Aardman Animations
Aardman Animations is a British stop-motion animation studio founded in 1972 by Peter Lord and David Sproxton in Bristol, England, renowned for its innovative claymation techniques and iconic characters such as Wallace & Gromit, Morph, and Shaun the Sheep.[1][2] The studio specializes in painstakingly crafted stop-motion productions, including short films, feature-length movies, television series, and advertisements, which have earned it four Academy Awards out of seven nominations, along with numerous BAFTAs and other accolades.[1][3] The partnership between Lord and Sproxton began during their school years, leading to the creation of their first animated short, Aardman, which aired on the BBC children's program Vision On and inspired the studio's name.[1] In 1976, they established a permanent studio in Bristol, where they honed their craft through early works like the character Morph, introduced in 1977 on Take Hart.[1][2] Key milestones include the 1993 release of The Wrong Trousers, a Wallace & Gromit short that won an Oscar for Best Animated Short Film and secured over 30 awards, marking Aardman's breakthrough in international acclaim.[1] Aardman's feature film debut came in 2000 with Chicken Run, a collaboration with DreamWorks that became the highest-grossing stop-motion film at the time, earning over $220 million worldwide, with a North American opening weekend of $17.5 million.[1][4] Subsequent successes include the Shaun the Sheep franchise, starting with the 2007 TV series and expanding to the 2015 feature film, as well as more recent projects like Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget (2023) and Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl (2024), which have continued sustainable production practices with Albert certification.[1] Today, Aardman continues to innovate in animation, blending traditional stop-motion with digital elements while maintaining its commitment to storytelling rooted in British humor and craftsmanship, and it operates the Aardman Academy to train future animators.[1][3]History
Founding and early years (1972–1989)
Aardman Animations was founded in 1972 in Bristol, England, by childhood friends Peter Lord and David Sproxton, who had begun experimenting with stop-motion animation as teenagers. While still students, they created their first short film, titled Aardman after a nerdish superhero character designed by Lord, which was purchased by BBC Bristol for the children's program Vision On. This marked the studio's entry into professional animation, leading them to register the company name Aardman Animations upon receiving their initial payment from the BBC.[1][5][6] In the mid-1970s, Lord and Sproxton transitioned to full-time work after the success of their clay character Morph, introduced in 1977 on the BBC series Take Hart alongside presenter Tony Hart. Morph, a simple yet expressive plasticine figure, became an instant hit with young audiences, paving the way for The Amazing Adventures of Morph, a 26-episode stop-motion series that aired from 1980 to 1981 and featured Morph alongside friends like Chas and Delilah in everyday mishaps. During this period, the duo also produced early shorts such as the 1978 Animated Conversations series for the BBC, including Down and Out and Confessions of a Foyer Girl, which explored dialogue-driven narratives using lip-synced plasticine figures. These works established Aardman's signature style of witty, character-focused claymation while building a steady collaboration with public broadcasters.[5][7][6] The early 1980s saw Aardman expand beyond children's programming, targeting adult audiences through a partnership with the newly launched Channel 4. In 1982–1983, they produced the Conversation Pieces anthology series, comprising five five-minute shorts like Early Bird, Sales Pitch, On Probation, Palmy Days, and Late Edition, which depicted humorous, lip-synced interviews with animated archetypes such as radio hosts and salesmen. In 1985, animator Nick Park joined the studio to complete his student project A Grand Day Out, the debut Wallace and Gromit adventure, while contributing to commercials and other shorts. A major breakthrough came in 1986 with the internationally acclaimed music video for Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer," directed by Lord and Sproxton, which utilized innovative stop-motion techniques including pixilation and won multiple MTV awards for its surreal visuals.[6][5][8] By the late 1980s, Aardman's reputation grew through advertising and award-winning shorts. They created commercials for clients like Enterprise Computers in 1984, honing their craft in short-form content. The 1989 release of Creature Comforts, a Lip Sync series installment featuring zoo animals voicing human complaints in mismatched settings, earned Aardman its first Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film and led to a successful ad campaign for the electricity board. That same year, Park's A Grand Day Out premiered, receiving an Oscar nomination and introducing the beloved inventor-dog duo to global audiences, signaling the studio's shift toward more ambitious narrative projects.[6][5][8]Breakthrough with Wallace and Gromit (1990–1999)
The breakthrough for Aardman Animations in the 1990s was marked by the release and acclaim of Nick Park's Wallace and Gromit short films, which elevated the studio from a niche stop-motion operation to an internationally recognized powerhouse in animation. Although A Grand Day Out, the first Wallace and Gromit film, had premiered in 1989 after six years of production, its television broadcast on Channel 4 on Christmas Eve 1990 garnered an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Short Film, signaling the duo's potential as cultural icons. This momentum was amplified by Aardman's first Oscar win that same year for Creature Comforts, a innovative lip-synch short that paired animal animations with real human audio, establishing the studio's mastery of claymation and witty storytelling.[9][10][6] The 1993 release of The Wrong Trousers on BBC's Boxing Day solidified Wallace and Gromit's breakthrough, winning the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film along with over 40 international accolades, including a BAFTA. Directed by Park and co-written by Bob Baker, the film introduced the villainous penguin Feathers McGraw and showcased inventive gags like techno-trousers, captivating audiences with its blend of humor, suspense, and meticulous stop-motion detail. This success was followed in 1995 by A Close Shave, which earned Aardman its third consecutive Oscar in the category and further BAFTA recognition, depicting Wallace and Gromit in a sheep-rustling adventure that highlighted the studio's growing technical prowess and narrative sophistication. By the mid-1990s, these films had collectively secured Aardman more than 100 festival awards, transforming Wallace—a cheese-loving inventor—and his loyal dog Gromit into British cultural staples.[2][9][10] The Wallace and Gromit series drove significant commercial growth for Aardman during the decade, with merchandising revenues reaching £50 million annually by the late 1990s through toys, books, and apparel. This popularity attracted high-profile partnerships, culminating in a landmark 1999 deal with DreamWorks SKG—a 12-year, $250 million agreement to co-produce four feature films, including the eventual Chicken Run. The series not only boosted Aardman's profile but also influenced the broader animation industry by proving the viability of British stop-motion against Hollywood dominance, paving the way for expanded productions and global distribution.[11][6]Major partnerships and feature films (2000–2009)
