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Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit 2005 123movies

Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit 2005 123movies

Something bunny is going on...Sep. 04, 200585 Min.
         
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit 2005 123movies, Full Movie Online – It’s ‘vege-mania’ in Wallace and Gromit’s neighborhood, and our two enterprising chums are cashing in with their humane pest-control outfit, “Anti-Pesto.” With only days to go before the annual Giant Vegetable Competition, business is booming, but Wallace & Gromit are finding out that running a “humane” pest control outfit has its drawbacks as their West Wallaby Street home fills to the brim with captive rabbits. Suddenly, a huge, mysterious, veg-ravaging “beast” begins attacking the town’s sacred vegetable plots at night, and the competition hostess, Lady Tottington, commissions Anti-Pesto to catch it and save the day. Lying in wait, however, is Lady Tottington’s snobby suitor, Victor Quartermaine, who’d rather shoot the beast and secure the position of local hero-not to mention Lady Tottingon’s hand in marriage. With the fate of the competition in the balance, Lady Tottington is eventually forced to allow Victor to hunt down the vegetable chomping marauder. Little does she know that Victor’s real intent could have dire consequences for her …and our two heroes..
Plot: Cheese-loving eccentric Wallace and his cunning canine pal, Gromit, investigate a mystery in Nick Park’s animated adventure, in which the lovable inventor and his intrepid pup run a business ridding the town of garden pests. Using only humane methods that turn their home into a halfway house for evicted vermin, the pair stumble upon a mystery involving a voracious vegetarian monster that threatens to ruin the annual veggie-growing contest.
Smart Tags: #dog #hunting #wallace_character #angry_mob #animal_in_title #animal_driving_a_car #competition #pest_control #giant_vegetable #rabbit #garden #wallace_and_gromit #human_becoming_an_animal #stop_motion_animation #full_moon #wilhelm_scream #animal_that_acts_human #vegetable_garden #spoof #church #cheese


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Ratings:

7.5/10 Votes: 136,639
95% | RottenTomatoes
87/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 2219 Popularity: 22.77 | TMDB

Reviews:

5 years in the making – very impressive
What-ho! This one is jolly good. I say jolly good, ol’ chap. Or should I say “ol’ bean”? My mastery of British terminology is a little dusty. Anyway, my biker boots and I walked into this screening with no prior viewing experience of Wallace and Gromit. I’m happy to say that my boots and I walked out pleased to have made their acquaintance.

While not as adult-accessible as Toy Story, W & G still manages to be clever enough to provide the grown ups with a little humor that will most definitely soar over the heads of the young ‘uns who are too busy guffawing at the Were-rabbit’s belches to have any clue that something is amiss. I highly suggest that you pay close attention any time you see books or words on the screen because there are quick glimpses of puns that you’ll miss if you aren’t paying attention. My favorite is a book of monsters that refers to the Loch Ness Monster as “tourist trappus.” If you’ve ever been known to say, “I can really relate to Kevin Federline,” or if you’re just illiterate then not only will you miss out on these jokes, but you probably should be spending your time learning to read instead of going to movies. Consider this a public service announcement.

The most impressive aspect about W & G is its clay animation. Thanks to the tedious process, it took FIVE YEARS to finish the film! According to the press notes, there were some days when the optimum goal was to merely accomplish 10 seconds of completed film. Folks, I sometimes have trouble finding the motivation to finish responding to a handful of emails or adding captions to pictures for my reviews (a point that is proved by a lack of pictures in this review); so I can’t even imagine having the required patience for that.

I really like the rough, hands-on quality of the claymation figures. The fact that you can see fingerprints in the clay is a nice, personal touch. How can you not be impressed with clay characters that show more expression and emotion than Paul Walker and Keanu Reeves combined? The Curse of the Were-rabbit is, as director Nick Park calls it, the world’s first vegetarian horror movie that should entertain both kids and adults alike. Relying on (and as a male who prides himself in his shaggy-haired, cool-bearded masculinity I hesitate to use this word) cute and (oh man, I probably shouldn’t use this word either) lovable characters rather than outdated M.C. Hammer references, W & G is proof that DreamWorks can create entertaining animation when it chooses cleverness over the cheap joke.

Review By: TheMovieMark
Excellent entertainment, superb characters and great detail
There are a few aspects to Park’s movies, and in particular Wallace & Gromit, that I would say make them so great. The first is subtlety and observation, the flagship of which is the character of Gromit. He doesn’t speak, he doesn’t make any noise, all he has are his eyes, brow, and body posture, and with these he commands the film. Park manages to give us everything we need from this silent character through his expression. The comedy and the emotion is conveyed through the subtlest of movements and it works superbly well.

