Animated
2000 / 84 minutes
RATING: 8/10
Sometimes whether you love or hate a film can be entirely about the expectations you come to it with. If you thought Chicken Run was going to be like other lightweight animated animal fare – Curious George or PAW Patrol – then you’d be disappointed. This tale of chickens trying to escape being made into pies isn’t for the timid toddler.
But if you were looking for a clever claymation homage to the World War II prisoner-escape films like Stalag 17 and The Great Escape, which you could share with your teens and tweens, then this is the film for you!
Our story begins in a chicken farm, but with the hen houses surrounded by rows of barbwire fencing, guard towers on every corner, and a pair of vicious dogs circling the perimeter. Younger viewers might think this some rather over the top security for a farm, but dad can point out that this chicken farm is doubling as a POW camp. And if anyone is going to get the flock out of this camp, the right hen for the job is Ginger, the bravest of all these chickens, and clever too. In fact, it seems like Ginger could get out any time she wants, but the problem is, she can’t manage to get everyone else out with her. In an opening montage we see one hilariously unsuccessful escape attempt after another.
So, if they can’t all get out through the gate or tunneling under the fence, what can they try next? Some of the other hens are content to stay, pumping out eggs and just keeping their cluckers down. But we find out quickly why this isn’t a place they can stay: chickens that can’t lay, don’t live for long.
Worse still, Mrs. Tweedy, the farm owner, is tired of selling eggs, and wants to get into the more profitable chicken pie business! So these birds have to fly the coop now… but how are they going to do it?
Here’s where Rocky the Rhode Island Rooster drops in… from the sky! Wait, what – can chickens actually fly? Well, seeing is believing, and Ginger saw it with her own two peepers. And now she has the best escape plan of all: Rocky will teach them all how to fly so they can just flap right over the fence!
But why is Rocky so reluctant to help?
Cautions
There’s all sorts of cautions that could be noted if you were watching this with kids under 10 – a chicken gets killed off screen, and all the chickens are threatened with death when an automated chicken pie-making shows up – this is just too tense for them.
For twelve and up the caution would be language. When Rocky shows up, the only other rooster around, an old British soldier, calls Americans “oversexed.” Other language concerns include British slang like “flippin’ hell,” “blooming’ heck” “thieving little buggers,” along with two mice noting that eggs come out of a hens “bum.”
Conclucksion
This seems the type of film you’ll either love or hate – no in-betweens. The stop-motion claymation trips up viewers, leading them to expect something light and fluffy, and the grit and tension that is key here leaves them with a bad taste in their mouths.
But if you’ve watched any old war films from the 1940s, 50s, or 60s, then I think the odds are very high that you’ll appreciate this too. My own kids have seen a dozen or so, and I think that’s why the daughter I watched this with loved it too.
So, recommended for 12 and up, with that proviso.