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IMDbPro

Chicken Run

  • 2000
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
220K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,291
250
Mel Gibson, Jane Horrocks, Miranda Richardson, Timothy Spall, Imelda Staunton, Phil Daniels, Lynn Ferguson, Julia Sawalha, and Benjamin Whitrow in Chicken Run (2000)
Home Video Trailer from Universal Studios Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:17
1 Video
99+ Photos
Animal AdventureBuddy ComedyDark ComedyPrison DramaSatireSlapstickStop Motion AnimationAdventureAnimationComedy

When a cockerel apparently flies into a chicken farm, the chickens see him as an opportunity to escape their evil owners.When a cockerel apparently flies into a chicken farm, the chickens see him as an opportunity to escape their evil owners.When a cockerel apparently flies into a chicken farm, the chickens see him as an opportunity to escape their evil owners.

  • Directors
    • Peter Lord
    • Nick Park
  • Writers
    • Peter Lord
    • Nick Park
    • Karey Kirkpatrick
  • Stars
    • Mel Gibson
    • Julia Sawalha
    • Phil Daniels
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    220K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,291
    250
    • Directors
      • Peter Lord
      • Nick Park
    • Writers
      • Peter Lord
      • Nick Park
      • Karey Kirkpatrick
    • Stars
      • Mel Gibson
      • Julia Sawalha
      • Phil Daniels
    • 445User reviews
    • 151Critic reviews
    • 88Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 24 wins & 27 nominations total

    Videos1

    Chicken Run
    Trailer 2:17
    Chicken Run

    Photos186

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    + 180
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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Mel Gibson
    Mel Gibson
    • Rocky
    • (voice)
    Julia Sawalha
    Julia Sawalha
    • Ginger
    • (voice)
    Phil Daniels
    Phil Daniels
    • Fetcher
    • (voice)
    Lynn Ferguson
    • Mac
    • (voice)
    Tony Haygarth
    Tony Haygarth
    • Mr. Tweedy
    • (voice)
    Jane Horrocks
    Jane Horrocks
    • Babs
    • (voice)
    Miranda Richardson
    Miranda Richardson
    • Mrs. Tweedy
    • (voice)
    Timothy Spall
    Timothy Spall
    • Nick
    • (voice)
    Imelda Staunton
    Imelda Staunton
    • Bunty
    • (voice)
    Benjamin Whitrow
    Benjamin Whitrow
    • Fowler
    • (voice)
    Jo Allen
    • Additional Chicken
    • (uncredited)
    Lisa Kay
    Lisa Kay
    • Additional Chicken
    • (uncredited)
    John Sharian
    John Sharian
    • Circus Man
    • (uncredited)
    Wyatt Shears
    • Additional Chicken
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Peter Lord
      • Nick Park
    • Writers
      • Peter Lord
      • Nick Park
      • Karey Kirkpatrick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews445

    7.1220.3K
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    Featured reviews

    10AdRager

    Something for everyone

    Chicken Run is a wonderfully entertaining movie for EVERYONE! Kids will love the eye-candy of chickens doing absurd things and tossing off silly one-liners. Adults will enjoy the brilliantly funny dialogue and the sweet, engaging story. Parents will enjoy taking their kids to a movie that does not have the Disneyesque product tie-ins and must-buy soundtrack. Movie buffs can try to count the references to The Great Escape, Stalg 17, Star Trek and Braveheart and may be pleasantly surprised at the quality of the camera work.

    Nick Park, Peter Lord & Co. succeeded (where so many other have failed recently) in making an animated movie whose story, plot and dialogue are equal to the brilliant animation. In the wordless opening minutes we are engaged and in invited to care about these silly chickens. By the time the snappy dialogue gets rolling we've already identified with the chickens' plight. It may be a bit slow through the middle for the younger moviegoers. But the sound of laughter, cheers and applause from the whole audience as the chickens make their final bid for freedom is well worth the wait. The only sad part is we may have to wait another five years for another Aardman Animations to produce another picture of the quality.
    8l_rawjalaurence

    Wonderful Animation Packed with Intertexts

    Watching Peter Lord and Nick Park's glorious animation story of a group of chickens escaping from a repressive farm in 1950s Britain, one comes to understand how the script draws on a whole raft of classic war films of the period, including THE COLDITZ STORY (1955), STALAG 17 (1953), and most obviously THE GREAT ESCAPE (1963).

