The Wrong Trousers
The Wrong Trousers | |
---|---|
Directed by | Nick Park |
Written by | Nick Park Bob Baker Brian Sibley |
Based on | a story by Brian Trueman |
Produced by | Chris Moll |
Starring | Peter Sallis |
Cinematography | Tristan Oliver Dave Alex Riddett |
Edited by | Helen Garrard |
Music by | Julian Nott |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | BBC Enterprises |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 29 minutes[1] |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £650,000[2] |
The Wrong Trousers is a 1993 British stop-motion animated short film co-written and directed by Nick Park, featuring his characters Wallace & Gromit, and was produced by Aardman Animations in association with Wallace and Gromit Ltd., BBC Bristol, Lionheart Television and BBC Children's International. It is the second film featuring the eccentric inventor Wallace (voiced by Peter Sallis) and his dog Gromit, following A Grand Day Out (1989). In the film, a villainous penguin, Feathers McGraw, posing as a lodger, recruits Wallace by using his techno-trousers to steal a diamond from the city museum.
The Wrong Trousers debuted in the United States on 17 December 1993, and the United Kingdom on 26 December 1993 on BBC Two.[3] It was commercially successful, and won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1994. It also inspired a charity fundraising day, known as "Wrong Trousers Day", one of several events.
The Wrong Trousers was followed by A Close Shave (1995), The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), and A Matter of Loaf and Death (2008). Feathers McGraw returns in the 2003 video game Wallace & Gromit in Project Zoo and made a background cameo in the 2023 film Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget.[4] McGraw returned in the 2024 film Vengeance Most Fowl.[5]
Plot
[edit]For his birthday, Wallace gives his dog Gromit a pair of robotic "techno-trousers" to take him on walks. To pay off debts, Wallace lets the spare bedroom to a penguin, who befriends Wallace and drives Gromit from the house. The penguin takes an interest in the trousers, which can walk on walls and ceilings, and secretly rewires them for remote control. Gromit discovers the penguin is Feathers McGraw, a wanted criminal who disguises himself as a chicken.
Feathers forces Wallace into the trousers, sends him through town to tire him out, then sends him to bed. Gromit spies on Feathers as he takes measurements of the city museum, and discovers his plans to steal a diamond. While Wallace sleeps, Feathers marches him to the museum in the trousers. He infiltrates the building and captures the diamond, but triggers the alarm, waking Wallace. Feathers marches him back to the house and traps him and Gromit in a wardrobe at gunpoint.
Gromit rewires the trousers to break open the wardrobe, and he and Wallace pursue Feathers aboard their model train set. Wallace disarms Feathers and frees himself from the trousers. After Feathers' train collides with the trousers, Gromit captures him in a milk bottle. Feathers is imprisoned in the city zoo, Wallace and Gromit pay their debts with the reward money, and the techno-trousers walk off into the sunset.
"The definitive screen villain of our age is a penguin with a red rubber glove on its head. The gun-toting, 3ft tall criminal mastermind first terrorised viewers in 1993 Oscar-winning short The Wrong Trousers. The fact that he’s mute with expressionless beady eyes only makes him more terrifying."
Reception
[edit]The Wrong Trousers was voted as the eighteenth-best British television show by the British Film Institute.[7] The film has an approval rating of 100% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 26 reviews, and an average score of 9.1/10. The critical consensus reads, "An endearing and meticulous showcase of stop motion animation, The Wrong Trousers also happens to be laugh-out-loud funny."[8] The film was awarded the Grand Prix at the Tampere Film Festival, and the Grand Prix at the World Festival of Animated film – Animafest Zagreb in 1994. The Wrong Trousers won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1994. In 2024, Michael Hogan in The Guardian's list of greatest Kid's TV villains ranked Feathers McGraw number one, writing, "The definitive screen villain of our age is a penguin with a red rubber glove on its head. The gun-toting, 3ft tall criminal mastermind first terrorised viewers in 1993 Oscar-winning short The Wrong Trousers. ... The fact that he's mute with expressionless beady eyes only makes him more terrifying."[9]
During a 2016 directors’ roundtable interview conducted by The Hollywood Reporter, American filmmaker David O. Russell cited the climactic train sequence as an influence on his direction of the action in Three Kings (1999); British filmmaker Danny Boyle agreed that it was "one of the greatest action sequences I’ve ever seen."[10]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Aardman Animations Present Wallace and Gromit in Nick Park's the Wrong Trousers".
- ^ "Aardman Animations – A Close Shave". telepathy.co.uk. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
- ^ "The Wrong Trousers (1993)". BFI. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
- ^ "Chicken Run 2's ending has a surprise crossover you might have missed". Digital Spy. 22 December 2023. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
- ^ "Wallace & Gromit's Christmas 2024 return adds Peter Kay, Reece Shearsmith". Radio Times. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "From Feathers McGraw to Mr Burns: kids' TV's all-time evillest villains". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
- ^ "The BFI TV 100: 1-100". Archived from the original on 11 September 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
- ^ " Wallace & Gromit in The Wrong Trousers ". Rotten Tomatoes.
- ^ "From Feathers McGraw to Mr Burns: kids' TV's all-time evillest villains". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
- ^ The Hollywood Reporter (4 January 2016). Quentin Tarantino, Ridley Scott, Danny Boyle, & More Directors on THR's Roundtables I Oscars 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2024 – via YouTube.
External links
[edit]- 1993 films
- 1990s British films
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s heist films
- 1990s stop-motion animated films
- 1993 animated short films
- 1993 comedy films
- 1993 television films
- 1993 children's films
- Aardman Animations short films
- Animated films about penguins
- Animated films about animals
- BBC Two original programming
- Best Animated Short Academy Award winners
- British animated comedy films
- British animated short films
- Claymation films
- English-language crime films
- English-language short films
- Films directed by Nick Park
- Films set in museums
- Films with screenplays by Bob Baker (scriptwriter)
- Films with screenplays by Nick Park
- Films about penguins
- Stop-motion animated short films
- Three-handers
- Wallace and Gromit films