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It’s not just Wallace & Gromit’s biggest adventure yet, but also one of the greatest adventures in animation

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The Horror Parody Masterpiece | Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit Review

It's not just Wallace & Gromit's biggest adventure yet, but also one of the greatest adventures in animation

Comments

Anonymous

So the next review is Christmas related. Cause I'm hearing Silent Night in the background.

Anonymous

Happy Birthday, Mat!

Alan Oliva

Allow me to state this, Happy Birthday Dude! And Your Welcome!

Kim Lechman

Happy Birthday Mat!

Anonymous

Happy birthday!

Anonymous

TOKYO GODFATHERS LETS GOOOO

Joshua Copelan

Happy Birthday Mat. Loved Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of The Were-Rabbit and I hope to watch it again in the near future.

Hugo Segal

I am forever grateful that Nick Park’s most iconic creations have played a significant role in defining my identity as both a lifelong animation aficionado and a creative individual.

Alan Oliva

Despite the fact this was requested out of coincidence, I'm honestly glad I Still did it. I'm mean who can Not have a Good time with Wallace and Gromit, The iconic Claymation duo of the 90s to early 2000s. Everytime they're on is a blast, and I still hold love to the shorts to this day. Although I still wish they made more then with Shaun the Sheep but still everything Aardman made is always good. I'm still hyped for another Chicken Run!

Hunter O'Laughlin

Happy 30th birthday, AniMat. I definitely remember watching this as a kid and having a blast with it, as well as being a great introduction to the iconic duo as this was the first thing with Wallace & Gromit I watched. I saw it on TV again 3 years prior to your review and I’m happy that it’s held up very well from an animation, technical, story and character standpoint as well as a film that pays respect to both the original shorts and the horror genre. It’s one of the few animated films based on a short format series that works really well on its own even without seeing the original shorts. I don’t know what the next Classic Review is, but from the hints and listening to the music, I can guess it’s Don Bluth’s The Small One.