble in US LBM Coaches Poll
- Wisconsin Republicans withhold university pay raises in fight over school diversity funding
- Federal judge imposes limited gag order on Trump in 2020 election interference case
- Even Beethoven got bad reviews. John Malkovich reads them aloud as 'The Music Critic'
- Stop What You're Doing—Moo Deng Just Dropped Her First Single
- Ja'Marr Chase Always Open merch available on 7-Eleven website; pendant is sold out
- Schumer, Romney rush into Tel Aviv shelter during Hamas rocket attack
- New Yorkers claimed $1 million prizes from past Powerball, Mega Millions drawings
Recommendation
-
Tennis Channel suspends reporter after comments on Barbora Krejcikova's appearance
-
Travis Barker's Son Landon Barker Shares His Struggles With Alcohol
-
Los Angeles hit with verdict topping $13 million in death of man restrained by police officers
-
Justice Barrett expresses support for a formal US Supreme Court ethics code in Minnesota speech
-
Florida State can't afford to fire Mike Norvell -- and can't afford to keep him
-
Mandy Moore Reveals What She Learned When 2-Year-Old Son Gus Had Gianotti-Crosti Syndrome
-
Jada Pinkett Smith bares all about marriage in interview, book: 'Hell of a rugged journey'
-
Fijian leader hopes Australian submarines powered by US nuclear technology will enhance peace