A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | |
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Directed by |
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Screenplay by |
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Story by | Richard Starzak |
Based on | |
Produced by | Paul Kewley |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Charles Copping |
Edited by | Sim Evan-Jones |
Music by | Tom Howe |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | StudioCanal |
Release dates |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Countries |
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Budget | $25 million |
Box office | $47.8 million [1] [2] |
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon is a 2019 animated science fiction comedy film produced by Aardman Animations. The film is directed by Richard Phelan and Will Becher (in their feature directorial debuts) and written by Mark Burton and Jon Brown, based on an idea by Richard Starzak. It is a stand-alone sequel to Shaun the Sheep Movie (2015) and is based on the claymation television series Shaun the Sheep , a spin-off from the Wallace & Gromit short film A Close Shave . The film stars Justin Fletcher, John Sparkes, Kate Harbour, and Rich Webber reprising their voice roles from the series and the previous film, whilst new cast members include Amalia Vitale, David Holt and Chris Morrell. In the film, Shaun and the flock encounter an alien with extraordinary powers who crash-lands near Mossy Bottom Farm. They have to find a way to return her home in order to prevent her falling into the hands of the Ministry for Alien Detection. [3]
Plans for a sequel began in 2015, following the release of the first film. The film officially began production following the end of production of Early Man (2018). Richard Starzak was announced to return as director, however, in November 2018, the film was later announced to be directed by Becher and Phelan.
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon was released in cinemas on 18 October 2019 in the United Kingdom, and on Netflix in the United States on 14 February 2020. The film received positive reviews from critics who praised its animation, characters and humour and grossed $43.1 million against a $25 million budget. It received a nomination for an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, and three nominations at the Annie Awards.
In the town of Mossingham a man named John and his Border Collie Bingo discover the landing of a UFO. On nearby Mossy Bottom Farm, Shaun and the flock attempt to pass time with several dangerous activities, only for sheepdog Bitzer to stop them. After being banned from having a barbecue for dinner, Shaun decides to order three pizzas, but when the pizzas arrive, the flock discover that the boxes are completely empty.
The next morning, Shaun discovers a trail of pizza crusts and encounters the visitor. The visitor introduces herself as Lu-La, an tentacled dog-like alien from the planet To-Pa who can mimic sounds and levitate objects. When Shaun introduces her to the flock, she causes mischief with a combine harvester, damaging it while transforming a field behind the farm house into unintentional crop circles. Taking advantage of the recent news of alien sightings, the Farmer decides to create an alien-based theme park, "Farmageddon", in which he can earn money to afford a new harvester.
The Ministry of Alien Detection's (M.A.D.) leader, Agent Red, who has been obsessed with proving the existence of aliens since seeing two of them as a child, investigates the UFO claims. Meanwhile, Lu-La and Shaun track down the UFO, followed by Bitzer, who spots them while posting flyers for "Farmageddon" in an alien costume. On board the UFO, Lu-La transmits her memories to Shaun, revealing that she is actually a child and accidentally launched her parents' UFO while playing on it. They realise they need an egg-shaped device that was dropped by Lu-La when leaving the UFO, to activate it. M.A.D. mistakes Bitzer for an alien and follows him to the UFO, capturing it with Shaun, Lu-La, and Bitzer still on board. They also find the device and take both it and the UFO back to their secret base.
At the base, Shaun and Lu-La slip out and manage to retrieve the device, successfully restarting the ship and escaping the base. They set a course for To-Pa; en route, Shaun ignores Bitzer's instructions not to press the ship's buttons and causes it to crash-land back at the farm. With the UFO destroyed, Lu-La is left heartbroken. Feeling guilty, Shaun discovers that the device can be used to send a distress signal if he reaches a high enough point. Shaun suggests that he and Lu-La attempt to reach the top of the Farmer's "Farmageddon" theme park tower to make contact.
With the help of the flock and Bitzer, Shaun and Lu-La climb the tower while the Farmer launches a show at the theme park. Meanwhile, Red arrives and chases Shaun and Lu-La up the tower with a mecha. Shaun manages to knock Red off the tower and successfully sends a distress signal to To-Pa. Lu-La's parents, Ub-Do and Me-Ma, quickly arrive and reunite with their daughter. Red eventually welcomes the aliens, recognizing them as the aliens she saw as a child. Shaun, Bitzer and the flock bid the aliens farewell, while the "Farmageddon" theme park and show receive rave reviews as the entire incident is regarded as part of the show's special effects. On their way back to To-Pa, the aliens discover the Farmer has accidentally boarded their UFO, prompting them to take him back to Earth.
