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Video/DVD Review: Chicken Run

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Common Sense Rating:  for ages 6+ Stars: 4 out of 5 (About Common Sense Ratings)
MPAA Rating: Studio: Universal Pictures Directed By: Nick Park  Cast: Mel Gibson, Miranda Richardson, Julia Sawalha  Running Time: 84 min  Release Date: 06/23/2000  DVD Release Date: 11/21/2000 Genre: Family and Kids 

What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that although this movie is rated G, it may be too scary or hard to follow for kids under 6 or 7. A minor character is killed off-screen, and characters are in peril throughout the movie.

Families can talk about why it was hard for Rocky to tell the truth -- and even to understand what telling the truth meant (as when he said, "I didn't lie to them, dollface. I just omitted certain truths"). Families can also discuss Ginger's perseverance in the face of steep odds, her refusal to escape without her friends, and the importance of leadership and teamwork. Why does Ginger have a dream of freedom that some of the other chickens can't even imagine? What does it mean to say that "the fences aren't just around the farm -- they're up here on your head"?

CHICKEN RUN has arrived, to the joy and relief of the many fans of Nick Park's Oscar-winning Wallace and Gromit short films. In his studio's first feature-length movie, a brave chicken plots an escape from a small Yorkshire chicken farm. The stern and angry Mrs. Tweedy (voiced by Miranda Richardson) and her hen-pecked husband have bullied their hens into producing eggs, but now they've set up a fierce-looking machine that turns chickens into chicken pies. Ginger (Julia Sawalha) is a smart, brave, loyal chicken who won't leave unless she can take the others with her. When an American circus rooster named Rocky ( Mel Gibson) arrives, Ginger gets him to agree to teach the chickens to fly over the fence, so they can find a place where they can live in freedom.

Animator Nick Park is a master at creating a world that is enchantingly believable. The farm seems to be set in the 1950s, and every detail, down to the last nail in the last board on the hen house wall, looks exactly as it should. The chickens are highly individual, completely believable, and wildly funny, as are the side-characters. Parents and kids alike will delight in Park’s Rube Goldberg-like machines and split-second action sequences.

Kids may not get all the jokes and some of the 1950s references may even escape adults. There is a wonderful variety of British accents here, but that shouldn’t deter non-Brit viewers. Both kids and adults will find much to enjoy in the chickens' adventures and their incredibly creative, highly detailed, animated world.

Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit
Creature Comforts
Wallace and Gromit in Three Amazing Adventures

Flushed Away



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