In the early 2000s, Aardman Animations entered a significant multi-year collaboration with DreamWorks Animation, marking a pivotal expansion into feature-length films. The partnership began with a $250 million agreement announced in late 1999, committing to the production of up to five animated features over 12 years, leveraging Aardman's stop-motion expertise alongside DreamWorks' distribution and financing capabilities. This alliance aimed to blend British creative storytelling with Hollywood-scale production, resulting in Aardman's first venture into wide theatrical releases.[12] The inaugural project under this deal was Chicken Run (2000), Aardman's debut feature film directed by Peter Lord and Nick Park, which parodied World War II prison escape narratives through claymation chickens plotting a breakout from a farm. Produced in collaboration with Pathé and DreamWorks, the film grossed over $224 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing stop-motion animated feature at the time and earning critical acclaim for its humor and craftsmanship.[12][13] Subsequent films included Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), directed by Nick Park and Steve Box, which extended the beloved duo's adventures into a full-length horror-comedy about a vegetable-devouring beast plaguing the town. This DreamWorks co-production won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and grossed approximately $192 million globally, reinforcing Aardman's reputation for innovative stop-motion while highlighting the partnership's success in blending quirky narratives with broad appeal.[12][14] However, the collaboration faced challenges with Flushed Away (2006), Aardman's first fully computer-animated feature, directed by David Bowers and Sam Fell in partnership with DreamWorks. Centered on a pampered pet rat's underground sewer adventure, the film utilized CGI to expand visual scope but underperformed commercially, earning about $149 million against a reported $149 million budget, amid production delays and creative differences. These issues contributed to the partnership's dissolution in January 2007, with rights to the three films reverting to DreamWorks and Aardman regaining independence for future projects.[13][12][14] Following the DreamWorks split, Aardman secured a new three-year first-look deal with Sony Pictures Entertainment in April 2007, valued at an undisclosed amount, to finance, co-produce, and distribute up to three feature films, with Sony Pictures Animation handling computer-animated projects. This agreement provided Aardman with creative autonomy while accessing Sony's global resources, setting the stage for diversified animation output, though no features were released under it by 2009. The deal was later renewed in 2010, underscoring Aardman's strategic pivot toward sustained Hollywood alliances.[15][16]Restructuring and diversification (2010–2019)
Following the end of its partnership with DreamWorks Animation in 2007, Aardman Animations renewed its three-year co-production, financing, and distribution deal with Sony Pictures Animation in 2010, marking a strategic pivot to stabilize operations and expand into new animation formats. This agreement facilitated the production of two feature films: Arthur Christmas (2011), Aardman's second foray into computer-generated imagery (CGI) animation, which depicted a holiday-themed adventure at the North Pole and grossed over $147 million worldwide on a $100 million budget, demonstrating the studio's diversification beyond traditional stop-motion claymation. The deal also supported The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! (also known as The Pirates! Band of Misfits), a stop-motion swashbuckler released in 2012 that became Aardman's largest-scale production to date, incorporating advanced visual effects and 3D technology while earning $26 million in North America and critical praise for its humor. These projects helped Aardman recover financially after earlier setbacks, with company turnover reaching £53.5 million in the year ending December 2010.[17][18][19][20] In parallel, Aardman diversified its revenue streams through its growing digital and interactive divisions, launching Aardman Digital in the early 2010s to develop online games and apps tied to core IPs like Shaun the Sheep. For instance, the 2010 game Championsheeps integrated photographic elements from the TV set with CGI and Flash animation to promote new episodes, achieving high engagement while reducing production costs compared to full stop-motion. The digital arm expanded rapidly, growing from four to 28 staff by 2010 and generating over £1 million in annual turnover through titles like Shaun the Sheep’s Home Sheep Home, which amassed 55 million plays. This shift into transmedia content extended to virtual reality (VR), with early experiments like the 2017 BBC collaboration We Wait, an Oculus Rift experience based on real refugee stories, showcasing Aardman's adaptation to immersive technologies. Additionally, the studio's rights division, focused on licensing and IP exploitation, secured deals such as broadcasting Shaun the Sheep on China's CCTV to reach 1.2 billion viewers, bolstering global merchandising and syndication.[21][22][23] By mid-decade, Aardman transitioned to a new primary partner in StudioCanal, Europe's largest independent film producer, which co-financed and distributed subsequent features to prioritize European markets and original stories. The partnership debuted with Shaun the Sheep Movie (2015), a stop-motion hit that earned $80 million worldwide on a modest budget and an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature, leveraging the TV series' popularity without dialogue to appeal internationally. This was followed by Early Man (2018), a prehistoric sports comedy directed by Nick Park, co-financed by the British Film Institute with a $50 million budget, which grossed $14 million in the UK alone upon its January 2018 release and highlighted Aardman's commitment to sports-themed narratives. On the television front, projects like the 2010 BBC One series Wallace & Gromit's World of Invention—a six-part educational program with accompanying games that won Aardman's first BAFTA for New Media—further diversified output into multi-platform content.[24][25][26][27][1] Amid these expansions, Aardman underwent significant internal restructuring in 2018 to ensure long-term independence and employee involvement, transferring 75% ownership to its 140 staff and 180 freelancers while founders Peter Lord and David Sproxton retained 25%. This employee ownership trust model, funded by built-up cash reserves to avoid debt, allowed profit-sharing and greater input in operations, protecting creative autonomy in a volatile industry. The move came after a period of steady growth, with pre-tax profits rising 60% to £3.3 million in 2014, driven by advertising and licensing revenues. Overall, the decade solidified Aardman's hybrid model, blending stop-motion heritage with CGI, digital media, and strategic alliances to navigate economic challenges and broaden its global footprint.[28][29]Recent projects and challenges (2020–present)