    All of the elements are there, treated with a tongue-in-cheek reverence that makes the film a memorable experience. Ginger (voiced by Julia Sawalha) is the lead chicken, desperately trying to devise escape plans from the farm policed by Mr. Tweedy (Tony Haygarth) and his shrewish spouse (Miranda Richardson). The need to escape is paramount; all the chickens have to hope for instead is a life dedicated to laying eggs and a violent death by strangulation, as the Tweedies cook yet another tasty Sunday dinner. The only problem is that Ginger's task is hampered by the well-meaning yet rather clueless inmates, led by Babs (Jane Horrocks) and Mac (Lynn Ferguson). The entire group are 'supervised' (?) by the Brigadier Fowler (Benjamin Whitrow), using the kind of Fifties Received Pronunciation accent that immediately recalls the war films of that period.

    Enter Rocky the Rooster (Mel Gibson), a self-assured refugee from the circus, with a cockiness (pun intended) recalling Steve McQueen in THE GREAT ESCAPE. Although eventually helping to create a successful escape, Rocky has to learn how to co-exist with a group of Brits, that requires both races to become more accommodating, and less xenophobic. The script allows for some jokes familiar to viewers acquainted with World War II history (all Americans are "overpaid, oversexed, and over here."

    Although only just over eighty minutes long, the film is packed with incident as well as some really funny jokes. CHICKEN RUN is a joyous experience, a tribute both to the talents of animators and script-writers alike.
    10cal-33

    Engaging and delightful!

    This movie is all you could hope for in summer film fare. It had action, suspense, romance and a large helping of comedy. I was predisposed to love the movie, being a great fan of Wallace and Gromit, and the movie lived up to those other award-winning works. The movie works on every level, and was fun for all ages viewing it. Even my husband, who disdains children's movies, was truly enjoying himself. Needless to say, the children loved it, despite one rather gruesome off-screen moment, but that seemed not to matter too much. All in all, I can't recommend this movie too highly, it was incredibly entertaining and well-done.
    Bigspend

    Simply delightful viewing

    As an older gentleman with a rather refined taste in flim viewing, I was surprised by how absorbed I got in this elaborate cartoon-like feature. It's no mean trick to create rubber characters that you can really care about. My favorites were Mr & Mrs Tweedy -- especially the latter. Mrs Tweedy was the personification of evil (within the confines of a cartoon of course) and just a thoroughly interesting character. The sets were well done, especially the Stalag 17 camp image (notice the 17 on the meeting hut). Lots of British stereotype stuff which worked pretty well and kept my attention. Fast paced without becoming just another Roger Rabbit.

    Recommended!
    9ElMaruecan82

    Another kind of chick flick!

    Disney and Pixar held such a firm grip on animation that somehow our expectations seem to have been conditioned by their standards. This is why enjoying a Hayao Miyazaki film or anything outside the 'Dream Factory' is capital to prevent a certain creative monopoly... for the sake of creativity itself. And to call "Chicken Run" creative is an understatement.

    I have never been into claymation or stop-motion, "Wallace and Gromit" are household names but I'm not sure I ever watched any of their cartoons, but I admire the legacy, the patience with which Nick Park and Peter Lord gave life to these characters with unmistakable ovoid smile. They made their own style like Parker and Stone did with "South Park", animation starts with style, guts, a touch of zaniness and... a good story. Park and Lord designed it, Karey Kirkpatrick wrote the screenplay.

    In 1995, having made names of themselves with two Oscars for Best Animated Shorts, the duo figured it was time to join the big league. After four years, was released "Chicken Run", a tale of chicken trying to escape from a big farm designed like a German POW camp with undertones that recall the darkest chapters of history. That the film maintain a jolly and goofy attitude is admirable because never the gags (and there are plenty of them) conceal what's in jeopardy here; not just freedom but survival.

    In what might be the film's most disturbing scene, hens are aligned in the manner of prisoners waiting for the Kommandantur officer to give his orders and then a tall and thin woman almost goose-stepping with long and ominous black boots, checks her notebook and finds that one of her hens hasn't laid eggs in five days. There's a strange contrast between the poor hen's cartoonish gulp and the following scene where Mrs. Tweedy (voiced by Miranda Richardson) becomes the executioner.

    That scene doesn't set the tone as much as the stakes. The opening credits treated the heroine's failing escape attempts as a 'running gag' (no pun intended) ending with her being thrown in solitary (a funny nod to "The Great Escape" shows her playing with a Brussels sprout like Steve McQueen's baseball) but when the poor hen is killed off-screen -we do hear the thud and we see the raising axe- we understand that it's a matter of life and death and these hens' lives hang on their capability to lay eggs, in fact, on economical viability to the money-driven owner.

