One of my favorite gags to this day is that the Vicar absolutely knows that he's in a horror film. He totally leans in to riling up the mob of townsfolk, he knows to enter a scene in a wheelchair after being attacked and then just gets up and walks out of it when the shock wears off, and his entire scene with Victor Quartermaine xD. He monologues about the wererabbit and leaves pauses in to acquaint the lightning and thunder, and you can see him realizing that lightning crashes after every time they say "A bullet? (BOOOOOM) A bullet! (BOOOOOM)" and is content to just keep back and forth-ing to play with the thunder and lightning until Victor catches on and slams the shutters closed lol
funnily enough, the church window(that the rabbit smashes) depicts a holy knight slaying a dragon. So it would make sense for the Vicar of a church founded for a sainted monster slayer to have monster hunting manuals and equipment on hand as standard
9:12 Fun fact, in the danish version, it sounded like Wallace said "år" instead of "hour", which means year, so she thought he said they were coming in a year, making the "I can't wait that long" joke double layered as there's also a joke in her having a very mild reaction to the pest control people saying it will take them a year to even look at the problem
I'm pretty sure it's the same in the Dutch dub, since that would be "jaar" but I'd have to check haha. When this movie was released I was old enough to watch original versions, probably still with subtitles but dubs were stupid and childish by then. God I feel old now.
The irony of Katzenberg criticising Disney as soulless corporatism then trying to rip the soul out of a British classic. His real gripe with Disney was he wasn't in charge.
Fun fact: This movie took 5 years to make and was the first stop motion movie to win an Oscar. The movie felt like an extended Wallace and gromit short but in a good way. I like how this movie shows the relationship between the duo. Gromit always goes out of his way to clean up Wallace’s mess because how much he cares about him. He’s like the father figure to him. This was a grand entertaining feature to watch. Also, I can’t wait to see the new Wallace and gromit movie set to be released this January 2025.
I'm from Brazil, I can confirm it, many people don't watched the original shorts and movies of Wallace and Grommit, but this one had an enormus success.
The smirk Quartermaine made is arguably scarier than the Were-Rabbit in general. He's willing to kill Wallace while disguising it as an act of heroism. Also, if Quartermaine returns, I can imagine Wallace becoming a Were-Rabbit in a rather serious moment of being out-of-character. You know you crossed Wallace's line when HE is weaponizing his inventions.
that would be cool if he wasn’t aloof to what was going on and did something about it, im hoping to see that in the new movie with Feathers coming back
This movie was one of the main reasons I became an animator. I saw both this and the nightmare before christmas during my childhood, and they just stuck with me throughout my life, and years later, here I am
Even as a kid I used to get goosebumps during that scene where the vicar reveals the wererabbit’s existence-- it really is a phenomenal moment. His fervent rant about how unholy and unnatural the creature is primes us for something, and then the "person-shaped hole" trope in the stained glass window. A cartoon effect normally used for laughs, but here it implies its form without directly revealing it. It gives us a very horror-esque idea in a very cartoony way-- so good.
This movie is extremely endearing to me for one reason. When I was much younger, me and my family went to an interim outdoor theater being hosted by a coastal town in Oregon. The weather was amazing and while we were waiting for the movie to begin I remember taking a moment to watch a young boy playing with a golden retriever puppy in the grass of a nearby field. This was easily the same year the movie came out...maybe 2007 ish. I'm fighting to have that kind of magic back in my life and sometimes it feels like I'm actually winning.
15:51 you say Wallace would probably design the lady rabbit this way, it works both ways because he is also the were-rabbit which is probably what in his mind inspired the look
"My hair is in your machine" might be the most entertaining joke I've ever heard! Like, I didn't blow out the windows with laughing, but it's just _so freaking good!_
5:18 ish, yes that's the point about Mrs Mulch's false teeth. You can see as Mrs Mulch goes on ahead out of the door, Mr Mulch is looking hesitant with her teeth as if to say, "Do you want these or what?" before resorting to putting them in his own mouth instead and just going with it.
As much as I love this movie all these years later, one of the best jokes never made it into the movie proper: the police constable's name is Macintosh. P.C. Macintosh.