In the early 2020s, Aardman Animations navigated the disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic by focusing on shorter-form content and socially relevant projects. In 2020, the studio produced Creature Discomforts, a stop-motion short film in collaboration with the Born Free Foundation, which used real people's lockdown experiences to highlight the plight of animals in captivity.[30] This was complemented by the launch of The Epic Adventures of Morph, a 52-episode stop-frame animated comedy series that debuted on Sky Kids in November 2020, reviving the classic character Morph for a new generation.[31] Additionally, in 2021, Aardman partnered with the Mental Health Foundation to create five animated shorts addressing youth issues like loneliness, perfectionism, and social media pressures, reaching over 5 million young people through targeted campaigns.[32] These initiatives demonstrated Aardman's adaptability amid production halts in the animation industry, where stop-motion work was particularly challenged by social distancing requirements.[33] The studio's return to feature-length projects marked a significant milestone in 2023 with Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget, the long-awaited sequel to the 2000 hit, directed by Sam Fell and exclusively released on Netflix on December 15, 2023. The film reunited the original voice cast, including Julia Sawalha and Lynn Ferguson, and introduced new characters voiced by Bella Ramsey and Zachary Levi, achieving strong initial viewership and ranking #1 in several markets. Following this, 2024 saw the release of Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl, a special written by Nick Park and Merlin Crossingham, which premiered on BBC One on January 1, 2024, before streaming on Netflix from February 2024. Featuring returning voices like Ben Whitehead as Gromit and new additions including Diane Morgan and Emma Mackey, the special addressed contemporary themes like AI and received critical acclaim, winning two BAFTAs in 2025, including for Animated Film. Financially, the period brought substantial challenges, exacerbated by the pandemic's lingering effects and rising production costs in the animation sector. Aardman reported a pre-tax loss of £550,135 for the year ending March 2023, attributed to increased expenses from delayed projects.[34] This worsened in 2024, with a £5 million pre-tax loss amid "very challenging market conditions," prompting redundancies affecting 20 positions—less than 5% of its 425 staff—in October 2024.[35][36] Despite these setbacks, Aardman secured high-profile partnerships, including a 2024 collaboration with The Pokémon Company International for an untitled stop-motion project slated for 2027, further teased in July 2025.[37] In 2025, the studio announced Shaun the Sheep: The Beast of Mossy Bottom, a feature film set for Halloween 2026 release in partnership with Sky and StudioCanal, alongside a creative initiative with the LEGO Group to promote stop-motion storytelling among young builders.[38][39] In August 2025, Aardman was awarded two Guinness World Records for the most claymation feature films by a single studio and the longest-running stop-motion TV series. On November 5, 2025, they announced a Christmas advertisement collaboration with Barbour featuring Wallace & Gromit. These developments underscore Aardman's resilience and commitment to expanding its claymation legacy.Corporate Structure
Company name and branding
Aardman Animations, often stylized as Aardman, derives its name from a short animated sketch created by founders Peter Lord and David Sproxton as teenagers in 1972. This sketch, titled Aardman, featured a nerdish Superman-like character and was purchased by the BBC for inclusion in Vision On, a children's program designed for deaf audiences. Upon receiving their first payment from the BBC, Lord and Sproxton registered the company as Aardman Animations to open a bank account, marking the formal establishment of the studio in Bristol, England.[1][40][5] The studio's branding has long emphasized its roots in stop-motion clay animation, with logos evolving to blend handmade craftsmanship and playful elements that evoke its signature quirky, British aesthetic. Early branding from the late 1980s featured a monochrome design with a square frame, telescope motif, and stars, accompanied by a bold sans-serif wordmark reading "AARDMAN ANIMATIONS," symbolizing exploration and creativity in animation.[41] This was succeeded in 1998 by a simplified red-and-white palette, where a prominent red star replaced the telescope, appearing on a black background to convey energy and innovation while maintaining ties to the studio's plasticine heritage.[41][40] By the early 2000s, branding incorporated more dynamic animations, such as a 2000 logo with rotating clay objects forming a blue square and gears around a star, reflecting Aardman's expansion into feature films and digital effects. A 2011 CGI variant showed the wordmark "peeling" upward with a reflective shadow, used during a period of high-profile partnerships. The current logo, introduced in 2022, adopts a minimalist uppercase sans-serif font (reminiscent of Franklin Gothic) with a subtle red star, prioritizing clean versatility for global licensing and digital media while honoring the studio's 50-year legacy. Additional 2023 iterations include stop-motion variants with clay elements like bouncing balls and spinning shadows, reinforcing the brand's commitment to tactile, authentic animation storytelling.[41][40] Overall, Aardman's branding strategy focuses on adaptability across commercials, films, and interactive content, often integrating iconic characters like Morph or Wallace and Gromit to embody its independent, humorous ethos without diluting the core handmade identity. This evolution has supported the studio's worldwide recognition, including four Academy Awards for animation.[1][41]Divisions and subsidiaries
Aardman Animations operates through several specialized divisions that handle distinct aspects of its animation production, distribution, and commercial activities, alongside a key overseas subsidiary focused on the advertising market. These internal structures allow the company to diversify its output while maintaining its core stop-motion expertise alongside CGI and digital innovations. The primary parent entity, Aardman Animations Limited, oversees these units from its Bristol headquarters, with shared leadership and resources ensuring cohesive operations across projects.[42] Aardman Features Limited, established in 1996, serves as the dedicated division for feature film production, responsible for major theatrical releases such as Chicken Run (2000) and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005). Registered as a separate UK company but fully integrated within the Aardman group, it collaborates with international partners like DreamWorks Animation and Sony Pictures Animation to finance and distribute long-form content, emphasizing high-budget stop-motion and hybrid animation techniques. This division has been instrumental in Aardman's expansion into global cinema, producing ten feature films to date.[43][44] In the commercial and advertising sector, Aardman maintains a robust commercials division that produces branded content, including short films, idents, and promotional campaigns for clients across industries like consumer goods and public health. This unit leverages the studio's signature claymation style for projects such as the Public Health England Change4Life series, blending creativity with commercial viability to generate a significant portion of the company's revenue. Complementing this is Nathan Love (formerly Aardman Nathan Love), a majority-owned U.S. subsidiary acquired in 2015 and based in New York, which focuses on North American advertising production and extends Aardman's reach into the lucrative U.S. market through character-driven animation and motion graphics. The subsidiary operates semi-autonomously, handling local client work while drawing on Aardman's Bristol-based creative resources for select collaborations.