Wallace & Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-rabbit ... Review

The heart of the film remains the relationship between the well-meaning but bumbling Wallace and the expressive, long-suffering Gromit.
It is packed with puns, slapstick humor, and gentle parodies of classic Universal horror movies.
Released in 2005, is a masterpiece of stop-motion animation from Aardman Animations. In this feature-length adventure, the cheese-loving inventor Wallace and his faithful, silent dog Gromit run "Anti-Pesto," a humane pest-control business protecting their neighborhood's prized vegetables ahead of the annual Giant Vegetable Competition.
It remains a quintessential family film—clever enough for adults to appreciate the cinematic references and goofy enough for children to love the chaotic chase sequences.
The film is built using traditional plasticine "claymation," giving it a tactile, charming texture that digital animation often lacks.