This movie is my entire childhood. I had always loved Wallace and Gromit as a kid, and one time my parents surprised me and my brother with a DVD of this movie. It's a core memory for me
When I was a kid who grew up in South Texas I didn't realize Wallace and Gromit was a British animation. I don't remember how I watched but I remember watching it a lot as a kid. So when Curse of the Were-Rabbit trailers came out I remember being really excited and telling friends about it at school and they had no idea what I was talking about. I also remember being made fun of for wanting to watch it, sadly that's one of the things that taught me to not talk about my personal interests unless other people were talking about the same thing first. On the bright side my older brother took me to watch this movie when it first came out. We were never very close and he often bullied me, but him taking just the two of us to watch Curse of the Were-Rabbit was one of the few things the two of us did together that we weren't forced to do.
I remember watching this as a kid at my neighbor’s house Halloween night. On my way home, I spooked pretty hard at a well timed animal noise after I said “there’s no such thing as were-rabbits…” Never sprinted faster in my life
No movie ever made me want to eat vegetables more as a kid than this one did. something about how they did the vegetables made them looks so damn appetizing. I always wanted to eat that carrot Gromit cut up.
I'm American but I knew about marrows thanks to Beatrix Potter, and I remember when I saw (the American version of) the movie, I thought it was weird that they missed the opportunity for a pun about Gromit having "a splendid marrow." Glad to learn they didn't.
I had no idea what a marrow was until this review, and I also grew up with Peter Rabbit, I guess it must have just never have been pushed by my parents when they read it to me.
You missed a great detail of the transformation scene. Gromit locking the doors because he knows what's coming again playing into that Gromit knows but cannot communicate
12:38 I love the subversion of expectation with the smooth camera to then rapidly moving it a tiny bit with the sound to suddenly imply that this is the monster's POV.
I remember seeing this in the cinema when it came out and even as a kid i was blown away by the upgrade in quality with it's presentation. I mean seriously go and watch a grand day out and then were rabbit and you'll see what I mean instantly.
I was obsessed with this movie as a kid! I rewatched it again about 2 weeks ago and it’s still one of my favorite films ever. I feel like I can appreciate it now more as an adult who’s seen a lot of horror movies, but honestly I don’t know if I ever would have been as big of a horror film if it wasn’t for this movie. It’s a perfect film for kids wanting to get into horror!
Ok but can we also talk about how good the licensed game on Xbox was? Like surprisingly good. I love this movie and I remember having fun for hours running around the Wallace and gromit world
Curse of the Wererabbit was my first Wallace and Grommit... anything, and I absolutely fell in love with the duo. I'd eventually get to watch more of their shorts, and I'm very pleased to say I've loved all the ones I've seen. Cant wait for the new movie :)
Glad you brought up Harvey, what an overlooked wholesome film. Shame so few stopanimations are made, it allows for both cartoonish and realistic writing while being an impressive medium.
11:00 The audio commentary for this film is very good. Nick Park says one animator did try (and fail) to animate 20 bunnies on cocktail sticks… 25:50 They went through several endings and this idea of Wallace/Hutch fixing and restoring it was the plan from Day 1, but it was rejected because Hutch was too good a character to “kill off”.
I literally just watched this film (for Halloween ofc 😂) and came straight here once I saw it on my recommended, and I didn't even realise those small details that you mentioned at 16:18 😭😭 But those details just make that scene even better ngl!! Great video too!! 😊
Man! I couldn’t even make it all the way through the video! The way you describe everything puts me right back into the excitement I had when watching this as a kid! I’m gonna rewatch the movie and then come back!
I bet Were-Rabbit Wallace would’ve thrown that tree at Victor (thus killing him) if he hadn’t of noticed Gromit was dangerously close Victor (as he would’ve ended up killing him too and he could still recognise his friend).
Here's my theory: when the Were-Rabbit saw Victor trying to wrestle the Golden Carrot award away from Lady Tottington, it was enough to make it remember that it was actually Wallace. Ergo, his fighting against the Were-Rabbit instincts was enough to remove the "curse" and return Wallace to normal.