In a mid-credits scene, Shaun, Bitzer, and the flock play with a frisbee, while the Farmer tries out his new harvester; the frisbee gets caught in the harvester's machinery and causes it to explode.
In a post-credits scene, one of the hazmats enters a black room with a piano. He then removes his suit and reveals himself to be Brian Cox. He plays a failed attempt of "Things Can Only Get Better" on the piano after being interrupted by Timmy, who unplugs the piano and tells him to be quiet.
On 14 September 2015, StudioCanal announced it was working with Aardman on a sequel to Shaun the Sheep Movie. [5] On 25 October 2016, under the working title, Shaun the Sheep Movie 2, Aardman confirmed a sequel would go into pre-production in January 2017 with Richard Starzak, co-director of the first film, returning [6] as well financial support by Creative Europe MEDIA.
In November 2018, it was announced that Aardman employees Richard Phelan and Will Becher would be co-directing the film, with Starzak still attached as director, due to Peter Lord and David Sproxton giving majority ownership of the company to employees to keep it independent. However, Phelan and Becher ended up being the directors of the final cut, while Starzak received both an executive producer and story by credit. Production began in November 2017 and ended in June 2019.
The music for the film is composed by Tom Howe. It was initially believed Ilan Eshkeri, who composed the music for Shaun the Sheep Movie , would return, but these rumours were false.
The theme tune for the film is titled "Lazy" and is written by Justin Hayward-Young, Yoann Intonti, Timothy Lanham, Freddie Cowan, Arni Hjorvar Arnason and Cole Marsden Greif-Neill and performed by The Vaccines and Kylie Minogue. Furthermore, like the previous film, the film incorporates a remix of the series theme tune "Life's a Treat". Both Mark Thomas and Vic Reeves return to perform the remix and are joined by Nadia Rose.
The film was first released in Germany on 26 September 2019 and in on 18 October 2019 in the United Kingdom. [7] It was intended to be theatrically released in the US on 13 December 2019 by Lionsgate, but due to the box office failure of Early Man , the film was acquired by Netflix, who released it digitally on 14 February 2020. [8]
In the United States, it was released on Blu-ray and DVD on 18 October 2022 by Shout! Factory. [9] In the United Kingdom, the film was released on Ultra HD Blu-ray and Blu-ray by StudioCanal. [10]
In January 2018, it was announced that the teaser of the film would play theatrically in front of another Aardman film, Early Man, worldwide, revealing the film's new title and synopsis. [11] On 7 December 2018, Aardman announced through on social media that the teaser trailer for the film along with release dates would be arriving the following week. The teaser trailer was released online on 11 December 2018, followed by the first official trailer released on 1 April 2019. [12] On 3 July 2019 the second trailer was released. [13]
As of 29 December 2019, A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon has made $43.1 million against a $25 million budget, [14] with the top-grossing countries being the UK ($9.2 million), Germany ($6.7 million) and France ($5.4 million). It currently ranks as the 16th highest-grossing stop-motion animated film of all time.
In the UK, A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon grossed $1.7 million on its three-day opening weekend, finishing in third behind Maleficent: Mistress of Evil ($4.2 million) and Joker ($7.1 million). On its second weekend, the film dropped by 20.3% with $1.3 million, finishing in fifth. On its third weekend, it dropped 2.8% and 55.7% on its fourth.
