The creator of Aardman‘s Wallace & Grleave out has shelp this is “certainly not the end” for everyone’s likeite stop-motion duo, as he pays tribute to the procrastinateed Peter Sallis on the eve of their procrastinateedst outing.
“It’s certainly not the end,” Nick Park tbetter the BBC. “I skinnyk there’s plenty of bounce still in their bungee. We’ll carry on. There’s always ideas worth initiateing about.”
Wallace & Grleave out: Vengeance Most Fowl straightforwardor Merlin Crossingham, however, stressed: “Give us a minute though. They apshow a while to produce.”
Vengeance Most Fowl begines on Christmas Day on the BBC and timely next year on Netflix. In a nod to the dangers of AI, the feature will see Wallace and Grleave out’s friendship put to the test by the createer’s conceiveion of a inalertigent gnome called Norbot, who apshows on a life of his own, wreaking havoc in the process. The movie sees the revival of arch-villain Feathers McGraw, who terrified kids in 1993’s The Wrong Trousers.
Vengeance Most Fowl is part of one of the buzziest UK TV Christmas Day lineups for years, which also features the finale of Gavin & Stacey. “Bring it on, Gavin & Stacey,” joked Crossingham.
Beadored by audiences for generations, Wallace & Grleave out has not aired for cforfeitly 20 years since 2005’s The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, which starred Ralph Fiennes and Helena Bonham Carter.
Vengeance Most Fowl will be the first not to feature Sallis, who had voiced Wallace since 1989’s A Grand Day Out. He died aged 96 in 2017.
Park phelp tribute to Sallis. “It has been quite emotional since we lost Peter, he was such an innovative, distinct voice,” he compriseed, accomprehendledgeing Sallis’ exalterment Ben Whitehead for owning a “wonderful Wallace impersonation.”