Reason for why Dreamworks tried to Americanize Wallace and Gromit even though they commissioned it: Because like with other huge cultural icons that isn't as big in the US, Hollywood hears about that icon, finds out it's a huge success or is critically celebrated not just in their home country but in other countries as well and thinks this is either an easy money grab or Oscar. But then they don't understand WHY it is iconic and then they get surprised when it turns out that icon is very much not that American or had the style they expected too. Like I remember an American studio commissioned Jean-Luc Godard to make an adaption of King Lear because they have heard of him being one of the pioneers of French cinema so they grabbed him thinking this is going to be an Oscar contender. But anyone who knows what type of movies Jean-Luc Godard makes (and if you don't, just look at clips of any of his movies) would know that was a really bad idea. And then that studio got shocked that Godard didn't do a straightforward Shakespeare movie. So that Katzenberg didn't know that Wallace and Gromit is very British in nature isn't shocking.
a note on vengeance most fowl, why have they got McGraw being so emotive? like more so than usual? his sinister creepiness was bc he didn't emote at all, they've said so in interviews
Fun Fact: I was only 14 and a half years old when I went to see Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in theatres when it first came out and this is how I was first introduced to Wallace and Gromit.
I remember a while ago, me and my brother were looking for something to watch and we found this movie, we were so excited 'cos it's been ages since we watched any wallace and gromit, only to be extremely disappointed when it started speaking in a language we didn't understand lol
Thanks for this Halloween review, this movie's got a fun little corner in my head after CN just randomly decided one day to air Were-Rabbit, Wrong Trousers, and Loaf and Death when I was a kid.
omg i just notice that at the 7 min mark of this video the penut butter is called the middle age spread and right now wallace in the movie is the farther that getting old and the gromit is their 20 year old child that wants their parent to take better care of them selfs they put alot of effort into this movie
I find it funny that Watership Down is still seen as the most disturbing animation ever when there's Fritz the Cat and that other one that's dealing with cats being experimented on and such (both of which have been reviewed by Saberspark). If you really read into Watership Down, it's actually more in a lesson about not losing yourself in stillness, conformity, and blind "ignorance". It's about triumph over trials and tribulations from your own kind and others. It's a fantastic movie, and though there are some startling parts, I don't think it's too much for the average 11 year old. As long as that kid is smart and emotionally secure, they'll be fine.
Most of where Watership Down's "most terrifying animated movie of all time" reputation comes from is that parents have for decades bought it to show to their young children thinking it's only going to be a cute rabbit movie that'll be fine for kids.
feeding rabbits nothing but carrots could actually kill them the sugar content in carrots is high meaning they should only be fed them rarely as a treat
I rewatched this movie with my best friend recently, and at the scene at 20:57 my friend said “oh, this is *so much worse* when I close my eyes..” and I couldn’t agree more 😂😂😂
Fun fact: Wensleydale cheese was saved from bankruptcy after wallice said WensleyDale, in the first wallice and gromit, bc they thought the word would make wallice look toothy
Am I the only one who thinks Wallace isn’t an idiot? I always thought he was just a slow thinker or oblivious or ignorant in some cases, but never stupid.
This film terrified me as a kid ! Especially that scene with the vegetables in Wallace's room... I love it now, so happy to see some appreciation for it !
Ah, this is one of my favorite movies of all time! Owned it on DVD! This was during a time where it was already common to watch my country's dub of a movie, and the VAs were honestly incredible. It's funny to hear folks sing the praises of so many special actors and VAs, when the voices I heard were of other people entirely, hehe. Also, that shot of Wallace and Hutch swapping mindwaves as he hopped around like a rabbit always spooked me a bit, ngl...
This is the best monster movie ever made. Well, aside from Abott and Costello Meet Frankenstein. Nothing can top that. Also, the twist of Wallace being the were-rabbit was really surprising. Great twist.
I had a similar experience with the radio playing Brighteyes. Someone plugged in a radio on a very choppy ferry to drown out the sounds of everyone throwing up. The song playing was Celine Dion's My Heart Will Go On. As you can imagine, it went down like a lead balloon and everyone was screaming to turn it off. 28:02 I assumed that new undamaged traps would be in Wallace's garden, so Victor took Gromit back there to lock him up.
this movie was such a major part of my childhood! it's amazing to finally see someone talking about it because i swore for years that no one else had heard of it lol
Thank you for solving the Mrs./Mr. Mulch teeth mystery. That bit has thrown me for years, I never noticed that Mr. Mulch offers the teeth to his wife momentarily.
