Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005)

Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005)
10 / 10

The Curse of the Were-Rabbit is Nick Park’s first feature-length Wallace and Gromit film and the rare animation that earns its long form. Park directed with Steve Box. Peter Sallis returned as the voice of Wallace, the cheese-obsessed inventor. Gromit, the silent dog, was animated by hand as he had been since A Grand Day Out in 1989. Ralph Fiennes voiced Victor Quartermaine, the rival hunter. Helena Bonham Carter voiced Lady Tottington. The film won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2006 and is the only Wallace and Gromit production to have done so at feature length.

Aardman Animations produced the film. Every frame was shot on stop-motion sets with hand-built models. The production took five years. The full-length runtime contains approximately ninety thousand individual frames, each of which required the team to physically move the puppets, props, and lighting between exposures. The labor involved is approximately the same labor required to build a small village.

The Plot

Wallace and Gromit are running Anti-Pesto, a humane pest control company specializing in vegetable garden protection in their village. The annual giant vegetable competition is approaching. The village has been overrun by rabbits. Wallace’s invention to brainwash the rabbits into not liking vegetables goes wrong. A monstrous were-rabbit emerges and begins terrorizing gardens at night. Wallace himself is suspiciously absent during these attacks.

The script is structured like a 1940s monster movie, complete with torch-bearing villagers, a noble huntsman with a rifle, and a beautiful aristocrat whose vegetable garden becomes the site of the climax. The film respects the conventions of the source genre while filling them with Wallace and Gromit’s specific brand of polite British absurdity.

For Writers

Comedy from genre fidelity is more interesting than comedy from genre parody. The Curse of the Were-Rabbit treats its monster-movie framework with affection rather than mockery. The torch-bearing villagers are funny because they are exactly what 1940s torch-bearing villagers would be, only in a Lancashire village arguing about vegetables. The lesson is that the funniest version of a genre is often the most committed one. Parody requires distance. Real comedy can come from getting closer.

The Animation

The puppet work is the film’s foundation. Wallace’s mouth moves through eight different expressions per syllable. Gromit’s eyebrows do the talking the dog cannot. The vegetable garden sequences include hundreds of individual practical vegetables, each of which had to be repositioned between frames. The third-act giant rabbit transformation requires the animation team to age, mutate, and revert puppets across long sequences without breaking continuity.

The visible craft is part of the appeal. The audience can see fingerprints on the clay. The faces of background characters are imperfect. The sets are clearly hand-built. None of this is hidden. Aardman has never tried to make their stop-motion look smooth. The texture of the production is part of what makes it warmer than CGI animation of the same period.

For Writers

Visible craft can be more inviting than polished production. The audience can tell when something has been made by hand. The Aardman aesthetic preserves the evidence of human labor in every frame. The lesson is that perfection is not always the most engaging quality in production. Sometimes the seams of construction tell the audience that real people cared. Show the craft when the work benefits from being shown to be work.

Gromit

Gromit is one of the great silent characters in animation. He has no voice. The dog communicates entirely through facial expression and small physical movements. The audience knows exactly what he is thinking at all times. Park and his team build Gromit’s expressions from a small library of carefully designed brow positions, eye angles, and mouth shapes, but the combinations produce a character with more apparent interiority than most voiced characters in animation.

The decision to never give him a voice has paid off for thirty-five years. A voiced Gromit would have been a different and lesser character. The silence is the foundation of who he is. He is the smart one. Wallace’s verbal output gives Gromit’s reactions something to react to.

For Writers

A character without dialogue can be the most fully realized character in a story if the visual storytelling is rigorous. Gromit’s expressions tell the audience what he is thinking in detail dialogue could not match. The lesson is that some characters work better without speech. If you find a character whose silence is more communicative than their dialogue would be, accept the silence. The reader will hear them anyway.

Craft Note

Nick Park and Steve Box co-directed. Park wrote with Bob Baker and Mark Burton. Peter Sallis voiced Wallace. Ralph Fiennes voiced Victor Quartermaine. Helena Bonham Carter voiced Lady Tottington. Aardman Animations produced. Five-year production timeline. Released October 2005. Approximately thirty million pound budget. One hundred and ninety-two million dollar worldwide gross. Won Best Animated Feature at the 2006 Academy Awards.

The Verdict

10/10. The best feature-length stop-motion of its decade. Aardman at the peak of its powers. The Oscar was earned. Wallace and Gromit’s first feature is one of the few cases where the move to long form preserved what made the shorts work. Watch it.


FAQ

How long did it take to make?

Approximately five years of production for an eighty-five minute feature. Stop-motion animation moves at roughly one to two minutes of finished film per week of shooting.

Did it win an Oscar?

Yes. Best Animated Feature at the 78th Academy Awards in March 2006.

Is it appropriate for children?

Yes. The were-rabbit scenes might frighten very young children but the film is otherwise family-friendly.

Are there other Wallace and Gromit films?

Four shorts (A Grand Day Out, The Wrong Trousers, A Close Shave, A Matter of Loaf and Death) plus this feature and Vengeance Most Fowl (2024). All are excellent.

Who voiced Gromit?

Nobody. Gromit does not speak. He is animated to communicate entirely through facial expression.

What was Peter Sallis’s connection to Wallace?

Sallis voiced Wallace from A Grand Day Out (1989) through A Matter of Loaf and Death (2008). He died in 2017. Ben Whitehead voiced Wallace in the 2024 production after Sallis’s death.

Should I watch this?

Yes. One of the great family films of the 2000s.

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