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Promotional Lines:
"There's Nothing More Determined Than Poultry With A Plan."
"Escape or Die Frying."
"A Few Good Hen"
"It's Chicken Impossible."
Quotes from Ginger:
"So, laying eggs all your life and then getting stuffed and
roasted, that's good enough for you, is it?"
Babs:
"It's a Living."
THE REVIEW-
Peter Lord's and Nick Park's Chicken Run is a classic clever,
family adventure comedy that has something for everyone, that
grabs your attention and builds in suspense, ending in a most
satisfying ending, which is all tied together by humor and truths
about the importance of teamwork, friendship and determination.
The story begins in an oppressive prison-like chicken yard
at Mrs. Tweedy's Egg farm in Yorkshire, England. Chicken huts
and their yard is surrounded by high fences, lights, reminding
one of the P.O.W. movies such as Stalag 17. The audience watches
a chicken, called Ginger dodging the flashlight of Mr. Tweedy,
as she sneaks across the yard to the fence. With a spoon, she
stealthily digs a hole under the fence and escapes to the other
side. However, when other chickens try to escape too, one gets
stuck, and they all get caught. Ginger is thrown into the coal
box for the night as punishment. We then see a variety of escape
plans planned by Ginger which always are foiled by one of the
other chickens.
At the end of the week, a bell rings one morning, and all the
chickens nervously line up, under the direction of Fowler, a
Rooster who was decorated in WW2 as a RAF mascot. The gate clangs
open and the camera focuses on a pair a black yard boots, and
we meet the evil Mrs. Tweedy, who is reviewing her records of
the laying results of each hen on her clipboard, as she slowly
moves down the inspection line. One hen, Edwina, who hasn't
laid an egg all week, is snatched up by Mr. Tweedy, taken from
the yard and never seen again. It is sinisterly implied that
she lost her head and became the Tweedy's dinner.
There situation brightens when an American flying rooster,
Rocky Rhodes (Mel Gibson), who escapes the circus, crash lands
in their yard. While the hens are overjoyed, Fowler, an old
rooster who had served in the RAF during the war as the mascot
of a bomber unit, considers this Yank an untrustworthy, unwelcomed
guest. "Pushy Americans, always showing up late for every war.
Overpaid, oversexed, and over here!"
Ginger immediately tries to get Rocky Rhodes to help the chickens
learn to fly over the fence so they can escape. It becomes apparent
that Fowler may be right about Rocky's character. However, when
men arrive from the circus, and offer a reward for the return
of Rocky, Ginger has Rocky over a barrel. She only hid him after
he promises to help them.
So with the help with the help of two scavenger rats, Fetcher
(Phil Daniels) and Nick (Timothy Spall), the chickens, under
Rocky's direction undergo a training program to learn to fly,
complete with exercise and various contraptions, designed by
a Scottish hen, Mac, to try to get over the fence with, after
learning to flap their wings doesn't work too well.
Meanwhile, the dastardly Mrs. Tweedy sees an advertisement
for a chicken pie machine, and she decides to try to make big
money making chicken pies! Uh oh! After Mr. Tweedy assembles
the machine in the barn, he grabs Ginger to try out the chicken
pie process. Rocky Rhodes flies into the machine to try to rescue
Ginger from certain death. After several close shaves with death,
they not only escape using their quick thinking, but also manage
to disable the machine, which will buy them more time.
After honored as a hero by Fowler, who even gives Rocky his
RAF medal, Rocky leaves, not able to handle the praise or the
fact that he loves Ginger. The next day, despite her disappointment
in Rocky, Ginger gets the idea of building a mechanical flying
plane, that runs on chicken foot power. Mac draws up the engineering
plans, and with the help of Fowler and the rats, the whole chicken
population works feverishly, hoping to finish their flying escape
bird- plane before the Tweedys can get their chicken pie machine
fixed. To add to the suspense, Mr. Tweedy nearly catches them
several times.
In Nick Park's films,"there is always some sort of machine
that plays a major part in the film's climax." The last 20 minutes
treats the audience to some great suspenseful escape adventure,
that brings out the very best of all the chickens, rats and
roosters, both Fowler and Rocky, who comes back at the last
moment to help. The most intense moments revolve around the
final showdown between the evil Mrs. Tweedy and Ginger in a
rather dangerous environment.
This most entertaining story was created / directed by the
United Kingdom's honored director / writer, Nick Park and the
talented director/producer Peter Lord. Nick Park made a name
for himself and was honored for his highly entertaining series
of films starring animated characters, WALLACE AND GROMIT, in
a variety of adventures. Parks and Lord have worked together
to make WALLACE AND GROMIT: THE GREAT VEGETABLE PLOT which is
due to come out in 2004.
The clever, humorous, suspenseful screenplay, based on Park's
and Lord's story, was written by Karey Kirkpatrick, who does
very well in the humorous pun department, and has written a
very witty, humorous, well-done script that does great justice
to Lord's and Park's story.
The actors and actresses hired to be the voices behind the
various characters all did a great job. With the exception of
Mel Gibson, all the others are UK -based actors and actresses,
active in British films and TV.
British TV actress, Julia Sawalha, does a superb job voicing
the character of the smart, brave hen, Ginger, determined to
find some way to escape oppressive conditions and the fear of
death, with her fellow chickens, to live in freedom in an area
full of grass, food and water, far away from the Tweedys.
Mel Gibson also does an excellent job in providing the voice
for Rocky Rhodes who has some character weaknesses that he manages
to get past to do the right thing in the end.
Lynn Ferguson offers a Scottish-accented voice for Ginger's
right hand engineering designer, Mac, who designs the escape
bird-plane with Fowler's help.
Miranda Richardson does a delightfully evil voice for the nasty
Mrs. Tweedy, the villainous chicken egg farm owner.
Benjamin Whitrow, a veteran British TV and film actor, catches
the spirit of Fowler, a proud RAF veteran of WW2.
Tony Haygarth does a convincing voice for the hen-pecked Mr.Tweedy,
husband of Mrs. Tweedy, who thinks he is seeing things when
he catches glimpses of what the chickens are up to at varying
stages of their escape plans.
Phil Daniels (Fetcher) and Timothy Spall (Nick) play the wise-cracking
rats who do scavenging for payments in eggs. They play off each
other's lines very well, delivering the comical punch intended
by the script.
CHICKEN RUN is rated G, and is truly a great family film that
everyone will enjoy. It offers the perfect mix of humor, story,
suspense and adventure, with an underlying message that isn't
beaten over your head. Very young children may be a little scared
of Mrs. Tweedy, but she does get her just deserts in the end,
which should make everyone laugh. She doesn't die, but she looks
awfully funny.
If you enjoyed CHICKEN RUN, you may like Park's WALLACE AND
GROMIT A GRAND DAY OUT, CREATURE COMFORTS, A BUG'S LIFE, TOY
STORY 2, BABE, STALAG 17, and THE
GREAT ESCAPE.
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