22:23 I was tariffed of this movie when I was a kid. Especially this scene. I would close my eyes every time it would happen. But now this is definitely one of my favorite movies! Stop motion is such a cool art form and I think it definitely needs more love! 🎥
They held an exhibition at ACMI in Melbourne with all of Aardmans movie sets and OMG the sets were gorgeous 😊 there was something magical seeing the clay sets up close of this film, shawn the sheep & Pirates! (They had the ENTIRE SHIP from the Pirates! Film and OMG it was incredible and bloody huge!) Just... if you ever get to go to an exhibition of their stuff PLEASE check it out ❤
When I was unable to use my eyes due to being swollen in the hospital after surgery, this movie was playing on the TV and I listened to it. It was 10/10 even without visuals
Having a King Kong nod in the movie works especially well here since all of the monsters in that film were also done with stop motion animation; they're paying tribute to the scene in its original medium (^.^) And it's not just a British thing, I'm from Canada and it was a similar feeling for me seeing the movie in cinema (^.^) I always loved the opening with the photos too and it adds a certain sweetness to everything; Gromit's like a young man who has a really good relationship with his dad excitable, gadget loving dad and helps keep him out of trouble, and I just find that really nice (besides which, puppy Gromit is adorable) Oh! And in the special features section it was mentioned that keeping Hutch as his current self was actually a decision the Aardman team made because they got attached to him (ah, with all of the novelty dairy products in the world, I'm sure they'll be able to find cheese made from rabbit milk or something, assuming Hutch even still has the same dietary needs as a normal rabbit; Wallace was turned into a were-rabbit, maybe Hutch was changed more than we think)
With this movie and Corpse Bride releasing within 2 weeks of each other.... which would you pick out of the two?
This one
Aardman takes the win for me
Both
Were-Rabbit is my favorite out of the two, hands down.
This movie :)
Funny how Daz has realised that he can skyrocket his channel by worming the word "terrible" into literally as many video titles as possible.
He has unlocked the "clickbait title can get more view" ability.
Yeah, it's a shame coz were-rabbit gets a bad reputation. It's actually a masterpiece in Animation. Daz seems to agree as well.
@@willbhowes It was not well-received?? That sounds horrible..
@@KraylebStudiosit was very well received, confused why this has such a crappy click bait title
@@willbhowes Um yah, he said it's not terrible. He's most known for his terrible series so he's differentiating this from that.
One of my favorite gags to this day is that the Vicar absolutely knows that he's in a horror film. He totally leans in to riling up the mob of townsfolk, he knows to enter a scene in a wheelchair after being attacked and then just gets up and walks out of it when the shock wears off, and his entire scene with Victor Quartermaine xD.
He monologues about the wererabbit and leaves pauses in to acquaint the lightning and thunder, and you can see him realizing that lightning crashes after every time they say "A bullet? (BOOOOOM) A bullet! (BOOOOOM)" and is content to just keep back and forth-ing to play with the thunder and lightning until Victor catches on and slams the shutters closed lol
Makes sense that the Vicar would catch on to the intentions of higher powers!
funnily enough, the church window(that the rabbit smashes) depicts a holy knight slaying a dragon. So it would make sense for the Vicar of a church founded for a sainted monster slayer to have monster hunting manuals and equipment on hand as standard
Guys. Two dogs in a plane? A dog fight? I can’t be the only one that got that joke…
OMG!
I'm so mad that i didn't get that joke till NOW!
That’s even a joke made in the film
Oh my god
It's still going over my head
9:12 Fun fact, in the danish version, it sounded like Wallace said "år" instead of "hour", which means year, so she thought he said they were coming in a year, making the "I can't wait that long" joke double layered as there's also a joke in her having a very mild reaction to the pest control people saying it will take them a year to even look at the problem
That's actually a pretty great one
The french dub got the same joke
I'm pretty sure it's the same in the Dutch dub, since that would be "jaar" but I'd have to check haha. When this movie was released I was old enough to watch original versions, probably still with subtitles but dubs were stupid and childish by then.
God I feel old now.
The irony of Katzenberg criticising Disney as soulless corporatism then trying to rip the soul out of a British classic. His real gripe with Disney was he wasn't in charge.
Wererabbit is such a culturally historic movie that I think I could recognise it from any frame
Could show me a piece of cheese from this movie and I'd know it.
Fun fact: This movie took 5 years to make and was the first stop motion movie to win an Oscar.
The movie felt like an extended Wallace and gromit short but in a good way. I like how this movie shows the relationship between the duo. Gromit always goes out of his way to clean up Wallace’s mess because how much he cares about him. He’s like the father figure to him. This was a grand entertaining feature to watch. Also, I can’t wait to see the new Wallace and gromit movie set to be released this January 2025.
It comes out this Friday on Netflix, let’s go!!!
