Thanks for watching me animate! It was such a fun movie to work on, and it will be released on December 15. Here’s the link to the teaser trailer! ruclips.net/video/2glrzI9UGOY/видео.html
@@justincarawan-carawanco.pu1639 I know, right? Me, I wouldn’t even have the patience to animate Rocky, myself, or any of the chicken characters from this movie, rather. It looks cool when you see it on the screen, but to actually do the work and moving one frame of the animation to another, wash, rinse, repeat for a whole week is just ridiculously tedious! Holy poultry!
@@G.S.Productions i mean reviewing movies and watching movies is a completly diffrent thing compared to actaully doing stopmotion, i REALLY want to focus on stopmotion someday as well as coming back as filmaker
Honestly though it's still less expensive then CGI animation. 2d's also less expensive. As complex as they rigs are, it's still easier then making CGI look impressive, which costs a lot more to rig and light and render.
@@HolyNamed Also in 2d. Honestly though as time consuming as this looks... when you consider in-between your drawings in 2d I think they're about as time consuming. At least for things like moving the arms in frame or adjusting the brow, that can go much faster then doing all the extra drawings in 2d.
stop motion animation is incredibly rewarding, that is motivation enough to keep pressing forward so you get to watch the final product when it's finished and it's incredibly satisfying after the fact
I really don’t know! I animate at a much smaller level but still it takes 6 hours for 30 seconds of animation! I just kinda like animation! It’s fun to bring things to life!
NEW WALLACE AND GROMIT FILM?! WRAPPED UP FILMING OF DAWN OF NUGGET?! THERE'S MORE ARDDMAN ANIMATORS ON RUclips?!! **Dies from intense amounts of surprise**
In a world over-saturated with souless CGI, the fact this film is keeping the original animation style after all these years deserves huge respect. I also adored the first film in 2000. I haven't been this excited for a movie in a LONG time.
@@SonicZThehedgehog Not really the same, thats also tough but nowhere near this time consuming and meticolous, you fuckin need to take these apart WITH YOUR HAND AFTER EACH FRAME goddamnit. How can you compare? Why do you think there are very few stop motion animation pictures?
The fact that a single frame like this is comprised of removing the head, changing the mouths shape with another, smoothing out that mouthpiece so it blends in with the rest of the head, replacing the head, making a few more adjustments to the model so it blends in perfectly with the previous frames and then finally taking a picture of that frame just to do it all again, all while taking up around 10 minutes just goes to show the amount of hard work, perseverance and hard work these animators have in them. You should all be proud.😁
A Chicken Run sequel? That’s my childhood right there! I can’t believe you get to be a part of making another! So cool! And how they just have all the mouths and expressions that can come apart is so neat! I remember watching their behind the scenes for Wallace and Gromit and being fascinated by the process. Thanks for sharing this it brings back memories.😄😊
I’m a sucker for those timelapses showing the stop motion process where the characters move normally with the animators zooming around moving them However I’ve never seen the process in real time and somehow this was equally satisfying. I love stop motion but this video is proof that I am not patient enough for it
Exactly. No matter the medium, animation hinges on one single principle; the illusion of life. Executing that illusion IS the art form. The only thing that changes is the medium.
@@sagewilde6866ure, but some mediums are definitely faster than others. If you want to make a movie stop motion that looks as good as a Pixar movie it would take ages. Computer animation is by far the fastest, but it has the ability to make a "better/higher quality" image in less time, and you CAN take a long time to do it if you choose in order to make it even better. The style of the film makes a huge difference, but let's say you're going for a more simple style and not something super detailed and/or realistic. In that case, computer animation will be WAY faster.
It usually goes like this. For 3D animation the main animation’s and cycles for the model are pretty fast compared to the rest of the process of modeling/rigging setting up scenes etc, god help you if you want the model to do something it wasn’t made to do. For handrawn/digital frames making changes is it’s specialty because everything is easily interchanged as the animation is simple(compared to 3D mediums) just requires much more expertise and understanding on how to make it look good for the production. Stop motion. God help you on everything
This gives me so much ASMR. This is not just patience but this is also really about mindfulness. It must be so chill and calming to animate stop motion! Lots of admiration to you and the rest of the team. Thanks for sharing this with us!
except stop motion and handrawn animations aren't things really taught anymore only a few places teach them and 3D animation is made to look 2D . it is also cheaper so more contents more money ... sad but this is how capitalism is quantity over quality ( i wanted to study animation but abandonned because the few places teaching 2D animations and stop motion are really rare it's an art being lost ) I couldn't aford to go to a different countrie to learn what I consider real animation
I can’t wait to see this movie 🎥, I can’t believe it took 23 years to get a sequel to one of the best stop motion animated movies 🎥 of all time. I’m super excited.
