Aardman Animations is a British-American animation studio founded by Peter Lord and David Sproxton, which co-produced some films with DreamWorks. They are most noted for their stop-motion work, with particular regards to the Wallace and Gromit franchise, though they have also produced both CGI (Flushed Away) and cel-animation. All of their stop motion films are among the highest-grossing stop-motion films, with their debut, Chicken Run, being their top-grossing film as well as the highest-grossing stop-motion film of all time.
History with DreamWorks[]
On October 27, 1999, Aardman signed a $250 million deal with DreamWorks to create 5 films that would be completed in 12 years. From this a project was announced, The Tortoise and The Hare, but was put on hold due to script issues.
On June 23, 2000, Chicken Run was released. The film received great critical and financial success, which was a great start for the two companies.
In 2005, Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit was released. The film received phenomenal success and reception.
Months after their next project (Flushed Away) was announced, Aardman and DreamWorks decided to cut short their contract due to "creative differences"
In 2006, Flushed Away was released, and was the first Aardman project made in all-CGI. Flushed Away received positive reviews but was only a minor box office success. Created on a budget of $149 million, poor box office reception resulted in a $109-million write-down for DreamWorks Animation, and in a termination of the partnership with Aardman.
Films[]
Notes[]
- Crood Awakening, one of the five movies, was supposed to be about prehistoric humans. Both studios continued with this idea after the termination; DreamWorks produced The Croods and Aardman produced Early Man.