In Latin America it was called "Wallace and Gromit: The battle of the vegetables", yet it was still successful.
I guess they must eat there greens
@peet-janissen5838 I can't speak for the whole culture, but most of the people I know prefer meat since childhood.
@@Alejandroigarabide atleast healthier than sugar
The battle of the vegetables just reminds me of veg in armour and chain mail 😭
I'm from Brazil, I can confirm it, many people don't watched the original shorts and movies of Wallace and Grommit, but this one had an enormus success.
I like how the were-rabbit looks like a costume. Like how older/low budget films would just has a simple costumed man playing the monster
Very “early monster movie” vibes. Even the transition back to a human is very early monster movie
The smirk Quartermaine made is arguably scarier than the Were-Rabbit in general.
He's willing to kill Wallace while disguising it as an act of heroism.
Also, if Quartermaine returns, I can imagine Wallace becoming a Were-Rabbit in a rather serious moment of being out-of-character. You know you crossed Wallace's line when HE is weaponizing his inventions.
that would be cool if he wasn’t aloof to what was going on and did something about it, im hoping to see that in the new movie with Feathers coming back
This movie was one of the main reasons I became an animator. I saw both this and the nightmare before christmas during my childhood, and they just stuck with me throughout my life, and years later, here I am
Original title: Aardman's AMAZING Were-Rabbit Horror Movie...
Second title: Aardman's Not-TERRIBLE Were-Rabbit Horror Movie...
Third title: Aardman’s Not-TORTURE TO WATCH Were-Rabbit Horror Movie…
Even as a kid I used to get goosebumps during that scene where the vicar reveals the wererabbit’s existence-- it really is a phenomenal moment. His fervent rant about how unholy and unnatural the creature is primes us for something, and then the "person-shaped hole" trope in the stained glass window. A cartoon effect normally used for laughs, but here it implies its form without directly revealing it. It gives us a very horror-esque idea in a very cartoony way-- so good.
This movie is extremely endearing to me for one reason. When I was much younger, me and my family went to an interim outdoor theater being hosted by a coastal town in Oregon. The weather was amazing and while we were waiting for the movie to begin I remember taking a moment to watch a young boy playing with a golden retriever puppy in the grass of a nearby field. This was easily the same year the movie came out...maybe 2007 ish. I'm fighting to have that kind of magic back in my life and sometimes it feels like I'm actually winning.
Hutch's deliver of the line "I am Wallace" when walking to the door kills me every time. So good!
15:51 you say Wallace would probably design the lady rabbit this way, it works both ways because he is also the were-rabbit which is probably what in his mind inspired the look
"My hair is in your machine" might be the most entertaining joke I've ever heard! Like, I didn't blow out the windows with laughing, but it's just _so freaking good!_
"Oh, no, it's only rabbits in there! The hare, I think you'll find, is a much larger mammal."
5:18 ish, yes that's the point about Mrs Mulch's false teeth. You can see as Mrs Mulch goes on ahead out of the door, Mr Mulch is looking hesitant with her teeth as if to say, "Do you want these or what?" before resorting to putting them in his own mouth instead and just going with it.
As much as I love this movie all these years later, one of the best jokes never made it into the movie proper: the police constable's name is Macintosh.
P.C. Macintosh.
Maybe it will in Vengeance Most Fowl?
@@taqresu5865no, he got promoted to Chief Inspector
This movie is my entire childhood. I had always loved Wallace and Gromit as a kid, and one time my parents surprised me and my brother with a DVD of this movie. It's a core memory for me
32:00 Oh dang. I never noticed they didn’t hide Wallace’s non-existent lower half in this scene. I won’t see this scene the same again now.
I never can look at that corner now
Calling curse of the were rabbit "not-terrible" is like calling beef wellington "technically edible"
Seriously why is Daz always so negative.. to play the algorithm?
My family used to say that we used to just think wallace was an idiot, this movie makes us realise everyone in this world is
When I was a kid who grew up in South Texas I didn't realize Wallace and Gromit was a British animation. I don't remember how I watched but I remember watching it a lot as a kid. So when Curse of the Were-Rabbit trailers came out I remember being really excited and telling friends about it at school and they had no idea what I was talking about. I also remember being made fun of for wanting to watch it, sadly that's one of the things that taught me to not talk about my personal interests unless other people were talking about the same thing first. On the bright side my older brother took me to watch this movie when it first came out. We were never very close and he often bullied me, but him taking just the two of us to watch Curse of the Were-Rabbit was one of the few things the two of us did together that we weren't forced to do.