The level of detail that goes into stop-motion animation is absolutely spellbinding. The infinite amount of patience and dedication these animators have is even more mind-blowing. To all the stop-motion animators out there, you have my undying respect.
I am so excited for this movie later in the year. I was raised on Wallace and Gromit! 😂 Aardman animations means a lot to me and its great to see you working on this movie, I hope you enjoyed your time on it.
I experiment with short burst hand-drawn and stop-motion animations for my own entertainment as a hobby from time to time. But even an absolute dog turd amateur like me knows that this is the kind of job that requires patience, discipline, commitment, and locking yourself in a room for hours on end. It gets even worse when you've got that "perfectionist" mentality, or OCD or whatever you wanna call it. Doesn't matter what type of animation it is you're doing. 2D, 3D, Stop-Motion, once you start goofing around with it and then unintentionally getting in the zone, you just immediately become laser-focused to the task at hand. Any kind of disturbance that could disrupt your flow is immediately gonna make you feel like "Eh, I'll finish it later" and before you know it 2 years have passed and you still haven't finished the sh*t. So huge respect to you my guy.
When we put traditional animation and stop motion animation side by side we clearly see how similar they are when it comes to commitment, patience, love and care with every single frame. My respect and admiration for these artists. We are glad this kind of animation is still alive.
You are an amazing artist in how much care and time as well as consideration you put in to one frame. Incredible. So happy to see you working on this film.
Idk why but this video has motivated me to practice and actually put passion in to my hobby. I guess it because watching you take 14 minutes (idk if this is edited or not but still) to make ONE FRAME of a 10 second clip, so no one can be complaining saying “it’s to hard” or “it takes to much time” look at the work these ppl are putting in to 10 seconds! Don’t give up ether, have patience. If this type of stuff is possible, then I’m sure what you’re trying to do/achieve if far from impossible!
Over 20 years we wait for this sequel. But this video really does make me love Aardman so much more for their dedication, animation and storytelling. Fantastic work man!
Ok I didn't knew that I needed to see this to stay motivated on my job as a 3D animator, which although it is also a time-consuming work, but it's nowhere near as complex as making stop motion, so much respect for you man.. thanks for sharing this process!
Wow! Almost 15 minutes just to shoot one frame?! Now if that doesn’t boggle the mind, I don’t know what does. Now that’s dedication. Such respect for Aardmam amd stop-mo companies in general.
That was interesting to watch. I so admire your dedication as a stop motion animator! The effect of seeing real objects move themselves in space and time- It's always like a bit of magic.
Dang. Never knew it would take too long to animate even just 1 frame. Thanks, Andy! The next time I watch a stop motion film, I'll give it the respect it deserves.
Considering mostly everything from the first movie burned in a warehouse fire, I'm curious about how difficult it was to recreate characters like Rocky here.
@@toonzach2870 I do believe some survived due to being given away to crew members but they sadly had been auctioned of by those crew members so Aardman can't reclaim them. I do believe one of the first movie sets still exists being one of the interior of the bunkers with a Rocky and Ginger puppet but I believe they are resin replicas due to the plasticine ones likely not being able to stand perfectly like that for extended periods of time, I also know 1 other set still exists somehow, those 2 things I mentioned are owned by Aardman
As a Stop motion Animator myself i know the struggles with the process of filming and having a lot of patience much respect for all animators out there remember a person is getting their hands dirty to make our entertainment
Whenever I heard the word claymation, I'm always at awe by how the people working on it have time and dedication into making it and even if it takes years to finish, I can't help but admire the movie and the people who worked on it. I'm honestly excited to see this "Chicken Run Dawn of the Nugget"
Mis respetos para estos animados del stop motion , realmente toma mucha paciencia y dedicacion para generar cada escena . Realmente esto le da un valor agregado a la pelicula. Estos animadores merecen un reconocimiento a nivel mundial por su arduo trabajo 💪
Wow. I make 2d animations and even i am so impressed with his patience. Mixing the clay to remove the gaps part must be REALLY frustrating after a while of redoing it.
