Start the week with a film: Is ‘Chicken Run’ the perfect corporate satire?
The stop-motion animated comedy is available on Netflix.
In 2000, Aardman Animations produced its first full-length feature, Chicken Run. Whenever you’re feeling militant or miserable after a fruitless day of work, tune into Netflix and settle down for a hilarious stop-motion animated adventure featuring doughty chicken, dreams of flight and typical British humour.
World War II has ended, but conditions remain dire at a poultry farm in Yorkshire. The farm is run by the tyrannical Mrs Tweedy and her gormless husband Mr Tweedy. Hens that don’t lay eggs every single day are given the chop.
Ginger is leading the resistance, coming up with inventive ways to escape the Tweedys and their mean dogs. Yet, every single plan fails, until a solution comes flying out of the sky: the American rooster Rocky Rhodes. Could Rocky teach the other birds to fly over the fence that has imprisoned the chickens and guide them to their freedom?
Rocky is a charmer but not quite the saviour he claims to be. Meanwhile, the ’orrible Mrs Tweedy decides that poultry isn’t as lucrative as slaughtering the chickens to make pie.
Directed by Peter Lord and Nick Park and written by Karey Kirkpatrick, the film is a fun-filled blast that sends up profit-obsessed corporate culture too. Here is an animated movie that...