War Story | |
---|---|
Directed by | Peter Lord |
Produced by | Melanie Cole Alan Gardner Sara Mullock |
Cinematography | Andy MacCormack Tristan Oliver David Sproxton |
Edited by | Helen Garrard |
Production company | |
Release date | 27 September 1989 |
Running time | 5 min |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
War Story is a 1989 animated short film created by Aardman Animations. It was directed by Peter Lord.
The film was commissioned by Channel 4 as part of a 5-part series of Aardman animations called "Lip Synch". The five films in the series were Creature Comforts (1989), Going Equipped (1990), Ident (1990), Next (1990) and War Story (1989). [2] They all used vox pop interviews as their source material. This one is with Bill Perry, a genuine British World War II vet. [3]
The short animated piece uses a real interview as its soundtrack. Bill Perry relates stories about his life, his tilted house, and The Blitz of World War II in Bristol, England. [4]
War Story received a rating of 6.3/10 from 172 users on imdb. [5] Dr. Grob gave the film two and a half stars out of five, praising the “very tongue-in-cheek” sequences, but felt that the film “suffers from a bad soundtrack, and (Perry)’s mumblings are at times very difficult to follow, indeed.” He notes that the “blending of real interviews with original and humorous images would be perfected in ‘Creature Comforts’ by Nick Park, who also animated on this film. In this sense ‘War Story’ is an important step towards Aardman’s mature style, which was to become less serious, and more cartoony, and consequently, more commercially successful.” [6]
This is a list of awards and nominations of War Story.
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1990 | Sara Mullock and Peter Lord | BAFTA Film Award for Best Animated Film | Nominated [7] |
1990 | Peter Lord | Ottawa International Animation Festival Craft Prize for Best Animation | Won [8] |
1990 | Peter Lord | Ottawa International Animation Festival OIAF Award for Best Film Under 10 Minutes | Won [9] |
War Story was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2013. [10]
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Aardman Animations Limited is a British animation studio based in Bristol, England. It is known for films and television series made using stop-motion and clay animation techniques, particularly those featuring its plasticine characters from Wallace and Gromit, Shaun the Sheep, Morph, and Angry Kid. 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.
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Peter Lord CBE is an English animator, director, producer and co-founder of the Academy Award-winning Aardman Animations studio, an animation firm best known for its clay-animated films and shorts, particularly those featuring plasticine duo Wallace and Gromit. He also directed Chicken Run along with Nick Park from DreamWorks Animation, and The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! from Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation which was nominated for Best Animated Feature at the 85th Academy Awards.
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Going Equipped is an animated short film created by Aardman Animations. It was directed by Peter Lord.
Lip Synch is a series of five 1989-1990 short films made by Aardman Animations which used vox pops as inspiration for their subject matter. They were commissioned by Channel 4. Nick Park's contribution to the series was the film Creature Comforts, which later won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short of 1990. Channel 4 screened the films as part of their Four-Mations UK season in November 1990.
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Down and Out is a 1977 short film created by Aardman Animations. It is part of the Animated Conversations series. In this short, creators David Sproxton and Peter Lord "applied the groundbreaking technique of using recorded conversations of real people as the basis for the script".
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Aardman Animations is an animation studio in Bristol, England that produces stop motion and computer-animated features, shorts, TV series and adverts.