If you work in stop-motion for a living, you must have a CRAZY amount of patience. I occasionally make LEGO Stop-Motions, but this seems like a lot of work. Keep it up! 👍🏾
i find it funny that i just recently found out that you can do it with lego stop motion too you can also take off the head and replace it with a slightly different face just less time consuming
Very surprised that the pieces aren't just solid to be switched out easier, and that the lines aren't just removed in post. Unwrapping every single piece just to take it off again one photo later seems like madness!
This reminds me of that one South Park episode where the boys decided to make a stop motion cartoon and spend all night animating a single sentence. This stuff takes insane amounts of skill and determination
Mad impressive each time you see behind the scenes like this. This is part of why I appreciate stop-motion so much. The patience and focus on detail. 👑
What's crazy is that the models used for the film had to be made from scratch using only references from the first film, because ALL of the original models were destroyed in a warehouse fire just weeks after the release of Curse of the Were-Rabbit.
I love this!! I loved the first movie, and I'm excited for this one to come out. I know it takes a ton of time, patience, effort and skill into this type of animation and they've got one of the best in the bizz, you, Andy! Watching you tweak each part of the face made me realize- this type of animation is basically a 3D flip book. I love your work!
If any of you thought CGI is a long and arduous process, look again. The only real driving force keeping any kind work going is keeping eyes on the bigger picture, and how it'll look when done, and stop-motion is no exception. Even today with much more readily-available gadgets and software, it's just as hard as it was when the first stop-motion movies started over a century ago, and the amount of dedication needed is all the same. As a kid, I tried stop-motion with my Legos in the early 2000s, but I got bored and just... Gave up, and even with CGI today, I just barely have the patience for that. You've gotta respect the effort and dedication that goes into just even a frame or a few seconds of stop-motion animation.
Not gonna lie that i have a huge respect to the people that animate the stop motions movies, if this little part taked more than 14 minutes, imagine animating an entire 1 hour and half movie!
amazing ! a movie alway give you the impression that there are alway multiple people working on it at the same time but this just look like a calm moment
The Stages: A Chicken Run sequel? Excitement grows as I watch the video I have to look up when the film will be coming out. It's December 15th, it's this year. The excitement grows. Man, I can't wait to see this at the cinema. I hope it lives up to the first one that I loved as a child. This is going to be fantastic, I'll actually have a reason to go to the cinema for the first time in over a decade. Scrolls down the Wiki page, sees the rights were bought by Netflix. Sinks into a rapid pit of depression. Half accepts defeat.
Interesting to watch. Props to stop motion animators, this takes a lot of patience and i assume gentleness as to not harm the clay. Been interested in animation since i was a kid, but never did anything with that interest. Also i wondered how you hid the mouth seems! Of course you use water, it's clay. XD *I think that was water.* Thanks for making this vid, people involved. God Bless!
{2:40 - 2:57} - This whole part is giving me anxiety. Simply having to change the mouth to stick the plasticine part that came off seems quite tedious to me. And it is impressive that it is one of the parts that you had to carry out the longest. {9:30 - 9:40 - 12:52 - 12:58 - 13:25} - I think this is the part I would most like to see once all this time and effort is invested in it. At first I wasn't a big fan of Stop Motion animation, and I always saw it as something tedious and with many limitations, but seeing someone professional doing it, being paid for it, seeing people in the comments supporting it and seeing how the product turns out In the end, it makes me think that all this effort and dedication is really worth it.
Explaining to students that "1 hour of work will last maybe 1 second on screen." Freaks them out...until they actually start animating. They really enjoy the process
Completely insane! Second kind of animation after the classic one which is 100% timeless. You can watch it a year, 10 years or 70 after the premiere and it will be still look amazing.
WOW! Thanks for the insight into the behind the scenes. I hope to show this to my daughter soon so she can see what actual patience looks like. haha. Congrats on getting to work on a sequel to such a great film!
It's amazing how many films and TV shows that Aardman actually produce and release. Giving the extremely hard work the lengthy painstakingly slow process of stop start animation. 📽🎬🎦🎞🎥🖥📺👏
I watched the film yesterday at the LFF 2023 screening, and I'm glad I saw your scene in the final product! Can't wait to find out what were the other shots you did!