    Later she'd rent a new machine designed to make automated pies to increase her profits and so eggs will lose their life values. I guess one who had visited a farm or these industrial complexes where animals are mechanically stuffed and killed, won't find the historical parallels too far-fetched. Park and Lord humanized the hens and gave each one distinct personalities. It's perhaps the one concession to formula that had to be made, but it works. You know you have a leader, a brainiac, a reluctant one and a goofball in a community, but to call these hens archetypal would really diminish the effort pulled in the writing. At the very least they're war film archetypes not cute animated characters.

    Ginger (Julia Sawalha) is the intrepid leader and the embodiment of "getting free or die trying", she's the voice of reason and her heroism leaves no doubt since her failing escapes are collective, if it was up to her, she would have been free already. She is supported by Mac, the scientific one (and ever since I watched that "What's My Line" episode, I know chicken can wear glasses), there's the most productive one Bunty (Imelda Stanton) whose skepticism is never overplayed, I actually loved her retort to Ginger's , "what haven't we tried before?" "we haven't tried not trying to escape" and there's Fowler (Benjamin Whitrow), an elderly rooster who keeps rambling about his experience at the RAF and youth's lack of discipline. And there's Babs (Jane Horrocks), the dim-witted champion knitter, one of these you can't help thinking 'God I wish nothing happens to her".

    It's interesting that the film is mostly an all-female cast where even the villain 'Mrs Tweedy" illustrates a sort of female power by being so dominant on her hen-pecked (literally) husband Mr Tweedy (Tony Haygart). Female characters are so prevalent that there had to be a reverse 'Smurfette effect', besides the two helpful rats (Phil Daniels and Timothy Spall). There's where the cocky (literally) Rocky Rhodes (Mel Gibson), a rooster with flying powers (so it seems) crashes into the farm. One can imagine how a rooster would feel surrounded by so many groupies, but Ginger has no time for courting, she offers him a shelter in exchange of flying lessons. It's not much the training session or Rocky's morale-boosting actions but his hidden flaws that make him such an endearing character. In a funny coincidence, the same year Gibson played a similar role in "What Women Want". Rocky knows what hens want but will he live up to his premise?

    As the plot advances, we understand that heroism is a dish often served with a share of bluff and the two roosters in fact have their shameful secrets. "Chicken Run" never runs out of ideas and gratifies us with great moments: a dancing party, hens trying to hide from Mr. Tweedy, and a spectacular climax. One of the film's greatest momentums is the trip inside the infernal pie-making contraption with some clever nods to Indiana Jones. And just imagine that the creators made four seconds of the film each day, just as if the hens dug a tunnel with toothpicks.

    It's a credit to the authors to have made a film with such dark undertones so fun. It is mature but never at the expenses of entertainment. And hens are so believable as characters that we cheer for them not because we're required so but because we want to.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Babs' knitting is real, done with toothpicks as needles.
    • Goofs
      Mr. Tweedy's shotgun disappears on the porch in the opening sequence.
    • Quotes

      Babs: [after fainting from a near-death experience] All of me life flashed before me eyes!

      [disappointed]

      Babs: It was really borin'.

    • Crazy credits
      Near the very end of the credits the conversation about which comes first, the chicken or the egg??, comes up again. The two rodents want to take an egg or a chicken and make a chicken farm to make their own eggs. However, they cannot decide if they need a chicken or an egg. Finally, Rocky the Rooster pipes in and says to "please pipe down".
    • Alternate versions
      Originally, when Mrs. Tweedy was cutting off Edwina's head, the shadow on the wall actually depicted the axe coming downward before cutting away. It was further moved back to the current theatrical version where you see the axe going up, but not coming down.
    • Connections
      Edited into The History of the Hands (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Ave Maria
      Written by Franz Schubert (uncredited)

      Performed by Gracie Fields

      Courtesy of Living Era (ASV Ltd)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 13, 2000 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Aardman Animations
      • Film Sözlük
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pollitos en fuga
    • Filming locations
      • Bristol, England, UK(Aardman Studios)
    • Production companies
      • Aardman Animations
      • DreamWorks Animation
      • DreamWorks Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $45,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $106,834,564
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $17,506,162
      • Jun 25, 2000
    • Gross worldwide
      • $224,888,359
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital EX
      • DTS-ES

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