rdfs:comment
| - Flushed Away is a Dreamworks movie.
- The film stars the voice talents of Hugh Jackman, Kate Winslet, Andy Serkis, Bill Nighy, Ian McKellen, Shane Richie and Jean Reno. The story was by Sam Fell, Peter Lord, Dick Clement, and Ian La Frenais, and the screenplay was written by Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais, Christopher Lloyd, Joe Keenan, and William Davies. The film was released in US on 3 November 2006, and in UK on 1 December 2006, and was distributed by Paramount Pictures, except for Switzerland, Spain, and the Netherlands, which were handled by Universal Pictures.
- The film was released in US on 3 November 2006, and in UK on December 1 2006, and was distributed by Paramount Pictures, except for Switzerland, Spain, and the Netherlands, which were handled by Universal Pictures.
- (The Dreamworks-uary logo is shown, before showing clips from Flushed Away) Doug (vo): It's a little weird to see Nick Park's Wallace and Gromit design in a CG world. Maybe it had to do with the fact that their studio burned down around that time. Maybe this was meant to be stop-motion, but because of that, they had to make it CG. Well, whatever the reason, Flushed Away is a pretty enjoyable flick.
- Flushed Away (2006) is an Aardman Animations film, using CGI to duplicate Aardman's trademark Claymation style of animation. A pet mouse called Roddy St. James (voiced by Hugh Jackman), after a mishap with a sewer rat ends up flushed down from his swank Kensington home into the underworld of vermin beneath London. Desperate to get home, he encounters Rita (voiced by Kate Winslet), who is on the run from a crime lord called The Toad (voiced by Ian McKellen).
- Flushed Away is a 2006 British computer-animated comedy film, perhaps one of the most beloved Aardman classics it is directed by David Bowers and Sam Fell, executive produced by Steven Spielberg, and written by Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais, and Simon Nye. It is a partnership between Aardman Animations of Wallace and Gromit fame, and DreamWorks Animation, and is Aardman's first completely computer-animated feature as opposed to the usual stop-motion, also along with Amblin Entertainment. The film was well-received, but only grossed $178 million worldwide against it's $149 million budget.
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