Several hours for a few seconds. I wish I could do it. I would need frequent long breaks. I’ve done a little bit of stop motion, and of course I made a few flipbooks (inspired by you) but I would need years and years to get this done.
Thanks for watching me animate! It was such a fun movie to work on, and it will be released on December 15. Here’s the link to the teaser trailer! ruclips.net/video/2glrzI9UGOY/видео.html
Day after my bday noice! 😊
Ooooooooooohhhh
@@romanog.208 4 days after mine 😲
I’m exited
Upload this kind of video again.
I have so much respect for these stop motion animators. Just the amount of patience and detail that goes into each frame is mind-blowing.
The original film took 3 and a half years to make, so I can bet that this took more than that to make this upcoming movie that I’m most excited about.
@@G.S.Productions Only a minute and a half in, and I'm exhausted just looking at how daunting this all is!
@@justincarawan-carawanco.pu1639 I know, right? Me, I wouldn’t even have the patience to animate Rocky, myself, or any of the chicken characters from this movie, rather. It looks cool when you see it on the screen, but to actually do the work and moving one frame of the animation to another, wash, rinse, repeat for a whole week is just ridiculously tedious! Holy poultry!
@@G.S.Productions i mean reviewing movies and watching movies is a completly diffrent thing compared to actaully doing stopmotion, i REALLY want to focus on stopmotion someday as well as coming back as filmaker
@@JordanWheeler1999 Okay, suit yourself, dude. But just be aware that your hands will get filled with clay and residue by the time you’re finished.
My first three reactions to this:
1. Chicken Run sequel????
2. This is magical
3. Animators are forces to be feared
Yes, the sequel will be showed in Netflix in november
@@paranerdiaDecember 15th actually
@@paranerdiaque
@@paranerdia december
Trailer looked not bad
This clip just shows how stop motion is the most expensive and hard way to do animation.
To do this you need a lot of passion, talent and patience.
I love this video!
Yes, I make 2d animation, This takes so much more time, I have patience but that much? I wouldn't be able to stay motivated
Honestly though it's still less expensive then CGI animation. 2d's also less expensive. As complex as they rigs are, it's still easier then making CGI look impressive, which costs a lot more to rig and light and render.
@@HolyNamed Also in 2d. Honestly though as time consuming as this looks... when you consider in-between your drawings in 2d I think they're about as time consuming. At least for things like moving the arms in frame or adjusting the brow, that can go much faster then doing all the extra drawings in 2d.
Gotta say… it is super time consuming and expensive to pull it off
But the satisfaction to see the finished product were really that good
10 seconds of animation = forever HOW DO YOU STAY MOTIVATED???
They specialize in this type of work. They learned patience and motivation to master animating stop motion
stop motion animation is incredibly rewarding, that is motivation enough to keep pressing forward so you get to watch the final product when it's finished and it's incredibly satisfying after the fact
I really don’t know! I animate at a much smaller level but still it takes 6 hours for 30 seconds of animation! I just kinda like animation! It’s fun to bring things to life!
Passion.
You really get into a zone and every frame becomes satisfying
Well now we know why the sequel took 23 years. Mad respect to these artists
I know you probably aren't serious, but it only takes like a year and a half to animate one of these movies
@@1ROCKET- sure
@@jayronveintemilsetenta7344 The entire first movie from idea to finish only took 3 and a half years look it up
@@1ROCKET- It usually take 3 to 4 years (but it can be more than that). It's a really meticulous process.
@@1ROCKET- thats still more than a year like u said
It’s so nice finally having a video out there that realistically shows how long it takes us changing mouths in-between frames! 😄
lol
They know how to make the animation just right just like dreamworks did
NEW WALLACE AND GROMIT FILM?!
WRAPPED UP FILMING OF DAWN OF NUGGET?!
THERE'S MORE ARDDMAN ANIMATORS ON RUclips?!!
**Dies from intense amounts of surprise**
@@hilariousskullnamedcatzo647 yea
@@hilariousskullnamedcatzo647 yea
Huge respect to Aardman for keeping the art in cinema after all these years.
It’s like 23 years
Especially after that huge fire that destroyed most of their work.
@@9386AliGugh I remember that. Did we find out the cause?
@@9386AliG I’m so excited for this sequel
@@JaggedBird The fire at Aardman Animations was caused by an electrical fault
- LinerAI
In a world over-saturated with souless CGI, the fact this film is keeping the original animation style after all these years deserves huge respect. I also adored the first film in 2000. I haven't been this excited for a movie in a LONG time.