[45][46][47][48] Aardman Digital, formed in 2007, represents the studio's push into interactive and multi-platform media, encompassing video games, VR experiences, and app-based content. Notable outputs include the mobile game Wallace & Gromit in The Last Resort (2009) and VR title Job Simulator collaborations, reflecting a strategic adaptation to digital distribution channels. This division, which grew from a small team to over 25 staff by 2010, prioritizes cross-media extensions of Aardman's franchises to engage younger audiences beyond traditional film and TV. For distribution and licensing, Aardman International, launched in 2006 as a dedicated TV sales arm, manages the global licensing of the studio's intellectual property, including series like Shaun the Sheep and Morph. It handles both Aardman's own catalog and select third-party animated content, securing deals with broadcasters worldwide and facilitating merchandise opportunities. This division underscores Aardman's evolution from production-focused studio to a full-service animation entity with international commercial infrastructure.[49][50]Leadership and key personnel
Aardman Animations was co-founded in 1972 by Peter Lord and David Sproxton, who began collaborating on stop-motion animations while still in school and formalized the company in Bristol in 1976.[51] Lord, known for directing films like Chicken Run (2000) and serving as the voice of Morph, has been the studio's creative force, while Sproxton handled business operations, including key partnerships with BBC and DreamWorks.[52] Both founders transitioned the company to employee ownership in November 2018 through the Aardman Trust, retaining significant influence on the executive board initially.[53] In September 2019, David Sproxton stepped down as Managing Director after 43 years, succeeded by long-time executive Sean Clarke, who had joined the company in 1999 and previously led its digital and interactive divisions.[54] Clarke now serves as Managing Director, overseeing overall operations and strategy for the employee-owned studio. Peter Lord followed suit in February 2024 by relinquishing his executive board seat but continues as Creative Director and Executive Producer, providing ongoing creative guidance on projects like Wallace & Gromit shorts.[55] The current executive board comprises key figures driving Aardman's creative, commercial, and financial directions. Sarah Cox was promoted to Chief Creative Director in 2024, focusing on IP development for franchises such as Morph and Shaun the Sheep, building on her prior directing work including the BAFTA-nominated Robin Robin (2021).[55] Daniel Efergan serves as Executive Creative Director of Interactive & Innovation, leading digital and gaming initiatives like Chicken Run: Eggstraction (2023). Emma Hardie joined as Executive Commercial and Brand Director in April 2024, managing financing, distribution, licensing, and marketing with her background from BBC Studios.[55] Joanna Cave was elevated to Finance Director in February 2024, handling fiscal operations after 17 years at the studio. Helen Argo acts as Executive Producer and Head of Commercials & Short Form, overseeing advertising and brief-form content production.[56] Among other key personnel, directors such as Will Becher (co-director of Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon, 2019) and Merlin Crossingham contribute to core animation efforts, while the board collaborates with trustees appointed in December 2024 to uphold the founders' vision under employee ownership.[56][57]Works
Feature films
Aardman Animations entered the realm of feature-length films with Chicken Run in 2000, marking the studio's first full-length theatrical production in stop-motion animation. Directed by Peter Lord and Nick Park, the film was funded and distributed by DreamWorks Animation and follows a group of chickens plotting an escape from a farm modeled after a World War II prisoner-of-war camp. It became the highest-grossing stop-motion animated film of all time upon release.[58][1] The partnership with DreamWorks continued with Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in 2005, the first feature film starring the iconic duo created by Nick Park. Co-directed by Park and Steve Box, this stop-motion adventure involves inventor Wallace and his dog Gromit combating a giant rabbit terrorizing vegetable gardens. The film earned the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, highlighting Aardman's mastery of claymation techniques, including a record 2,844.9 kg of clay used in production.[59][60][8] Flushed Away (2006), the third and final collaboration with DreamWorks, represented Aardman's initial foray into computer-generated imagery (CGI). This fully CGI-animated film, directed by David Bowers and Sam Fell, centers on a pampered pet rat flushed into London's sewers, where he allies with local rodents against a villainous toad. The production shifted from Aardman's traditional stop-motion roots, blending humor with detailed digital environments.[61][62] Shifting partnerships to Sony Pictures Animation, Aardman produced Arthur Christmas (2011), its second CGI feature. Directed by Sarah Smith and Barry Cook, the film explores Santa Claus's operation through the eyes of his bumbling son Arthur, voiced by James McAvoy, alongside Hugh Laurie and Bill Nighy. It emphasized high-tech holiday logistics in a whimsical narrative. The studio's next release, The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! (2012, also known as The Pirates! Band of Misfits in some regions), returned to stop-motion. Directed by Peter Lord, this adaptation of Gideon Defoe's novel follows a hapless pirate captain, voiced by Hugh Grant, in a quest for the Pirate of the Year award, featuring exaggerated historical comedy.[18][19] Aardman's stop-motion tradition continued with Shaun the Sheep Movie (2015), directed by Mark Burton and Richard Starzak, expanding the silent, mischievous world of the Shaun the Sheep TV series into a feature about the flock's chaotic trip to the city to rescue their farmer. Its sequel, A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2019), directed by Will Becher and Richard Phelan, incorporates sci-fi elements as Shaun befriends a lost alien, maintaining the dialogue-free format that appeals to global audiences. Both films were produced in association with STUDIOCANAL.[25] Early Man (2018), directed by Nick Park, is a stop-motion prehistoric comedy co-financed by STUDIOCANAL and the British Film Institute (BFI). Set in the Stone Age, it depicts a tribe of cave dwellers defending their valley against Bronze Age invaders through an unlikely football (soccer) match, blending historical parody with sports humor and voices including Eddie Redmayne and Tom Hiddleston.[27] In recent years, Aardman has partnered with Netflix for sequels and new entries. Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget (2023), directed by Sam Fell, serves as a stop-motion sequel set years after the original, where Ginger and Rocky protect their daughter from a sinister chicken nugget factory. Featuring voices like Thandiwe Newton and Zachary Levi, it premiered exclusively on the streaming platform. The studio's latest feature, Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl (2024), directed by Nick Park and Merlin Crossingham, reunites the duo in a stop-motion mystery involving the villainous penguin Feathers McGraw and Wallace's faulty inventions, including a smart gnome called Norbot. Released on BBC in the UK and Netflix internationally, it has garnered nominations for Best Animated Feature at the Academy Awards and BAFTA.[63][64][10][65][66]| Title | Release Year | Director(s) | Animation Style | Key Production Partner(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken Run | 2000 | Peter Lord, Nick Park | Stop-motion | DreamWorks Animation |
| Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit | 2005 | Nick Park, Steve Box | Stop-motion | DreamWorks Animation |
| Flushed Away | 2006 | David Bowers, Sam Fell | CGI | DreamWorks Animation |
| Arthur Christmas | 2011 | Sarah Smith, Barry Cook | CGI | Sony Pictures Animation |
| The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! | 2012 | Peter Lord | Stop-motion | Sony Pictures Animation, Columbia Pictures |
| Shaun the Sheep Movie | 2015 | Mark Burton, Richard Starzak | Stop-motion | STUDIOCANAL |
| Early Man | 2018 | Nick Park | Stop-motion | STUDIOCANAL, BFI |
| A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | 2019 | Will Becher, Richard Phelan | Stop-motion | STUDIOCANAL, Netflix |
| Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget | 2023 | Sam Fell | Stop-motion | Netflix, Pathé |
| Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl | 2024 | Nick Park, Merlin Crossingham | Stop-motion | BBC, Netflix |
Television series and specials
Aardman Animations has produced a range of acclaimed television series and specials, primarily utilizing stop-motion animation techniques with plasticine models, establishing the studio as a leader in family-oriented animated content for broadcasters like BBC and Sky. Early works such as the Morph series laid the foundation for Aardman's distinctive claymation style, while later productions expanded into educational and comedic formats, often featuring recurring characters from their flagship franchises. These television projects have garnered international distribution and awards, contributing to Aardman's reputation for blending humor, storytelling, and innovative animation.[7] One of Aardman's pioneering television efforts is The Amazing Adventures of Morph, a stop-motion clay animation series featuring the mischievous terracotta-skinned character Morph and his sidekick Chas, first debuting in short segments on BBC's Take Hart in 1977 before evolving into a standalone series of 40 one-minute episodes in the 1980s. Revived through crowdfunding in 2013, the character returned in The Epic Adventures of Morph, a 2020 Sky Kids series comprising 15 five-minute episodes set in an artist's studio, emphasizing playful antics for preschool audiences and nostalgic viewers alike.[7] Creature Comforts, originating as an Academy Award-winning 1989 short film that paired unscripted human interviews with animated zoo animals, expanded into a television format with two seasons on ITV (2003 and 2005–2006), each comprising 13 episodes of approximately nine minutes, and an American adaptation in 2007 with 13 episodes. The series maintained its documentary-style approach, using real voices from vox-pop interviews to bring clay characters to life, discussing everyday topics like weather and accommodation. A 30-minute Christmas special aired in 1990. An inspired 2020 follow-up, Creature Discomforts, shifted to 2D animation for the Born Free Foundation, highlighting animal welfare through lockdown-themed narratives.[67] Within the Wallace and Gromit universe, Aardman produced the six-part educational miniseries Wallace & Gromit's World of Invention in 2010 for BBC One, where the inventor Wallace and his dog Gromit, voiced by Peter Sallis, explore real-world scientific innovations alongside presenter Jem Stansfield and actress Ashley Jensen. Each 30-minute episode delves into themes like music, speed, and flight, showcasing gadgets from jet packs to historical inventions like Einstein's refrigerator, blending animation with live-action expert segments to inspire young viewers about science and creativity.[68] The Shaun the Sheep franchise anchors much of Aardman's modern television output, with seven series totaling 190 seven-minute episodes airing since 2007 on BBC One, with the seventh series of 20 episodes premiering in May 2025, following the wordless escapades of a clever sheep and his farmyard flock in slapstick adventures like heists and holiday mishaps. Complementing the series are two 30-minute Christmas specials: The Farmer's Llamas (2015), introducing chaotic new arrivals to Mossy Bottom Farm, and Shaun the Sheep: The Flight Before Christmas (2021), a festive tale of aerial antics. The spin-off Timmy Time, centered on the youngest lamb Timmy learning life lessons with friends, premiered on CBeebies in 2009 with 78 ten-minute dialogue-free episodes, later reformatted into 78 five-minute voiced versions in 2019, plus two 22-minute specials and an educational companion series Learning Time with Timmy developed with the British Council; it has broadcast in over 150 territories.[69][70][71] More recent preschool programming includes The Very Small Creatures, an award-winning stop-motion series for Sky Kids launched in 2021, featuring four colorful clay characters—Pink, Blue, Orange, and Yellow—exploring a playroom world through 61 three-minute episodes across three seasons that promote themes of teamwork, empathy, and diversity via comedic play. Aardman has also ventured into holiday specials outside its core franchises, such as the 2021 Netflix co-production Robin Robin, a 30-minute stop-motion musical directed by Dan Ojari and Mikey Please, following a robin raised by mice on a journey of self-discovery with voices including Bronte Carmichael and Richard E. Grant; plans for spin-off stories were announced in 2024.[72][73] Looking ahead, Aardman announced in October 2024 a collaboration with Mattel to co-develop a new stop-motion 3D animated series reviving the iconic penguin Pingu, building on the character's legacy of wordless, cheeky adventures for young children, though production details and release dates remain forthcoming.[74]Short films, commercials, and other media
