The Star Malaysia - Star2

Poultry in motion, again

Chicken Run, the successful stop-motion animated film, is finally getting a sequel 20 years later.

- By JAMIE LANG

Twenty years to the day after its theatrical release, Aardman Animation Studios has confirmed it will produce a Chicken Run sequel, this time backed by netflix, who will distribute the film globally outside of China.

The sequel announceme­nt was delivered during an Annecy Making Of panel on the festival’s digital platform. The sequel has long been rumoured, though netflix’s involvemen­t is major news.

A netflix release that coincided with the presentati­on explained that Studiocana­l – which has financed, distribute­d and sold Aardman production­s since 2015’s Shaun The Sheep Movie –and Pathe, which backed the original, have closed a deal with Aardman to allow the transfer of the sequel rights to the global streaming giant.

Two decades after its release, Chicken Run remains the highest-grossing stop-motion animated film of all time and was nominated for Best Animated Feature at the 2000 Oscars. The first time around, Aardman’s legendary award-winning stop-motion innovators Peter Lord (The Pirates! Band Of Misfits) and nick Park (Wallace & Gromit) directed. This time, Oscarnomin­ated Paranorman and Flushed Away director Sam Fell is to direct.

“we’ve discussed it so many times over the years and come up with various ideas but never quite found one we loved enough,” explained Lord in a video available on Annecy’s digital platform.

“But it was always in the back of our minds,” he went on, explaining that every three to four years there would be a conversati­on at Aardman about how to do so.

now, he’s convinced, “we’ve got the perfect story, and the relationsh­ip with netflix is kind of perfect as well because they celebrate the filmmaker and are so filmmaker friendly,” he explained. “I feel now we can make the Chicken Run sequel we want to, the one we really care about.”

“we’ve been working on the script for some time, years in truth,” Fell confessed, recalling a brainstorm­ing session with co-writers Karey Kirkpatric­k and John O’farrell where he was sold on the project by a “hooky logline which promises so much: ‘This time, they’re breaking in’,” he shared, before going on to explain some of the film’s new plot details.

Chicken Run sequel will turn on Ginger, now living in a human-free chicken paradise.

There, Ginger and Rocky hatch an egg together and daughter Molly is born. The girl grows up quickly, “as children do,” Fell explained, and Molly begins to outgrow the island.

At the same time, rumours start to float of a new and terrible threat on the mainland, forcing Ginger to rally her troops and put their own hard-won freedom at risk for the good of all chicken- kind.

“I tell you it will be fun and games seeing these chickens back in action,” Fell promised. “All the gadgets, the kit, we’re kind of moving towards an almost-tribute to Mission Impossible with elements of heist and how they’re going to pull off this amazing break-in.”

Shooting is planned for next

year with Lord, Carla Shelley and Karey Kirkpatric­k returning as executive producers. Steve Pegram will produce, and Park will be involved in a consulting role. Rachel Tunnard joins Kirkpatric­k and O’farrell on screenwrit­ing duties. Details on other upcoming Aardman projects were discussed as well.

“we are shooting one called Robin Robin,” said Lord, describing it as a half-hour, stop-motion Christmas special. “(It’s) directed by two guys new to Aardman, which is great,” he went on, adding that with the new talent comes a new style, and that the special will look different to what Aardman has done before.

Aardman is also working on the recently announced The Big Fix Up, anew Wallace & Gromit story developed with Fictioneer­s – a collection of British creative companies including Potato, Sugar Creative and Tiny Rebel Games, with support from the University of South wales – which will be using the latest immersive technologi­es to bring the classic characters into the realm of augmented reality. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Chicken Run is the highest-grossing stop-motion animated film of all time. — Filepic
Chicken Run is the highest-grossing stop-motion animated film of all time. — Filepic

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