After DreamWorks Split, Aardman Animation Hooks Up with Sony
Big fan of the Aardman Animation flicks? Well, you are if you dug "Chicken Run," "Flushed Away," and "Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit." Unfortunately those last two flicks didn't make enough money to keep DreamWorks happy, which is why Aardman now has a new home at Sony.
Much ink was spilled on how disappointing the "Flushed Away" box office was, and when DreamWorks bailed on their Aardman contract a few months later, a lot of animation fans in North America went "Aw, man. Not cool." Well now it's Sony Animation to the rescue, as they've signed a deal with Aardman to bring a few of their new projects to American cinemas. (And one of those new ones might be another "Wallace & Gromit" adventure!)
Aardman chief Stephen Moore couldn't resist taking one last shot at DreamWorks while celebrating his new Sony deal: "The thing that attracted us to Sony is that they have a very broad taste, and they are distributing 20 movies a year around the world ... their desire to restrict us was much less, so we can make movies that follow Aardman’s instinctive style." In other words, as Variety points out, Sony will probably let the Aardmaneers do their own thing, whereas DW was a lot more "hands-on" than the filmmakers would have liked.
Apparently Jeffrey Katzenberg is convinced that the decidedly British Aardman attitude simply doesn't sell well enough in the U.S., but hey, the guys have made three damn good films, regardless of box office, so this new Sony deal is good news all around.
Source: Variety
Much ink was spilled on how disappointing the "Flushed Away" box office was, and when DreamWorks bailed on their Aardman contract a few months later, a lot of animation fans in North America went "Aw, man. Not cool." Well now it's Sony Animation to the rescue, as they've signed a deal with Aardman to bring a few of their new projects to American cinemas. (And one of those new ones might be another "Wallace & Gromit" adventure!)
Aardman chief Stephen Moore couldn't resist taking one last shot at DreamWorks while celebrating his new Sony deal: "The thing that attracted us to Sony is that they have a very broad taste, and they are distributing 20 movies a year around the world ... their desire to restrict us was much less, so we can make movies that follow Aardman’s instinctive style." In other words, as Variety points out, Sony will probably let the Aardmaneers do their own thing, whereas DW was a lot more "hands-on" than the filmmakers would have liked.
Apparently Jeffrey Katzenberg is convinced that the decidedly British Aardman attitude simply doesn't sell well enough in the U.S., but hey, the guys have made three damn good films, regardless of box office, so this new Sony deal is good news all around.
Source: Variety
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| Movie: | Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit |
| Flushed Away |
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jacog writes: on Apr 03 2007 06:02 AM Hoo ra... 'bout that time eh chaps, let's get Brahms and Liszt, eh? Foaaaahr. (Reply to this) |
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gerke writes: on Apr 03 2007 06:54 AM In reply to this comment (#860028) aardman sell plenty in other countries and on dvd to make money on each project. maybe the price of the company was too high. anyways, strange to see dreamworks losing a critically acclaimed studio due to dissapointing figures in the USA. if i remeber correctly Dreamworks was started as an awnser to the big hollywood studio's that focused on economics rather than quality of a movie. it proves again: averybody has his price. name me one company or writer or director that keeps his intergrity (???, sorry for my spelling) (Reply to this) |
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Mikeal420 writes: on Apr 03 2007 08:13 AM In reply to this comment (#860029) I remember that claim when Spielberg made it, but the second movie to be released by Dreamworks was that awful Clooney-Kidman movie "The Peacemaker", so obviously they always cared more about money over substance. Which in the end is understandable, you can't have one daring big-budget movie unless you release a few cheesy commercial ones to go with it. (Reply to this) |
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dagreenman18 writes: on Apr 03 2007 03:25 PM this is the same studio that made "Mouse Hunt", so no surprises. Better Sony than Disney. (Reply to this) |
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VML writes: on Apr 03 2007 07:50 PM In reply to this comment (#860029) The people at Dreamworks Animation are Nazis, you know? I mean, they're recent CGI movies all seem to have the same content (popular culture humor, toilet humor, dirty jokes only adults would understand, etc). Anyway, I'm glad Aardman Animation will continue releasing movies in the US through Sony. My family are suckers for their films. (Reply to this) |
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Mikeal420 writes: on Apr 04 2007 08:21 AM In reply to this comment (#860032) Anything Dreamworks has put out is not nearly as offensive as you calling them Nazis. You ought to feel ashamed (Reply to this) |
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hello_goodbye writes: on Apr 05 2007 12:36 PM Though I havn't seen flushed away yet through the Quality of Chicken Run and Wallace and Grommit films, as well as the TV shows (W+G, Creature Comforts, Shaun the Sheep etc) I am really happy that their carrying on :) (Reply to this) |
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