Feathers McGraw, the infamous clay penguin, is back for revenge in the first feature-length Wallace & Gromit adventure in almost two decades. 'Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl' sees the inventor duo facing off against McGraw's cunning plan and the unintended consequences of unchecked technological advancement.
A master of disguise, an evil genius with plenty of tricks up his wings and a relentless pursuer of retribution, Feathers McGraw nests among cinema’s great villains without ever having crooned a single chirp.
It’s all in the notorious clay penguin's blank face. McGraw has been slow-cooking his revenge against Wallace and Gromit, Aardman Animations’ inventor-and-dog duo, while serving time at a zoo since “The Wrong Trousers” back in 1993. His plan finally unfolds in “Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl,” the beloved British pair's first feature-length adventure since the Oscar-winning “The Curse of the Were-Rabbit” almost two decades ago. This hilarious and expertly crafted new clay-animation caper begins by reminding us that all those years ago, Wallace and Gromit thwarted McGraw’s attempt to steal an invaluable blue diamond. Yet the malevolent flightless bird with a chip on his plumage isn't the sole antagonist of “Vengeance Most Fowl.” The unchecked implementation of technology in daily menial tasks is just as big of a specter here. The trouble becomes twofold when that technology falls into McGraw’s grasp. Nick Park, the creator of Wallace and Gromit, returns to direct, this time with a veteran animator at the studio, Merlin Crossingham, as his co-director. The mayhem typical to these adventures is set in motion when Wallace — now voiced by Ben Whitehead after Peter Sallis, the character's original voice, died in 2017 — builds Norbot , a comically creepy, artificially intelligent gnome, with the intention of helping Gromit with his gardening work. But once Norbot’s hardware is hacked to carry out crimes and then replicated to create an army of evil gnomes, Gromit must fight back to protect Wallace. The pup appreciates doing things for pleasure, not efficiency, thus the gnomes irk him. One of Aardman’s trademarks is how its films effectively adapt easily recognizable tropes to their wacky characters. Here, sci-fi movies such as “The Terminator” and “The Matrix” read as likely inspirations to the more classic cops-and-robbers aspect of the plot. Tucked inside Aardman's putty preoccupations is a potent philosophical statement about the irreplaceable quality of the human touch. Since the painstaking technique of stop-motion animation relies literally on the artists’ handicraft, this tracks brilliantly. Especially since Wallace and Gromit’s friendship has always been a representation of the struggle between doing things the old-fashioned way and a desire for constant innovation. “Vengeance Most Fowl” preserves the essence of this silly hand-molded universe — Gromit remains as clever as ever and Wallace stays as clueless, if always well-intentioned — while simultaneously striving for more ambitious visual components. Sight gags baked into the production design and gnome puns aplenty make for a ride in which every frame packs a dense layer of comedy, at times conspicuous, others not so much. The team at Aardman knows how to manipulate our expectations for maximum humor, so much that seeing Feathers McGraw swiveling on a chair holding a new pet can yield laugh-out-loud results. The moment is a typical Bondian bad-guy intro, and yet because of the facetiously serious tone and absurd context around it, it’s absolutely sidesplitting. The inept Chief Inspector Mackintosh and up-and-coming copper Mukherjee trying to carry out her investigation by the book complement the mishap-prone ensemble. Park, also the co-writer here with longtime collaborator Mark Burton, has had the foresight to space out the “Wallace & Gromit” productions so that we never feel like they’ve overstayed their welcome. Rather, it's like we get the chance to catch up with old friends we’ve missed. They successfully toe the line between staying faithful to the established formula and the need to innovate just enough to keep it modern, while not diluting the charm with vapid pop-culture references. And though Aardman might implement more digital tools these days, its heroes and foes are still unequivocally human-operated. “There’s some things a machine just can’t do,” says a grinning Wallace at one point, and that’s true both of patting his canine buddy with affection and of art-making itself.
ANIMATION COMEDY TECHNOLOGY VILLAIN BRITISH FILM
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Aardman Invented Whole New Stop-Motion Animation Technique For Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most FowlWallace, Gromit, and a Norbot in Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
Read more »
Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl Trailer Sees Iconic Villain Return For A "Proper Crime Wave" Alongside Evil GnomeGromit cowering behind Wallace in the pantry in Wallace and Gromit Vengeance Most Fowl
Read more »
Feathers McGraw Seeks Retribution in 'Wallace & Gromit Vengeance Most Fowl' TrailerFeathers McGraw in wallace & gromit vengeance most fowl
Read more »
Here's Everything We Learned From the Set of 'Wallace and Gromit Vengeance Most Fowl'wallace-and-gromit-vengeance-most-fowl
Read more »
Wallace & Gromit Fight an Evil Robot Gnome in Vengeance Most Fowl TrailerThe Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl trailer has dropped for the upcoming animated movie from Netflix and Aardman Animations.
Read more »
Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most FowlWallace & Gromit return in a new adventure where Wallace's latest invention, a gardening robot, goes awry.
Read more »