Aardman Animations has a rich history of producing short films, beginning with experimental works in the late 1970s under the Animated Conversations series, which featured silhouette animations paired with unscripted audio recordings to explore everyday dialogues. Notable early entries include Down and Out (1977), depicting a homeless person's experiences, and Confessions of a Foyer Girl (1978), capturing the mundane routines of a cinema worker. These shorts established Aardman's signature blend of humor and social observation through innovative animation techniques.[75] The studio's Lip Sync series in the late 1980s further showcased this approach, with Creature Comforts (1989) standing out as a landmark 5-minute stop-motion film. Directed by Nick Park, it animated zoo animals lip-synching to real vox-pop interviews from the British public, complaining about their "accommodations" in a mockumentary style. Premiered on Channel 4, the short won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1990 and inspired subsequent TV series and ad campaigns, such as the Electricity Board's "Heat Electric" promotions.[67] Other Lip Sync entries like War Story (1989) used similar vox-pop techniques to recount World War II anecdotes through animated characters.[76] The Wallace & Gromit franchise began as a series of short films that propelled Aardman to international acclaim. A Grand Day Out (1989), directed by Nick Park, follows inventor Wallace and his dog Gromit on a moon voyage in search of cheese, earning an Academy Award nomination. This was followed by The Wrong Trousers (1993), involving a penguin jewel thief and robotic trousers, which secured an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film along with 13 other honors. A Close Shave (1995) introduced the mischievous sheep Shaun and won another Oscar, completing the original trilogy of 30-minute shorts. Later additions include the 10-episode Wallace & Gromit's Cracking Contraptions (2002), a series of 1.5-minute inventions gone awry. These films, totaling over 100 awards including three Oscars, exemplify Aardman's meticulous stop-motion craftsmanship and whimsical storytelling.[10] Beyond narrative shorts, Aardman has created standalone projects like Pib and Pog (1998–2000), a surreal, violent claymation series of 1.5-minute episodes satirizing consumerism, and Robin Robin (2021), a 30-minute stop-motion musical directed by Dan Ojari and Mikey Please for Netflix, featuring a mouse raised by robins in a heist plot. These works highlight the studio's versatility in blending genres and formats.[45] Aardman's commercials division has produced hundreds of advertisements since the 1980s, often employing stop-motion to infuse brands with character-driven narratives. Early campaigns include the long-running Lurpak butter ads (1985–2003), featuring the animated "Douglas the Butterman" in quirky kitchen scenarios, and the Chewits dinosaur spots promoting chewy sweets through adventurous clay figures. More recent examples encompass the Nokia "Dot" campaign (2010s), a poetic animation of connectivity, and the Imperial War Museum's Flight of the Stories (2020), a poignant short directed by Darren Dubicki evoking wartime memories through birds carrying letters. The studio's commercials, overseen by creative director Steve Harding-Hill since 2016, span global clients like ITV and Born Free Foundation, with projects like Creature Discomforts (2020) using 2D animation to address wildlife lockdown issues.[45][77] In other media, Aardman has ventured into music videos and interactive content, expanding its stop-motion expertise into digital realms. The groundbreaking Sledgehammer video for Peter Gabriel (1986), directed by Stephen Johnson, utilized innovative claymation and pixilation techniques, winning numerous MTV awards and influencing the medium. Recent efforts include the animated video for Coldplay's Daddy (2019), directed by Åsa Lucander, which mixes puppetry, 2D animation, and live-action to depict a child's memories through tactile ocean imagery. Interactive projects feature augmented reality experiences like Wallace & Gromit: The Big Fix Up (2020), an AR app partnering with Fictioneers for iOS and Android, allowing users to join the duo in eco-adventures. Additionally, We Wait (2019), a BBC VR animation based on refugee stories, immerses viewers in 360-degree narratives to foster empathy. These endeavors demonstrate Aardman's adaptation of traditional animation to emerging technologies.[78][79][23]Video games and interactive content
Aardman Animations has expanded its portfolio beyond traditional animation into video games and interactive media, often leveraging its iconic characters and stop-motion aesthetic to create engaging experiences. Initially, the studio's involvement in gaming focused on licensing its intellectual properties for tie-in titles developed by external partners, beginning with the 2000 release of Chicken Run for platforms including PlayStation, Windows, and Dreamcast, where Aardman provided character designs and animation assets to support the action-adventure gameplay centered on the film's escape plot.[80] This approach continued with subsequent adaptations, such as Wallace & Gromit in Project Zoo (2003) for PlayStation 2, Xbox, and Windows, a platformer featuring the duo solving puzzles in a zoo setting, and Wallace & Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005) for PlayStation 2 and Xbox, which incorporated action and stealth elements tied to the film's narrative. In the mid-2000s, Aardman collaborated with DreamWorks on Flushed Away (2006), contributing animation and character supervision for versions on Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS, where players navigated a rodent's underground adventure through puzzle-solving and mini-games. The studio also ventured into mobile gaming with Rex the Runt: Lost Marbles (2005) for J2ME devices, a casual puzzle game based on its early claymation series. By the 2010s, Aardman deepened its direct involvement, co-developing episodic adventure games like Wallace & Gromit's Grand Adventures (2008–2010) for Windows in partnership with Telltale Games, which used point-and-click mechanics to explore inventive stories with voice acting by creators Peter Sordid and Nick Park. Shaun the Sheep titles followed, including Shaun the Sheep: Home Sheep Home series, with the Farmageddon Party Edition (2014) for Windows and Nintendo Switch offering co-op platforming challenges inspired by the film's chaotic farm antics. Aardman's gaming efforts have increasingly emphasized narrative depth and innovation, as seen in 11-11: Memories Retold (2018), a co-developed World War I narrative adventure for Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One, blending stop-motion-inspired visuals with real-time strategy elements to commemorate the Armistice, earning praise for its emotional storytelling.[81] More recent releases include mobile puzzler Wallace & Gromit: Big Fix Up (2021) for iOS and Android, where players repair contraptions in bite-sized levels, and the VR title Wallace & Gromit in The Grand Getaway (2023) for Meta Quest, a single-player narrative experience involving inventive escapes on a luxury liner.[82][83] Looking ahead, Chicken Run: Eggstraction (2025), developed with Outright Games for consoles and PC, introduces co-op heist gameplay with Ginger and Rocky plotting a daring rescue.[84] Beyond console and mobile games, Aardman has pioneered interactive content focused on education, accessibility, and immersion. The StorySign app (2018), developed in partnership with Vodafone, Huawei, and the European Union of the Deaf, uses augmented reality to translate children's books into sign language via an animated avatar, aiding literacy for deaf children and supporting over 20 languages.[85] Similarly, the CBeebies Go Explore app (2019), created with the BBC, offers preschoolers curriculum-based games and videos featuring characters like Go Jetters, promoting skills in numeracy, language, and social development through interactive adventures.[86][87] Other projects include the Aardman Animator app, a free stop-motion tool for mobile devices that democratizes animation creation, and immersive experiences like Little Nirvana, a VR game world designed to support pediatric patients during hospital visits by distracting and comforting them through playful narratives.[88] Aardman has also produced AR trails, such as Shaun the Sheep-themed augmented reality hunts at UK attractions like RHS Gardens, enhancing family engagement with location-based storytelling.[89] These initiatives reflect Aardman's commitment to using interactive media for positive impact, often collaborating with tech firms like Rapt Media to infuse emotional depth into branching video narratives.[90]Franchises
