Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
2024's Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl is actually the seventh film featuring these delightful stop animation characters that was so clever, so imaginative, and so freaking funny, it earned a 2025 Oscar nomination for Outstanding Animated Film. It also motivated me to go back and watch the first six films.

For those who are new to this franchise like myself, what I gathered from what I saw here, Wallace is an eccentric, slightly dim, but always well-intentioned inventor who lives in a secluded cabin somewhere in an English countryside with his dog Gromit, who doesn't speak, but actually seems to spend most of his time keeping Wallace out of trouble and learning deal with Wallace's constant inventions that are supposed to make their lives easier.

This film opens with Wallace and Gromit being hailed as heroes for capturing a renowned jewel thief, a bird named Feathers McGraw, who is sentenced to life in a zoo. Meanwhile, in another attempt to make his and Gromit's lives easier, Wallace has invented a robot named Norbot, who Gromit feels Wallace is planning to replace him with. Unfortunately, Feathers figures out a way to reprogram Norbot for his own agenda, which includes Norbot cloning hundreds of himself.

The near brilliant screenplay by director Nick Park, Mark Burton, and Holly Walsh is a delicious blending of these eccentric characters with a lot of 2025 pop references and sensibilities that we don't see coming, as well as nods to films of the past without directly ripping them off. I loved when Feathers McGraw is first observed in his new zoo prison and he is observed doing chin-ups with newspaper clippings on the wall...it was so Robert De Niro in Cape Fear. And those Norbot duplicates were an uneasy combination between oompa loompas and those gremlins that popped out of Gizmo after feeding him chicken after midnight. Also LOVED when Feathers was reprogramming Norbot and beforre the computer would allow him to finish, it made him click on all images of cheese before going on. I was on the floor.
I loved the animation techniques employed to produce these characters. Can't even begin to explain how it's accomplished, but director Park and his animation crew nail it. Even though the characters of Gromit and Feathers McGraw don't have mouths and are unable to speak, the viewer is able to experience every mood or feeling their characters do, it's absolutely spooky.

Park and company keep things moving at a nice pace and provide consistent surprises along the way. Love the voice work by Ben Whitehead as Wallace and Reece Shearsmith too. Smashing entertainment from start to finish, can't wait to go back and watch the first six films.
2024's Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl is actually the seventh film featuring these delightful stop animation characters that was so clever, so imaginative, and so freaking funny, it earned a 2025 Oscar nomination for Outstanding Animated Film. It also motivated me to go back and watch the first six films.

For those who are new to this franchise like myself, what I gathered from what I saw here, Wallace is an eccentric, slightly dim, but always well-intentioned inventor who lives in a secluded cabin somewhere in an English countryside with his dog Gromit, who doesn't speak, but actually seems to spend most of his time keeping Wallace out of trouble and learning deal with Wallace's constant inventions that are supposed to make their lives easier.

This film opens with Wallace and Gromit being hailed as heroes for capturing a renowned jewel thief, a bird named Feathers McGraw, who is sentenced to life in a zoo. Meanwhile, in another attempt to make his and Gromit's lives easier, Wallace has invented a robot named Norbot, who Gromit feels Wallace is planning to replace him with. Unfortunately, Feathers figures out a way to reprogram Norbot for his own agenda, which includes Norbot cloning hundreds of himself.
The near brilliant screenplay by director Nick Park, Mark Burton, and Holly Walsh is a delicious blending of these eccentric characters with a lot of 2025 pop references and sensibilities that we don't see coming, as well as nods to films of the past without directly ripping them off. I loved when Feathers McGraw is first observed in his new zoo prison and he is observed doing chin-ups with newspaper clippings on the wall...it was so Robert De Niro in Cape Fear. And those Norbot duplicates were an uneasy combination between oompa loompas and those gremlins that popped out of Gizmo after feeding him chicken after midnight. Also LOVED when Feathers was reprogramming Norbot and beforre the computer would allow him to finish, it made him click on all images of cheese before going on. I was on the floor.
I loved the animation techniques employed to produce these characters. Can't even begin to explain how it's accomplished, but director Park and his animation crew nail it. Even though the characters of Gromit and Feathers McGraw don't have mouths and are unable to speak, the viewer is able to experience every mood or feeling their characters do, it's absolutely spooky.

Park and company keep things moving at a nice pace and provide consistent surprises along the way. Love the voice work by Ben Whitehead as Wallace and Reece Shearsmith too. Smashing entertainment from start to finish, can't wait to go back and watch the first six films.
Last edited by Gideon58; 2 weeks ago at 12:27 PM.