I remember watching this as a kid at my neighbor’s house Halloween night. On my way home, I spooked pretty hard at a well timed animal noise after I said “there’s no such thing as were-rabbits…”
Never sprinted faster in my life
Honestly, I’m genuinely shocked you of all people haven’t Reviewed this till now, But really glad you are
No movie ever made me want to eat vegetables more as a kid than this one did. something about how they did the vegetables made them looks so damn appetizing. I always wanted to eat that carrot Gromit cut up.
They had to use CGI for liquid effects (Flushed Away, the gravy explosion in Chicken Run). It's inevitable.
I was genuinely terrified of this movie as a kid. That wererabbit haunted me.
I'm American but I knew about marrows thanks to Beatrix Potter, and I remember when I saw (the American version of) the movie, I thought it was weird that they missed the opportunity for a pun about Gromit having "a splendid marrow." Glad to learn they didn't.
I had no idea what a marrow was until this review, and I also grew up with Peter Rabbit, I guess it must have just never have been pushed by my parents when they read it to me.
There's a ton of adult sexual humor in the film, too. Her "secret garden". heh
“Just take a look at my wife’s brassicas! Ravaged in the night!” 😂
@@willwright3831 The alarm bell is a pair of tits.
There's a ''bag of shite'' in a scene 😅
“Kiss my ar…tichoke!”
You missed a great detail of the transformation scene. Gromit locking the doors because he knows what's coming again playing into that Gromit knows but cannot communicate
The hand changing is a homage to the scene from An American Warewolf in London
12:38 I love the subversion of expectation with the smooth camera to then rapidly moving it a tiny bit with the sound to suddenly imply that this is the monster's POV.
I watched this movie so many times as a kid and even 20 years later, I say "veGetables...." the way Wallace does sometimes lol
I remember seeing this in the cinema when it came out and even as a kid i was blown away by the upgrade in quality with it's presentation. I mean seriously go and watch a grand day out and then were rabbit and you'll see what I mean instantly.
I was one of those kids scared of the transformation scene, granted I was like 3 to 4 years old when I first saw the movie.
I was obsessed with this movie as a kid! I rewatched it again about 2 weeks ago and it’s still one of my favorite films ever. I feel like I can appreciate it now more as an adult who’s seen a lot of horror movies, but honestly I don’t know if I ever would have been as big of a horror film if it wasn’t for this movie. It’s a perfect film for kids wanting to get into horror!
The scene were the vicar hears a burp and says “ Mrs Munge 😂😂
Ok but can we also talk about how good the licensed game on Xbox was? Like surprisingly good. I love this movie and I remember having fun for hours running around the Wallace and gromit world
OH MY GOSH, SAME!
11:43 If we're going Britishly British for this, I would have loved a Bob Hale from Horrible Histories here
Omg yes I was going to say this
Almost certain that’s the reference he was making, because that sounded like the perfect cadence
Curse of the Wererabbit was my first Wallace and Grommit... anything, and I absolutely fell in love with the duo. I'd eventually get to watch more of their shorts, and I'm very pleased to say I've loved all the ones I've seen. Cant wait for the new movie :)
Grommit has more personality then I do and the dog can't even speak
I remember watching this movie as a kid from a DVD in a video store.
Agh, is that what feels to get older? Oh god.
Glad you brought up Harvey, what an overlooked wholesome film.
Shame so few stopanimations are made, it allows for both cartoonish and realistic writing while being an impressive medium.
11:00 The audio commentary for this film is very good. Nick Park says one animator did try (and fail) to animate 20 bunnies on cocktail sticks…
25:50 They went through several endings and this idea of Wallace/Hutch fixing and restoring it was the plan from Day 1, but it was rejected because Hutch was too good a character to “kill off”.
I literally just watched this film (for Halloween ofc 😂) and came straight here once I saw it on my recommended, and I didn't even realise those small details that you mentioned at 16:18 😭😭 But those details just make that scene even better ngl!! Great video too!! 😊
Not-terrible??? This is a masterpiece of modern art!!
Man! I couldn’t even make it all the way through the video! The way you describe everything puts me right back into the excitement I had when watching this as a kid! I’m gonna rewatch the movie and then come back!