- How is your day, dear?
- Oh, it was so hard, the deadline is so soon, so I had to animate ten frames today
- Wow, my hero!
Can’t imagine how much longer it must have taken when whole scenes had to be done at once, rather than backdrops being composited in later
Honestly as someone who animates in non-stop motion, that DID seem the REALLY terrifying aprt.
Let’s not Get Disturbed and Lose patience for this Stop motion animation it’s same thing with anime and animated and 3D animation what we do too
@@SonicZThehedgehog Agreed: they're all a lot of work and dedication to make look good, and all to be appreciated when done well
@@SonicZThehedgehog Not really the same, thats also tough but nowhere near this time consuming and meticolous, you fuckin need to take these apart WITH YOUR HAND AFTER EACH FRAME goddamnit. How can you compare? Why do you think there are very few stop motion animation pictures?
Gotta admire the dedication that animators like you give in order to work on such time consuming animations.
Yeah, 10 seconds takes like a couple days for stop-motion
@@HolyNamed
They all owe a tremendous debt of gratitude for the inspiration and influence of Ray Harryhausen and his mentor Willis O’Brien.
@@TPDManiacXC626 I have a question why Chicken Run 2 is on Netflix why and what is wrong with movie theaters what is wrong with that ?
The fact that a single frame like this is comprised of removing the head, changing the mouths shape with another, smoothing out that mouthpiece so it blends in with the rest of the head, replacing the head, making a few more adjustments to the model so it blends in perfectly with the previous frames and then finally taking a picture of that frame just to do it all again, all while taking up around 10 minutes just goes to show the amount of hard work, perseverance and hard work these animators have in them. You should all be proud.😁
In conclusion, those who really deserve an Oscar are these magnificent people
theres also VFX artists who paintakingly brought beautiful visuals to the big screen wheres their oscar?
Oscars are for acting,
They deserve a medal
A Chicken Run sequel? That’s my childhood right there! I can’t believe you get to be a part of making another! So cool! And how they just have all the mouths and expressions that can come apart is so neat! I remember watching their behind the scenes for Wallace and Gromit and being fascinated by the process. Thanks for sharing this it brings back memories.😄😊
I’m a sucker for those timelapses showing the stop motion process where the characters move normally with the animators zooming around moving them
However I’ve never seen the process in real time and somehow this was equally satisfying. I love stop motion but this video is proof that I am not patient enough for it
It's funny that even in 3d animation and traditional hand drawing it's not even that much faster if you want it to look decent.
Exactly. No matter the medium, animation hinges on one single principle; the illusion of life. Executing that illusion IS the art form. The only thing that changes is the medium.
@@sagewilde6866ure, but some mediums are definitely faster than others. If you want to make a movie stop motion that looks as good as a Pixar movie it would take ages. Computer animation is by far the fastest, but it has the ability to make a "better/higher quality" image in less time, and you CAN take a long time to do it if you choose in order to make it even better.
The style of the film makes a huge difference, but let's say you're going for a more simple style and not something super detailed and/or realistic. In that case, computer animation will be WAY faster.
But how skibidi toilets can animate so fast?
It usually goes like this. For 3D animation the main animation’s and cycles for the model are pretty fast compared to the rest of the process of modeling/rigging setting up scenes etc, god help you if you want the model to do something it wasn’t made to do. For handrawn/digital frames making changes is it’s specialty because everything is easily interchanged as the animation is simple(compared to 3D mediums) just requires much more expertise and understanding on how to make it look good for the production. Stop motion. God help you on everything
This gives me so much ASMR. This is not just patience but this is also really about mindfulness. It must be so chill and calming to animate stop motion!
Lots of admiration to you and the rest of the team. Thanks for sharing this with us!
I'll forever have so much respect for stop-motion animators. The patience!
This short clip is a great educational tool for all those students entering the animation industry. Thanks for taking the time to share your artistry.
I’m so excited for the sequel
except stop motion and handrawn animations aren't things really taught anymore only a few places teach them and 3D animation is made to look 2D . it is also cheaper so more contents more money ... sad but this is how capitalism is quantity over quality ( i wanted to study animation but abandonned because the few places teaching 2D animations and stop motion are really rare it's an art being lost ) I couldn't aford to go to a different countrie to learn what I consider real animation
I am a stopmotion animator too glad to see people are making a living off my passion!