The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes records 96% positive reviews based on 78 critics and an average rating of 7.5/10. The critical consensus reads, "A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon retains the charm of its small-screen source material while engagingly expanding the title character's world." [15] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 79 out of 100, based on 17 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [16]
Guy Lodge of Variety , who reviewed the previous film, gave the film a positive review, saying, "The great pleasure of these films' bright, largely wordless slapstick is that it plays universally whilst accommodating all manner of obsessive, idiosyncratic detailing at the edges." [17]
Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times who also reviewed the previous film, gave the film a positive review, saying "That all these characters and then some have distinct personalities is all the more remarkable because no one uses actual words, instead making do quite nicely with assorted grunts, groans and indefinable grumbles." [18]
Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com gave 3.5/4 stars to the movie, saying "If you like anything Aardman, or anything funny really, you should make an effort to find it." [19]
Carlos Aguilar of The Wrap gave the film a positive review, saying, "A quick-witted and uproarious homage to the sci-fi genre like only the stop-motion geniuses at Aardman Animations could imagine and handcraft." [20]
Award | Date of Ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result |
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Academy Awards [21] | 25 April 2021 | Best Animated Feature | Richard Phelan, Will Becher and Paul Kewley | Nominated |
Annie Awards [22] | 16 April 2021 | Best Animated Feature – Independent | Paul Kewley | Nominated |
Writing in an Animated Feature Production | Mark Burton and Jon Brown | Nominated | ||
Editorial in an Animated Feature Production | Sim Evan-Jones and Adrian Rhodes | Nominated | ||
Austin Film Critics Association [23] | 19 March 2021 | Best Animated Film | A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | Nominated |
Art Directors Guild Awards [24] | 10 April 2021 | Excellence in Production Design for an Animated Film | Matt Perry, Matt Sanders and Richard Edmunds | Nominated |
British Academy Film Awards | 2 February 2020 | Best Animated Film | Will Becher, Richard Phelan and Paul Kewley | Nominated |
British Animation Awards | 12 March 2020 | Best Long Form | Will Becher and Richard Phelan | Won |
British Independent Film Awards [25] | 1 December 2019 | Best Effects | Howard Jones | Won |
Douglas Hickox Award | Will Becher and Richard Phelan | Nominated | ||
Cinema Audio Society [26] | 17 April 2021 | Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Motion Picture – Animated | Dom Boucher, Chris Burdon, Gilbert Lake, Adrian Rhodes, Alan Meyerson and Ant Bayman | Nominated |
Chicago Film Critics Association [27] | 21 December 2020 | Best Animated Film | A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | Nominated |
Critics' Choice Super Awards [28] | 10 January 2021 | Best Animated Movie | Nominated | |
2021 Gold Derby Awards [29] | 16 April 2021 | Best Animated Film | Will Becher, Richard Phelan and Paul Kewley | Nominated |
2020 Golden Tomato Awards [30] | 11 March 2021 | Best Animated Movie 2020 | A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | 4th Place |
Hollywood Music in Media Awards [31] | 27 January 2021 | Best Original Score in an Animated Film | Tom Howe | Nominated |
Music + Sound Awards UK | 21 July 2020 | Best Original Composition in a Feature Film | Nominated | |
National Film Awards UK | 1 July 2020 | Best Animated Film | Will Becher and Richard Phelan | Nominated |
London Critics Circle Film Awards | 30 January 2020 | Technical Achievement Award | Nominated | |
Online Association of Female Film Critics [32] | 1 March 2021 | Best Animated Film | A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | Nominated |
Satellite Awards | 19 December 2019 | Best Motion Picture – Animated or Mixed Media | Will Becher and Richard Phelan | Nominated |
World Soundtrack Awards [33] | 24 October 2020 | Discovery of the Year | Tom Howe | Nominated |
To promote the release of the movie, an updated version of the previously released Home Sheep Home games entitled Home Sheep Home: Farmageddon Party Edition was released on Nintendo Switch and Steam in October 2019. [34] It was released in Japan in August 2020 by Greenlight Games. It was also released on PS4 and Xbox in 2023. [35] This version contains a party mode that offers several minigames to play against other players, all hosted by Lu-La. [36]
Wallace & Gromit is a British stop-motion animated comedy franchise created by Nick Park and produced by Aardman Animations. It consists of four short films, two feature-length films and has spawned numerous spin-offs and TV adaptations. The series centres on Wallace, a good-natured, eccentric, cheese-loving inventor, and Gromit, his loyal and intelligent anthropomorphic beagle. The first short film, A Grand Day Out, was finished and released in 1989. Wallace was voiced by actor Peter Sallis until 2010 when he was succeeded by Ben Whitehead. While Wallace speaks very often, Gromit is largely silent and has no dialogue, communicating through facial expressions and body language.
Aardman Animations Limited is a British animation studio based in Bristol. It is known for films and television series made using stop motion and clay animation techniques, particularly those featuring its plasticine characters from Wallace & Gromit, Chicken Run, Shaun the Sheep, and Morph. After some experimental computer-animated short films during the late 1990s, beginning with Owzat (1997), Aardman entered the computer animation market with Flushed Away (2006). As of February 2020, it had earned $1.1 billion worldwide, with an average $135.6 million per film.
Rex the Runt is a stop-motion adult animated claymation pixilation comedy series, primarily consisting of a television show and two short films produced by Aardman Animations and Egmont Imagination for BBC Bristol, with EVA Entertainment co-producing the first series. Its main characters are four plasticine dogs: Rex, Wendy, Bad Bob and Vince.
Super 8 is a 2011 American science fiction thriller film written and directed by J.J. Abrams and co-produced by Steven Spielberg. The film stars Joel Courtney, Elle Fanning, and Kyle Chandler in lead roles. Set in 1979, the plot follows a group of young teenagers who witness a mysterious train derailment while filming their own Super 8 movie. As strange occurrences unfold in their small Ohio town, they realize that something dangerous has been unleashed from the train.