I bet Were-Rabbit Wallace would’ve thrown that tree at Victor (thus killing him) if he hadn’t of noticed Gromit was dangerously close Victor (as he would’ve ended up killing him too and he could still recognise his friend).
I think British Humor is the humor I've been missing my entire life.
I'd argue _Troll 2_ is also a "vegetarian" horror movie. They turn people into plants and eat them, so it counts.
I can't believe they tried to replace his voice actor with just a random celebrity voice actor, thank frick they changed it back
Don’t you mean Frith?
@jrnsurlan405 Whos Frith
Here's my theory: when the Were-Rabbit saw Victor trying to wrestle the Golden Carrot award away from Lady Tottington, it was enough to make it remember that it was actually Wallace. Ergo, his fighting against the Were-Rabbit instincts was enough to remove the "curse" and return Wallace to normal.
Gromit has no mouth, but just with the way they abimate his eyes, he's easily one of the most expressive characters in all of stop motion
Was literally just looking for ur review of this yesterday thank you for posting it
Reason for why Dreamworks tried to Americanize Wallace and Gromit even though they commissioned it: Because like with other huge cultural icons that isn't as big in the US, Hollywood hears about that icon, finds out it's a huge success or is critically celebrated not just in their home country but in other countries as well and thinks this is either an easy money grab or Oscar. But then they don't understand WHY it is iconic and then they get surprised when it turns out that icon is very much not that American or had the style they expected too.
Like I remember an American studio commissioned Jean-Luc Godard to make an adaption of King Lear because they have heard of him being one of the pioneers of French cinema so they grabbed him thinking this is going to be an Oscar contender. But anyone who knows what type of movies Jean-Luc Godard makes (and if you don't, just look at clips of any of his movies) would know that was a really bad idea. And then that studio got shocked that Godard didn't do a straightforward Shakespeare movie.
So that Katzenberg didn't know that Wallace and Gromit is very British in nature isn't shocking.
a note on vengeance most fowl, why have they got McGraw being so emotive? like more so than usual? his sinister creepiness was bc he didn't emote at all, they've said so in interviews
Fun Fact: I was only 14 and a half years old when I went to see Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in theatres when it first came out and this is how I was first introduced to Wallace and Gromit.
I remember a while ago, me and my brother were looking for something to watch and we found this movie, we were so excited 'cos it's been ages since we watched any wallace and gromit, only to be extremely disappointed when it started speaking in a language we didn't understand lol
Thanks for this Halloween review, this movie's got a fun little corner in my head after CN just randomly decided one day to air Were-Rabbit, Wrong Trousers, and Loaf and Death when I was a kid.
This was one of my favorite movies growing up, still is. Just rewatched it last week
omg i just notice that at the 7 min mark of this video the penut butter is called the middle age spread and right now wallace in the movie is the farther that getting old and the gromit is their 20 year old child that wants their parent to take better care of them selfs they put alot of effort into this movie
I find it funny that Watership Down is still seen as the most disturbing animation ever when there's Fritz the Cat and that other one that's dealing with cats being experimented on and such (both of which have been reviewed by Saberspark). If you really read into Watership Down, it's actually more in a lesson about not losing yourself in stillness, conformity, and blind "ignorance". It's about triumph over trials and tribulations from your own kind and others. It's a fantastic movie, and though there are some startling parts, I don't think it's too much for the average 11 year old. As long as that kid is smart and emotionally secure, they'll be fine.
Most of where Watership Down's "most terrifying animated movie of all time" reputation comes from is that parents have for decades bought it to show to their young children thinking it's only going to be a cute rabbit movie that'll be fine for kids.
@@spencerowensrichey And that sounds like a personal problem, especially for nowadays!
This movie was a huge part of my childhood.
30:03 Victors dog actually has a name it’s said ones or twice in the movie and the dogs name is Philip
feeding rabbits nothing but carrots could actually kill them the sugar content in carrots is high meaning they should only be fed them rarely as a treat
I rewatched this movie with my best friend recently, and at the scene at 20:57 my friend said “oh, this is *so much worse* when I close my eyes..” and I couldn’t agree more 😂😂😂
Fun fact: Wensleydale cheese was saved from bankruptcy after wallice said WensleyDale, in the first wallice and gromit, bc they thought the word would make wallice look toothy
It's the only film I've been to at any cinema that got a spontanious standing ovation at the end!
oh my god I had completely forgotten about this movie I LOVED this as a kid 😭
Am I the only one who thinks Wallace isn’t an idiot? I always thought he was just a slow thinker or oblivious or ignorant in some cases, but never stupid.