Is it just me, or is the eyeball taking out part so satisfying?!
WHAT 😳
i knew about how people make stop motion movies but seeing it... im in love with this.
I can’t wait to see this movie 🎥, I can’t believe it took 23 years to get a sequel to one of the best stop motion animated movies 🎥 of all time. I’m super excited.
Gosh, the amount of work to make this, my respect to all of you at Aardman
The level of detail that goes into stop-motion animation is absolutely spellbinding. The infinite amount of patience and dedication these animators have is even more mind-blowing. To all the stop-motion animators out there, you have my undying respect.
I knew claymation and stopmotion took a long time, but Jesus…
exactly
@@FrankyG41000
And to think their influential idol Ray Harryhausen did all the monster stop-motion work all by himself!
I am so excited for this movie later in the year. I was raised on Wallace and Gromit! 😂 Aardman animations means a lot to me and its great to see you working on this movie, I hope you enjoyed your time on it.
Christ. This is painstakingly tedious. , but I'ts incredible.
I can't beleive they are still actually using clay to some degree. That is amazing
I experiment with short burst hand-drawn and stop-motion animations for my own entertainment as a hobby from time to time. But even an absolute dog turd amateur like me knows that this is the kind of job that requires patience, discipline, commitment, and locking yourself in a room for hours on end. It gets even worse when you've got that "perfectionist" mentality, or OCD or whatever you wanna call it.
Doesn't matter what type of animation it is you're doing. 2D, 3D, Stop-Motion, once you start goofing around with it and then unintentionally getting in the zone, you just immediately become laser-focused to the task at hand. Any kind of disturbance that could disrupt your flow is immediately gonna make you feel like "Eh, I'll finish it later" and before you know it 2 years have passed and you still haven't finished the sh*t.
So huge respect to you my guy.
When we put traditional animation and stop motion animation side by side we clearly see how similar they are when it comes to commitment, patience, love and care with every single frame. My respect and admiration for these artists. We are glad this kind of animation is still alive.
I will never not be in awe of stop motion animation
I would love to see more videos like these... So relaxing and interesting at the same time
Thanks!
@@andymation just take your time and just reminders us when you make another film
You are an amazing artist in how much care and time as well as consideration you put in to one frame. Incredible. So happy to see you working on this film.
Idk why but this video has motivated me to practice and actually put passion in to my hobby. I guess it because watching you take 14 minutes (idk if this is edited or not but still) to make ONE FRAME of a 10 second clip, so no one can be complaining saying “it’s to hard” or “it takes to much time” look at the work these ppl are putting in to 10 seconds! Don’t give up ether, have patience. If this type of stuff is possible, then I’m sure what you’re trying to do/achieve if far from impossible!
Over 20 years we wait for this sequel. But this video really does make me love Aardman so much more for their dedication, animation and storytelling. Fantastic work man!
Ok I didn't knew that I needed to see this to stay motivated on my job as a 3D animator, which although it is also a time-consuming work, but it's nowhere near as complex as making stop motion, so much respect for you man.. thanks for sharing this process!
Wow! Almost 15 minutes just to shoot one frame?! Now if that doesn’t boggle the mind, I don’t know what does. Now that’s dedication. Such respect for Aardmam amd stop-mo companies in general.
Please do more of this. So satisfying and displays your skills as a master animator
That was interesting to watch. I so admire your dedication as a stop motion animator!
The effect of seeing real objects move themselves in space and time- It's always like a bit of magic.
Gotta say, the patience you have to make each frame in every project is worth to admire.
I have never not seen a SINGLE stop motion film or short that was bad. This is to animation what climbing Mt Everest is to everyone else!
Dang. Never knew it would take too long to animate even just 1 frame. Thanks, Andy!
The next time I watch a stop motion film, I'll give it the respect it deserves.
Considering mostly everything from the first movie burned in a warehouse fire, I'm curious about how difficult it was to recreate characters like Rocky here.
Yes they made all new characters for this
Wow I did not know everything burned in a ware house
@@LemieuxponyvlogsBack in 2005. It was a freak accident that destroyed a lot of Aardman's models and sets from their previous films.
