Wallace & Gromit Vengeance Most Fowl Had Some Jokes Rejected For Being Too British, But I Want To Know More About The Gag Cut For ‘Family Viewing’

Film

As we look forward to the upcoming 2025 movies in theaters and on streaming, I’m excited for the world to see Netflix’s Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl. Aardman Animation’s world of comedy that rides the line between punny humor adults will love and sight gags kids will go nuts over, the legendary franchise has always been an example of crowd pleasing fun that’s specifically broad.

That beautiful contraction does have its limits though, and directors Nick Park and Merlin Crossingham shared an instance where that line was firmly drawn by the powers that be. Which leaves us with a new mystery that I need to know more about.

How Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl Balanced Its British Humor For A Worldwide Audience

I guess this is the point where I’d turn my swivel chair around, and gesture like a proper villain; much like one of our favorite show stealing villains Feathers McGraw. I haven’t been able to admit it yet, but I haven’t just seen Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl in advance… I actually got to visit the set. So today’s latest trailer reveal wasn’t the only information I had to go on when entering into a recent chat with both Mr. Park and Mr. Crossingham.

(Image credit: Aardman Animations / Netflix)

With an early press day on behalf of this Netflix/BBC winter release, several of Aardman’s finest were on hand to discuss everything from the wonders of stop-motion animation to why Feathers McGraw is returning in the first place. A virtual press conference earlier in the day brought up the story of how there were some jokes that might not play properly to international audiences.

Originally Posted Here

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