Watching the movie you have to be aware of the entire screen. Normally you’ll be guided to things in the movies, the screen won’t be cluttered too much, there won’t be many things to take your eyes away from the main clue or action. Park seems to need to look the other way with his movies. He throws extra content at his audience, there’s action in the background, to the side of the screen, even off screen, and there’s just about always something in the foreground to catch your eye. His movies are about multiple viewing and discovery, they’re layered with jokes and ancillary action.

Throughout this film there are layers of things happening on screen, jokes in the foreground maybe on a jar label and background shadows that give away action. You can imagine that for Park the movies has always been an event, and the movies he loves are ones which he wants to watch again and again. This is what shows in his movies, and in through his most beloved characters.

Then there are the bizarre and wacky inventions which Wallace make, something which is reflected in the storyline and the twists and turns of the plot, everything is bizarre and off the wall, yet it seems so perfectly normal in this world. You can imagine that inside Park is the mind of Wallace.

There’s also one more thing that make these movies so unique, and that’s the modelling and precise hand animation. I must admit I was concerned when I knew Dreamworks was involved in the making of this movie, and I thought that they would bring their computer animation experience to the forefront. What I was scared of was Wallace & Gromit becoming CGI entities, or at the smallest, CGI being used to clean up the feel that the modelling brought to the movie.

Not so. You can still see thumbprints and toolmarks on the characters, and far from distracting from the movie, this just adds so much real feeling to it and a feeling of physical depth to the characters and the scene on screen.

So what of the movie? Well I must say that the plot twist was something I had thought about well before the film was in the cinema and it came as no surprise, but that did not affect my enjoyment one little bit. Actually watching the twist unfold and the comic timing of the discovery and reactions was everything, and it had me just as sucked in as if it was a thriller, yet all the time I was laughing.

Watching the movie was fascinating in various ways. To see the animation completed, how wild the inventions are, how Wallace is going to get into trouble and Gromit get him out, where all the cross references are in the movie, and where all the jokes are! I must admit afterwards talking with my friends I couldn’t believe how much I had missed.

There’s something different in this movie than with the others, there’s a new level of adult humour in here, and I don’t mean rude jokes (although there are a couple that are just so British you can’t help laughing), I mean jokes that simply fly over kids heads but slap adults in the face. The kind you are used to seeing come out of somewhere like Pixar. This just adds even more appeal to the movie.

Okay though, let me try and be a bit negative here. I didn’t notice the voices in this movie, you know how you usually listen to the actors and see if you can recognise them? Well I was just too wrapped up in the movie to care or to notice who they were…okay, that’s not negative. Let me try again. The main plot wasn’t as strong and gripping as I’d expected, and I found myself being caught up in the side stories and the characters themselves…again…that’s not a bad thing, the film was just so much rich entertainment.

I honestly can’t think of a bad thing to say about this movie, probably the worst thing I could say is that the title sequence at the end is quite repetitive…until the final title! Really, that’s the worst I can say.

The story is a lot of fun, well set-up, well written, well executed. There’s lot’s of fantastic characters in here, not just Wallace & Gromit. There’s so much happening on screen, so many references and jokes (check out the dresses of Lady Tottingham), cheese jokes everywhere, jokes for all the family. The characters are superbly absorbing and you’ll find that you’ve taken to them before you realise. There’s just so much in this movie for everyone.

There’s so much I could say and write about, but I know it will quickly turn into a backslapping exercise for Park and Aardman, it would also just turn into a series of “this bit was really funny” and “there’s a bit when…”, and what I would rather do is tell you that this is a superb movie, to go see it, and to experience the whole thing for yourselves. I will say though that the bunnies are excellent!

Review By: PyrolyticCarbon

Other Information:

Original Title Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Release Date 2005-09-04
Release Year 2005

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 25 min (85 min)
Budget 30000000
Revenue 192610372
Status Released
Rated G
Genre Animation, Adventure, Comedy
Director Steve Box, Nick Park
Writer Steve Box, Nick Park, Mark Burton
Actors Peter Sallis, Helena Bonham Carter, Ralph Fiennes
Country United Kingdom, United States
Awards Won 1 Oscar. 40 wins & 25 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix DTS, Dolby Digital, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1 (35mm) (Denmark), 1.85 : 1 (35mm) (Finland), 1.85 : 1 (35mm) (Norway), 1.85 : 1
Camera Mitchell BNC, Canon K35, Cooke Cinetal and Varotal Lenses
Laboratory Technicolor, London, UK (prints)
Film Length 2,325.5 m (5 reels)
Negative Format 35 mm (Fuji Super F-125T 8532, Super F-500T 8572)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Spherical (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision 2383)

Original title Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
TMDb Rating 7.018 2,219 votes

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