Friday 11 December 2009

2005 Corpse Bride and Curse of the Were Rabbit














Tim Burton's Corpse Bride is an Academy Award-nominated 2005 stop-motion-animation fantasy film directed by Mike Johnson and Tim Burton. It is based loosely on a 19th century Russian Jewish folktale version of an older Jewish story and set in a fictional Victorian era village in Britian.

The film was nominated in the 78th Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature, but was bested by Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit.

Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit is a 2005 British stop motion animated film, the first feature-lengthWallace and Gromit film. It was produced by DreamWorksAnimation and Aardman Animation, and released by DreamWorks Pictures.

The film followed eccentric inventor Wallace (still voiced by Peter Sallis) and his intelligent but silent dog, Gromit, as they come to the rescue of the residents of a village which is being plagued by a mutated rabbit before the annual vegetable competition.

It was a critical and commercial success, and won a number of film awards including the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.

The audience would be horror film lovers andpeople who are big fans of Tim Burton, as for Wallace and Gromit, the audience would be young teenagers and young children.

The important history is that both films are summer blockbusters and the Corpse Bride is the purest of a director's vision of recent years gone by, Wallace and Gromit's Curse of the Were-Rabbit won many awards, such as the Empire Awards, Bodil Awards, 33rd Annie Award, 78th Academy Award and the British Comedy Award.

The technique for Corpse Bride is freeze motion and stop motion, a bit of puppetry and clay animation.

The technology is computer generated with screen editing and plenty of emotion added to the scenes.

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