Wallace and Gromit
Wallace and Gromit is a British stop-motion clay animation franchise created by Nick Park at Aardman Animations, featuring the comedic misadventures of an inventive human and his anthropomorphic dog companion.[91] The series debuted in 1989 and has since become a cornerstone of Aardman's output, blending British humor, inventive contraptions, and heartfelt storytelling to captivate audiences worldwide.[10] Over three decades, the franchise has expanded from short films to feature-length movies, television specials, and spin-off media, earning acclaim for its meticulous craftsmanship and enduring appeal.[10] The central characters are Wallace, a cheerful yet absent-minded inventor from the fictional town of Wigan with a passion for cheese and gadgetry, and Gromit, his silent, resourceful, and expressive beagle who often rescues Wallace from his own mishaps.[10] Voiced initially by Peter Sallis as Wallace, the duo's dynamic—Wallace's enthusiastic verbosity contrasted with Gromit's wordless expressiveness—has defined the franchise's charm, drawing inspiration from Park's family life and everyday British eccentricities.[91] Recurring antagonists like the villainous penguin Feathers McGraw add layers of suspense and humor to their tales.[65] The franchise's core productions include four short films, two feature films, a series of invention shorts, and recent television specials, all produced using traditional stop-motion techniques that highlight Aardman's signature style.[10]| Production | Year | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Grand Day Out | 1989 | Short film (23 min) | Wallace and Gromit build a rocket to visit the moon in search of rare cheese, encountering a coin-operated robot in this Oscar-nominated debut.[10][9] |
| The Wrong Trousers | 1993 | Short film (30 min) | Wallace's techno-trousers invention leads to chaos when a penguin lodger plots a diamond heist, introducing Feathers McGraw.[10] |
| A Close Shave | 1995 | Short film (30 min) | Wallace's window-washing business expands into sheep shearing with his Knit-O-Matic, unraveling a wool-smuggling scheme.[10] |
| Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit | 2005 | Feature film (85 min) | As pest controllers, the duo faces a giant rabbit terrorizing vegetable gardens before a local competition, co-directed by Park and Steve Box.[10] |
| Wallace & Gromit in A Matter of Loaf and Death | 2008 | Short film (29 min) | Running a bakery, Wallace and Gromit investigate murders targeting local bakers amid a romance with baker Piella Bakewell.[10] |
| Wallace & Gromit's Cracking Contraptions | 2002 | Short series (10 x 1.5 min episodes) | Gromit tests Wallace's 10 bizarre inventions, from a intelligent kettle to a trouser press, in humorous vignettes.[10] |
| Wallace & Gromit's World of Invention | 2010 | TV series (6 x 30 min episodes) | The pair host a BBC educational series exploring real-world inventions and science, blending animation with live-action interviews.[92] |
| Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl | 2024 | Feature-length special (90 min) | Wallace's new smart gnome invention, Norbot, malfunctions, teaming up with returning villain Feathers McGraw in a festive holiday caper.[65][92] |
Shaun the Sheep
Shaun the Sheep is a British stop-motion animated franchise created by Aardman Animations, originating as a character in the 1995 Wallace & Gromit short film A Close Shave. Devised by Nick Park, Shaun was designed as a clever and mischievous sheep leading a flock on Mossy Bottom Farm, with the character's debut earning acclaim alongside the film's Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. The franchise emphasizes wordless storytelling through visual comedy, grunts, and bleats, which has contributed to its universal appeal without reliance on dialogue. The television series Shaun the Sheep premiered on BBC One and CBBC in the United Kingdom on March 5, 2007, expanding Shaun's world into 7-minute episodes focused on the flock's farmyard antics involving the Farmer, the sheepdog Bitzer, and other animals. Produced entirely at Aardman's Bristol studio using traditional stop-frame animation at 12 to 24 frames per second, the series comprises seven seasons totaling 190 episodes as of November 2025, with series 7 (20 episodes) premiering on BBC One and CBBC in May 2025. Specials include the 30-minute Christmas episodes The Farmer's Llamas (2015) and The Flight Before Christmas (2021), both blending holiday themes with the franchise's signature humor. The series has been broadcast in over 170 territories worldwide, establishing Shaun as Aardman's most successful intellectual property. The franchise expanded into feature films with Shaun the Sheep Movie (2015), directed by Mark Burton and Richard Starzak, which follows Shaun and the flock venturing to the city to aid an alien visitor and grossed over $106 million worldwide. The sequel, A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2019), directed by Will Becher and Richard Phelan, centers on an extraterrestrial sheep and grossed over $92 million worldwide, receiving an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature, along with BAFTA wins for Best Animation and Best Children's and Family Film. A third film, Shaun the Sheep: The Beast of Mossy Bottom, in production since 2025 for a Halloween 2026 release, directed by Steve Cox and Matthew Walker, with a plot involving Halloween chaos and a mysterious beast, distributed by Sky in the UK and STUDIOCANAL internationally. Spin-offs include the preschool series Timmy Time (2009–2012), focusing on Shaun's young nephew Timmy at a farm nursery, which aired on CBeebies and earned a BAFTA Children's Award for Best Pre-School Animation in 2010. Additional media encompasses video games, live stage shows, commercials, and theme park attractions such as Shaun in the City (a 2015 public art trail in the UK) and Shaun the Sheep Land at High Chaparral in Sweden. Puppets for the series and films are handcrafted from modeling clay, with multiple duplicates used per character—such as 22 versions of Shaun in Farmageddon—to facilitate parallel shooting across dozens of sets. The franchise has garnered significant recognition, including a BAFTA Children's Award for Best Children's Animation in 2010, an International Emmy for Children and Young People in 2010, and a YouTube Diamond Creator Award in 2023 for surpassing 10 million subscribers on its official channel, which has amassed over 10 billion views. Shaun's global impact is evident in its merchandising, such as a themed café in Japan, and cultural crossovers, including a 1997 fashion trend sparked by Spice Girl Emma Bunton carrying a Shaun backpack.Chicken Run and other properties