Ok cool that’s interesting thanks for telling
@@toonzach2870 I do believe some survived due to being given away to crew members but they sadly had been auctioned of by those crew members so Aardman can't reclaim them. I do believe one of the first movie sets still exists being one of the interior of the bunkers with a Rocky and Ginger puppet but I believe they are resin replicas due to the plasticine ones likely not being able to stand perfectly like that for extended periods of time, I also know 1 other set still exists somehow, those 2 things I mentioned are owned by Aardman
As a Stop motion Animator myself i know the struggles with the process of filming and having a lot of patience much respect for all animators out there remember a person is getting their hands dirty to make our entertainment
Stop motion is so beautiful to see! Such talented artists!
Awesome! I think its the part when he pushes the button and a coffee get made in the background
i dont even know what to say man aghhh. stop motion is just aghhhhh. masterwork.
Whenever I heard the word claymation, I'm always at awe by how the people working on it have time and dedication into making it and even if it takes years to finish, I can't help but admire the movie and the people who worked on it. I'm honestly excited to see this "Chicken Run Dawn of the Nugget"
Love that they allowed you to show this! People get to see really what actually goes into the painstaking process of stop-motion.
Cool behind the scenes footage! Words can't describe how EXCITED I am for this movie!
Stop motion is something that should be more valued. It's beautiful and amazing to see.
And look how hard they work for just do a simple "What?!"
It’s nice to see stop motion animation is still going strong
Mis respetos para estos animados del stop motion , realmente toma mucha paciencia y dedicacion para generar cada escena .
Realmente esto le da un valor agregado a la pelicula.
Estos animadores merecen un reconocimiento a nivel mundial por su arduo trabajo 💪
So much patience and attention 👏👏
Chicken run was the first movie i ever saw as a kid and i was awe inspired, and now theres a sequel?? The nostalgia thank you ❤
Wow. I make 2d animations and even i am so impressed with his patience. Mixing the clay to remove the gaps part must be REALLY frustrating after a while of redoing it.
Incredible patience and skill are required to keep this genre of movie alive. That's why there's not many stop motion companies left today.
If you work in stop-motion for a living, you must have a CRAZY amount of patience. I occasionally make LEGO Stop-Motions, but this seems like a lot of work. Keep it up! 👍🏾
Is this the behind the scenes of the new Chicken Run movie that is called Dawn of the Nugget?
@@trevorsheehan1757Yes it is
i find it funny that i just recently found out that you can do it with lego stop motion too you can also take off the head and replace it with a slightly different face just less time consuming
Very surprised that the pieces aren't just solid to be switched out easier, and that the lines aren't just removed in post. Unwrapping every single piece just to take it off again one photo later seems like madness!
This reminds me of that one South Park episode where the boys decided to make a stop motion cartoon and spend all night animating a single sentence. This stuff takes insane amounts of skill and determination
Mad impressive each time you see behind the scenes like this. This is part of why I appreciate stop-motion so much. The patience and focus on detail. 👑
Mis respetos a las personas que hacen este tipo de animación, la paciencia que deben de tener para hacer este tipo de animaciones
amazing! The blending of the mouth piece on for each phoneme is what stands out as most impressive to me
What's crazy is that the models used for the film had to be made from scratch using only references from the first film, because ALL of the original models were destroyed in a warehouse fire just weeks after the release of Curse of the Were-Rabbit.
RESPECT. It’s amazing that you have to unwrap the mouthpiece and then rewrap it for every shot when they are talking.
Impressive, there's a reason why I love stop motion!!! 🥰🥰🥰
The animator's face says more than a thousand words about what your job is like
My absolute respects 😎
I love this!! I loved the first movie, and I'm excited for this one to come out. I know it takes a ton of time, patience, effort and skill into this type of animation and they've got one of the best in the bizz, you, Andy! Watching you tweak each part of the face made me realize- this type of animation is basically a 3D flip book. I love your work!
If any of you thought CGI is a long and arduous process, look again. The only real driving force keeping any kind work going is keeping eyes on the bigger picture, and how it'll look when done, and stop-motion is no exception. Even today with much more readily-available gadgets and software, it's just as hard as it was when the first stop-motion movies started over a century ago, and the amount of dedication needed is all the same.
As a kid, I tried stop-motion with my Legos in the early 2000s, but I got bored and just... Gave up, and even with CGI today, I just barely have the patience for that. You've gotta respect the effort and dedication that goes into just even a frame or a few seconds of stop-motion animation.