Shaun the Sheep is an independent stop-motion animated silent children's television series which is developed by Aardman Animations. A spin-off in the Wallace & Gromit franchise, the series focuses on the adventures of Shaun, the eponymous sheep previously starring in A Close Shave, as the leader of his flock on an English farm. The series premiered on 5 March 2007 on CBBC in the UK, also airing on BBC Two. Since 2020, the series is streamed globally on Netflix. In March 2024, it was announced that the seventh series is in development and will premiere in 2025. With 170 episodes over 6 series, Shaun the Sheep is one of the longest-running animated series in British television.
Richard Starzak, previously known as Richard "Golly" Goleszowski, is an English animator, screenwriter, and film director.
Mark Burton is a British television writer, screenwriter, television producer, film producer, and film director.
Carla Shelley is an English producer for Aardman Animations and Birdbox Studio.
Timmy Time is a British stop motion animated television programme for preschoolers created and produced by Bob the Builder producer Jackie Cockle for the BBC's CBeebies and produced by Aardman Animations. It started broadcasting in the United Kingdom on 6 April 2009. It is a spin-off of Shaun the Sheep, itself a spin-off of the Wallace & Gromit film A Close Shave (1995).
Paul is a 2011 comic science fiction road film directed by Greg Mottola from a screenplay by Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. Starring Pegg and Frost, with the voice and motion capture of Seth Rogen as the title character, the film follows two science fiction geeks who come across an alien. Together, they help the alien escape from the Secret Service agents who are pursuing him so that he can return to his home planet. The film is a parody of other science-fiction films, especially those of Steven Spielberg, as well as of science fiction fandom in general.
Shaun the Sheep is an adventure game developed by Art Co., Ltd and published by D3Publisher's America and Europe branches for the Nintendo DS handheld console. The game is based on the popular Aardman Animations series of the same name and was released on September 23, 2008 in the United States. In the game, Shaun must find and rescue the sheep before the farmer gets home.
The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! is a 2012 animated swashbuckler comedy film produced by Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation in association with Aardman Animations, and distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing. The second and final collaborative project between Sony and Aardman, it is Aardman's first book-based movie as well as their first stop-motion feature film since Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), and Sony Pictures Entertainment's first stop-motion film. The film was directed by Peter Lord, co-directed by Jeff Newitt, and written by Gideon Defoe, based on Defoe's 2004 novel The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists. The film stars the voices of Hugh Grant, David Tennant, Imelda Staunton, Martin Freeman, Salma Hayek, and Jeremy Piven, and follows a crew of amateur pirates in their attempt to win the Pirate of the Year competition.
Shaun the Sheep Movie is a 2015 animated adventure comedy film written and directed by Richard Starzak and Mark Burton. It is based on the British television series Shaun the Sheep, in turn a spin-off of the Wallace & Gromit film A Close Shave (1995). Starring the voices of Justin Fletcher, John Sparkes, and Omid Djalili, the film follows Shaun and his flock navigating the big city to save their amnesiac farmer, while an overzealous animal control worker pursues the group. It was produced by Aardman Animations, and financed by StudioCanal in association with Anton Capital Entertainment.
Shaun in the City was a public charity arts trail organised by Wallace & Gromit's Children's Foundation and Aardman Animations, in which 120 giant, artist and celebrity-decorated fibreglass sculptures of Shaun the Sheep were displayed in famous locations and green spaces around London and Bristol. The first 50 Shaun sculptures appeared in London from 28 March to 31 May 2015, with a further 70 Shaun sculptures appearing in Bristol from 6 July to 31 August 2015.
Shaun the Sheep: The Farmer's Llamas is a British stop-motion animated television special based on the television program Shaun the Sheep by Nick Park. Produced by Paul Kewley and John Woolley and directed by Jay Grace, the programme made its debut on Amazon Video in the United States on 13 November 2015 and on BBC One in the United Kingdom on 26 December 2015, Boxing Day. The special follows Shaun the Sheep as he gets the Farmer to bring home three Llamas from the County Fair. Like the television series, there is no significant dialogue, as the majority of the screenplay takes place through visual implications or implied dialogue.
Aardman Animations is an animation studio in Bristol, England that produces stop motion and computer-animated features, shorts, TV series and adverts.
Tom Howe is a British composer and musician who has worked on over 100 films and television series. Growing up in a musical family, Howe was classically trained on piano, clarinet and guitar.
Will Becher is a British animator and film director. He is best known for his directorial debut A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2019), which earned him an Academy Award and BAFTA Award nomination.