Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit Wins Top Honors at 33rd Annual Annie Awards Including ‘Best Animated Feature’
By ph. diddy on Feb 5, 2006 in Movie Awards
DreamWorks Animation SKG and Aardman’s “Wallace & Gromit - The Curse of the Were-Rabbit,” the Academy Award(R) nominated film and one of the best reviewed movies of the year, was honored Saturday with ten Annie Awards including “Best Animated Feature.” Presented by the International Animation Film Society to recognize the year’s finest animation in film and television, the acclaimed comedy adventure won every category in which it was eligible, tying the record for the most Annie Awards for a single movie.
The film, which features the two enterprising chums using all their wildly imaginative inventions to try to capture a mysterious beast of epic and fluffy proportions, will be released worldwide on DVD and VHS beginning with the February 7 launch in North America and rolling out across key territories including the U.K. February 20.
DreamWorks Animation and Aardman Features are currently working together on the computer-animated comedy “Flushed Away,” set for release in theaters November 2006. Blending Aardman’s trademark style and characterizations with DreamWorks’ state-of-the-art computer animation, “Flushed Away” is a madcap comedy set on and beneath the streets of London.
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit Annie Award Wins:
- Best Animated Feature
- Effects Animation: Jason Wen
- Character Animation: Claire Billett
- Character Design in an Animated Feature: Nick Park
- Directing in an Animated Feature Production: Nick Park & Steve Box
- Music in an Animated Feature Production: Julian Nott
- Production Design in an Animated Feature Production: Phil Lewis
- Storyboarding in an Animated Feature Production: Bob Persichetti
- Voice Acting in an Animated Feature: Peter Sallis (as Wallace)
- Writing in an Animated Feature Production: Steve Box, Nick Park, Bob Baker & Mark Burton

1 Comment(s)
By Toni on Feb 9, 2006 | Reply
I loved this movie. It was so cute, yet had many clever instances of humor for adults.