I remember suggesting this to you via instagram lol
One of my favorite aspects of this film is that there's one garden the were-rabbit never goes for; despite how close it is.
This film terrified me as a kid ! Especially that scene with the vegetables in Wallace's room... I love it now, so happy to see some appreciation for it !
Ah, this is one of my favorite movies of all time! Owned it on DVD! This was during a time where it was already common to watch my country's dub of a movie, and the VAs were honestly incredible. It's funny to hear folks sing the praises of so many special actors and VAs, when the voices I heard were of other people entirely, hehe.
Also, that shot of Wallace and Hutch swapping mindwaves as he hopped around like a rabbit always spooked me a bit, ngl...
This is the best monster movie ever made. Well, aside from Abott and Costello Meet Frankenstein. Nothing can top that. Also, the twist of Wallace being the were-rabbit was really surprising. Great twist.
I had a similar experience with the radio playing Brighteyes. Someone plugged in a radio on a very choppy ferry to drown out the sounds of everyone throwing up. The song playing was Celine Dion's My Heart Will Go On. As you can imagine, it went down like a lead balloon and everyone was screaming to turn it off.
28:02 I assumed that new undamaged traps would be in Wallace's garden, so Victor took Gromit back there to lock him up.
this movie was such a major part of my childhood! it's amazing to finally see someone talking about it because i swore for years that no one else had heard of it lol
Thank you for solving the Mrs./Mr. Mulch teeth mystery. That bit has thrown me for years, I never noticed that Mr. Mulch offers the teeth to his wife momentarily.
I love how Gromit's facial expressions are just adjustment of a clay flap for a brow ridge.
I loved this movie growing up. I think I still have the DVD.
31:41 only just notived the box saying 'may contain nuts' love it!!
22:23 I was tariffed of this movie when I was a kid. Especially this scene. I would close my eyes every time it would happen.
But now this is definitely one of my favorite movies! Stop motion is such a cool art form and I think it definitely needs more love! 🎥
Correction: technically it’s their first film in 16 years. The last W&G movie was _A Matter Of Loaf and Death_ in 2008.
I am from the USA but have always loved the Wallace & Gromit series!
22:12 IIRC, the foot transformation took an entire year, possibly 2, by itself.
This was one of my childhood movies
They held an exhibition at ACMI in Melbourne with all of Aardmans movie sets and OMG the sets were gorgeous 😊 there was something magical seeing the clay sets up close of this film, shawn the sheep & Pirates! (They had the ENTIRE SHIP from the Pirates! Film and OMG it was incredible and bloody huge!) Just... if you ever get to go to an exhibition of their stuff PLEASE check it out ❤
I had never heard of Watership Down before, and you mentioning it piqued my curiosity.
thanks for that…
Love the new format your using!
When I was unable to use my eyes due to being swollen in the hospital after surgery, this movie was playing on the TV and I listened to it. It was 10/10 even without visuals
3:00 Ok, that french title is actually really clever, combining "Lapin" and "Loup-Garou"
13:20 You terrified me with that L4D2 spitter jingle. My brain is too Source Engine coded for this.
I LOVED this one as a kid! I remember eagerly rewatching the final fight scene everytime I got
Having a King Kong nod in the movie works especially well here since all of the monsters in that film were also done with stop motion animation; they're paying tribute to the scene in its original medium (^.^)
And it's not just a British thing, I'm from Canada and it was a similar feeling for me seeing the movie in cinema (^.^) I always loved the opening with the photos too and it adds a certain sweetness to everything; Gromit's like a young man who has a really good relationship with his dad excitable, gadget loving dad and helps keep him out of trouble, and I just find that really nice (besides which, puppy Gromit is adorable)
Oh! And in the special features section it was mentioned that keeping Hutch as his current self was actually a decision the Aardman team made because they got attached to him (ah, with all of the novelty dairy products in the world, I'm sure they'll be able to find cheese made from rabbit milk or something, assuming Hutch even still has the same dietary needs as a normal rabbit; Wallace was turned into a were-rabbit, maybe Hutch was changed more than we think)
It’s nice to see someone finally talking about this classic
I love how this movie plays it completely straight, like a proper horror film.
The number of ways this movie flipped off the big studio expectations made it worth the ticket price.