A Close Shave
This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary. It should be expanded to provide more balanced coverage that includes real-world context. (August 2020) |
A Close Shave | |
---|---|
Directed by | Nick Park |
Written by | Bob Baker Nick Park |
Produced by | Carla Shelley Michael Rose |
Starring | Peter Sallis Anne Reid Justin Fletcher |
Cinematography | Dave Alex Riddett |
Edited by | Helen Garrard |
Music by | Julian Nott |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | BBC Worldwide |
Release date |
|
Running time | 29 minutes[1] |
Country | United Kingdom |
Budget | £1.3 million[2] |
A Close Shave is a 1995 British stop-motion animated comedy film directed by Nick Park and produced by Aardman Animations in association with Wallace and Gromit Ltd., BBC Bristol and BBC Children's International. It is the third film featuring the eccentric duo Wallace and Gromit, following A Grand Day Out (1989) and The Wrong Trousers (1993). In A Close Shave, Wallace and Gromit uncover a plot to rustle sheep by a sinister dog.
Like The Wrong Trousers, it won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[3] A Close Shave has the first appearance of the character Shaun, who would later be the protagonist of the Shaun the Sheep spin-off television series and two feature films.
Plot[]
Inventor Wallace and his dog Gromit operate a window cleaning business. Wallace falls for wool shopkeeper Wendolene Ramsbottom, unaware that her sinister dog, Preston, rustles sheep to supply the shop. Discovering a lost sheep has wandered into and made a mess of the house, Wallace places him into his Knit-o-Matic, which bathes and shears sheep and knits the wool into sweaters. Preston appears and steals the machine's blueprints, as Wallace names his new pet Shaun.
Gromit becomes suspicious of Preston when he sees a lorry full of sheep behind Wendolene's shop. Preston captures Gromit, and frames him for the sheep rustling. Gromit is placed in prison, while Wallace's house is inundated with the freed sheep. Wallace and the sheep break Gromit out of prison, and hide out in the countryside. Wendolene and Preston arrive in a lorry to round up the sheep. When Wendolene rebels against Preston, demanding he stop the rustling, he locks her in the lorry with the sheep and drives away, intent on turning them into dog food.
Wallace and Gromit give chase on their motorcycle. When Gromit's sidecar detaches, he activates its aeroplane mode and resumes the chase from the air. Wallace becomes trapped in the lorry, and he, Wendolene and the sheep are transported to Preston's factory, where Preston has built a replica of the Knit-o-Matic. The captives are loaded into the machine's wash basin, but Shaun escapes. Shaun activates the factory's neon sign to reveal its location to Gromit, who breaks into the factory and attacks Preston. Shaun sucks Preston into the Knit-o-Matic, where his fur is removed. Wendolene reveals that Preston is actually a robot created by her deceased inventor father, but has malfunctioned from his original programming and turned evil.
When Preston becomes blinded after the Knit-o-Matic dresses him in a sweater made from his fake fur, he inadvertently hits the controls, and the group become poised to fall into a mincing machine. Shaun pushes Preston into the machine, jamming it and crushing him. Gromit is exonerated, and Wallace rebuilds Preston as a harmless remote-controlled dog. When Wendolene visits, Wallace invites her to have some cheese and crackers, but she declines due to a dairy allergy. As a disheartened Wallace decides to help himself, he finds Shaun eating the cheese, much to his chagrin.
Reception[]
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On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a perfect score of 100%, based on 20 reviews.[4]
References[]
- ^ A Close Shave - Wallace and Gromit: The Complete Collection (Motion picture). Apple TV. 12 November 1995. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Production History – A Close Shave". Telepathy. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ "The 68th Academy Awards (1996) Nominees and Winners". The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 25 March 1996. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ "A Close Shave". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
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External links[]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: A Close Shave |
- 1995 films
- 1990s animated short films
- 1990s children's fantasy films
- 1990s fantasy films
- 1990s stop-motion animated films
- 1995 animated films
- 1995 comedy films
- 1995 short films
- 1995 television films
- Aardman Animations short films
- Animated comedy films
- Animated films about animals
- Animated films about robots
- Best Animated Short Academy Award winners
- BBC Television shows
- British animated short films
- British films
- British short films
- Clay animation films
- Films about dogs
- Films about sheep
- Films directed by Nick Park
- Films with screenplays by Bob Baker (scriptwriter)
- Films with screenplays by Nick Park
- Stop-motion animated short films
- Wallace and Gromit films