Chicken Run is a prominent stop-motion animated franchise created by Aardman Animations, centered on a group of anthropomorphic chickens led by Ginger, who seek freedom from human exploitation. The franchise debuted with the 2000 feature film Chicken Run, directed by Peter Lord and Nick Park in collaboration with DreamWorks Animation and Pathé. This 95-minute production, featuring voices by Mel Gibson, Julia Sawalha, and Miranda Richardson, parodies The Great Escape and became the highest-grossing stop-motion animated film in history upon release.[58] The franchise expanded with the sequel Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget in 2023, directed by Sam Fell and exclusively released on Netflix. Set 23 years after the original, the film follows Ginger and Rocky raising their daughter Molly amid a new peril from a fortified nugget factory, emphasizing themes of family and resistance. Produced over five years with a focus on traditional stop-motion techniques, it reunited much of the original voice cast, including Thandiwe Newton as Ginger and Zachary Levi as Rocky, while introducing new characters voiced by Bella Ramsey and Romesh Ranganathan.[63] Further extending the franchise, Aardman partnered with Outright Games to develop Chicken Run: Eggstraction, a family-friendly video game released on October 24, 2025 across platforms including Nintendo Switch, PlayStation, Xbox, and PC. The game features an original story continuing the events after Dawn of the Nugget, with players controlling Ginger and the flock in puzzle-adventure gameplay to rescue eggs and thwart villains, incorporating mini-games and collectibles inspired by the films.[96] Beyond Chicken Run, Aardman has developed several other enduring properties that showcase its signature claymation style and humorous storytelling. Morph, the studio's first original character, was created in 1976 by Peter Lord and debuted in 1977 on the BBC children's program Take Hart alongside presenter Tony Hart. This simple, malleable terracotta figure, capable of shape-shifting antics, appeared in shorts throughout the 1970s and 1980s, fostering early experimentation in stop-motion. Revived through a 2013 crowdfunding campaign that raised over £110,000 from fans, Morph returned in the 2020 series The Epic Adventures of Morph—a 15-episode run on Sky Kids—featuring Morph, his friend Chas, and a young inventor named Delilah in tales promoting creativity and problem-solving.[7] Another foundational property is Creature Comforts, originating from Nick Park's 1989 short film of the same name, which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. The concept pairs unscripted vox-pop interviews from the British public with animated animals expressing relatable, humorous observations on everyday life, blending documentary-style realism with whimsical animation. It evolved into an ITV television series (2003–2006), consisting of two seasons totaling 26 episodes, plus a U.S. adaptation for CBS (2001–2003) using American interviewees. The format influenced numerous commercials, including campaigns for the Electricity Board, and inspired later works like the 2020 2D-animated special Creature Discomforts for the Born Free Foundation, addressing wildlife conservation.[67] Additional properties include The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists! (2012), a stop-motion swashbuckler co-produced with Sony Pictures Animation and directed by Peter Lord, based on Gideon Defoe's novels. Voiced by Hugh Grant, Salma Hayek, and Brendan Gleeson, the film follows a bumbling pirate crew's quest for glory, grossing over $100 million worldwide and earning an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature. While not expanded into a full franchise, it exemplifies Aardman's venture into ensemble adventure storytelling.[19] Aardman's portfolio also encompasses web-based and preschool-oriented works, such as the flash-animated series Angry Kid (2000–2019), featuring a foul-mouthed teenager in short, satirical sketches that garnered a cult following on platforms like YouTube. These properties collectively highlight Aardman's versatility in expanding intellectual properties across media while maintaining its commitment to handcrafted animation.[97]Awards and Recognition
Academy Awards and nominations
Aardman Animations has earned four Academy Awards and twelve nominations across the Best Animated Short Film and Best Animated Feature categories, recognizing the studio's pioneering work in stop-motion animation. The wins include three for short films directed by Nick Park in the early 1990s and one for a feature film in 2006, highlighting Aardman's signature claymation style and storytelling. Nominations span from 1990 to 2025, often featuring Wallace and Gromit characters or Shaun the Sheep properties, demonstrating the studio's consistent critical acclaim.[1] The studio's first Oscar success came in 1990 with Creature Comforts, a short film that won Best Animated Short Film for its innovative blend of zoo animal interviews with animated models, directed by Nick Park. That same year, Aardman's A Grand Day Out—the debut Wallace and Gromit adventure—was also nominated in the category but lost to its studio sibling. Subsequent short film nominations included Peter Lord's Adam in 1992 and Wat's Pig in 1996, the latter competing alongside the winning A Close Shave (another Wallace and Gromit entry) in a rare instance of intra-studio rivalry. Park's The Wrong Trousers secured a win in 1994 for its inventive heist narrative involving the inventive inventor Wallace and his loyal dog Gromit. Wallace & Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death (2008), also directed by Park, received a nomination for Best Animated Short Film in 2009.[98][99] In the Best Animated Feature category, introduced in 2001, Aardman achieved its sole win with Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in 2006, praised for expanding the short film duo into a full-length horror-comedy hybrid. Further nominations followed for The Pirates! Band of Misfits in 2013, lauded for its swashbuckling humor; Shaun the Sheep Movie in 2016, a dialogue-free farmyard escapade; and A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon in 2021, noted for its sci-fi elements and visual effects despite a delayed release. The most recent nod came in 2025 for Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl, a Netflix special returning the duo after nearly two decades, nominated for Best Animated Feature.[100][101][102][66]| Year | Film | Category | Outcome | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1990 | Creature Comforts | Best Animated Short Film | Won | Directed by Nick Park; first Aardman Oscar.[67] |
| 1990 | A Grand Day Out | Best Animated Short Film | Nominated | Wallace and Gromit debut; lost to Creature Comforts.[103] |
| 1992 | Adam | Best Animated Short Film | Nominated | Directed by Peter Lord.[98] |
| 1994 | The Wrong Trousers | Best Animated Short Film | Won | Wallace and Gromit; penguin thief plot.[10] |
| 1996 | A Close Shave | Best Animated Short Film | Won | Wallace and Gromit; sheep-related mystery.[10] |
| 1996 | Wat's Pig | Best Animated Short Film | Nominated | Directed by Peter Lord; same year as A Close Shave win.[98] |
| 2009 | Wallace & Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death | Best Animated Short Film | Nominated | Directed by Nick Park; baker mystery plot.[99] |
| 2006 | Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit | Best Animated Feature | Won | Feature debut for the franchise.[8] |
| 2013 | The Pirates! Band of Misfits | Best Animated Feature | Nominated | Directed by Peter Lord.[100] |
| 2016 | Shaun the Sheep Movie | Best Animated Feature | Nominated | Dialogue-free adventure.[101] |
| 2021 | A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | Best Animated Feature | Nominated | Sci-fi sequel; qualified via streaming.[102] |
| 2025 | Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl | Best Animated Feature | Nominated | Return of Wallace and Gromit.[66][104] |