It's honestly a miracle any stop motion film gets made at all
When I saw the trailer I thought, oooh they switched to CG. But no! Jeeze this is work-intensive. Mad respect!
It's hard but at the same time a really entertaining and satisfying job to do and this is what my experience says ❤
Rocky without his beak is creepy, I watched the Chicken Run series and it was awesome! The first time I watched out of order, But then I corrected it.
Congratulations! Your gonna be on Netflix! Be proud Andy!👏
Not gonna lie that i have a huge respect to the people that animate the stop motions movies, if this little part taked more than 14 minutes, imagine animating an entire 1 hour and half movie!
So much work and effort, you and Aardman are absolute pros.
amazing ! a movie alway give you the impression that there are alway multiple people working on it at the same time but this just look like a calm moment
Wow it’s amazing to see you working on this film. So proud of you man, thanks for sharing
The Stages:
A Chicken Run sequel?
Excitement grows as I watch the video
I have to look up when the film will be coming out.
It's December 15th, it's this year. The excitement grows.
Man, I can't wait to see this at the cinema. I hope it lives up to the first one that I loved as a child. This is going to be fantastic, I'll actually have a reason to go to the cinema for the first time in over a decade.
Scrolls down the Wiki page, sees the rights were bought by Netflix.
Sinks into a rapid pit of depression.
Half accepts defeat.
I'm looking out for this very moment when I finally see it! Let's see if we can remember this exact pose
It's really amazing how an animation from 23 years ago still stood the same. I can't wait for the sequel to come out.
Interesting to watch. Props to stop motion animators, this takes a lot of patience and i assume gentleness as to not harm the clay. Been interested in animation since i was a kid, but never did anything with that interest. Also i wondered how you hid the mouth seems! Of course you use water, it's clay. XD *I think that was water.* Thanks for making this vid, people involved. God Bless!
{2:40 - 2:57} - This whole part is giving me anxiety. Simply having to change the mouth to stick the plasticine part that came off seems quite tedious to me. And it is impressive that it is one of the parts that you had to carry out the longest.
{9:30 - 9:40 - 12:52 - 12:58 - 13:25} - I think this is the part I would most like to see once all this time and effort is invested in it.
At first I wasn't a big fan of Stop Motion animation, and I always saw it as something tedious and with many limitations, but seeing someone professional doing it, being paid for it, seeing people in the comments supporting it and seeing how the product turns out In the end, it makes me think that all this effort and dedication is really worth it.
Finally, some behind-the-scenes after 2 days for a first look/teaser trailer
Explaining to students that "1 hour of work will last maybe 1 second on screen." Freaks them out...until they actually start animating. They really enjoy the process
I was waiting the whole movie for this small 1 second💀💀
And it wasn’t even in the movie 💀
Completely insane! Second kind of animation after the classic one which is 100% timeless. You can watch it a year, 10 years or 70 after the premiere and it will be still look amazing.
I'm delighted🧡👏👏👏🌹 thank you for a such smart, creative, professional work
WOW! Thanks for the insight into the behind the scenes. I hope to show this to my daughter soon so she can see what actual patience looks like. haha.
Congrats on getting to work on a sequel to such a great film!
I've always wanted to know: Do you guys use a plasticine that doesn't dry out? I'm always amazed how the models never seem to dry out!
Some of its foam with wire in (body etc) and the eyebrows and mouth that are plasticine and just get exchanged a lot
It's amazing how many films and TV shows that Aardman actually produce and release. Giving the extremely hard work the lengthy painstakingly slow process of stop start animation. 📽🎬🎦🎞🎥🖥📺👏
I'll try to spot this one frame in the movie when it comes out. Wish me luck haha 😅
The fact that the figure is mostly non dry clay is just impressive. I though aniamting with legos and action figures was hard!
Love this concept! It reminds us all the work that the animators do...
I watched the film yesterday at the LFF 2023 screening, and I'm glad I saw your scene in the final product! Can't wait to find out what were the other shots you did!
The power of patience!
I was so sure this was CGI made to look like claymation. Now I'm even more impressed
Several hours for a few seconds. I wish I could do it. I would need frequent long breaks. I’ve done a little bit of stop motion, and of course I made a few flipbooks (inspired by you) but I would need years and years to get this done.
23 years to make a masterpiece movie. Staying true to traditional clay animation. I hope more like Wallace and Gromit will return one day.