In Farmageddon, Shaun the Sheep boldly goes where no domesticated animal has gone before (since the early days of the space race anyway). On paper, he is probably the least appropriate lead in a science-fiction film, but that’s what makes him perfect, according to the film’s director Richard Phelan.
“He’s such an iconic character,” says Phelan. “I feel he would fit in anywhere – political satire, a corporate drama with no dialogue. It’s just about finding the right stories for him.”
After a young alien crash-lands near Mossy Bottom Farm, Shaun is tasked with helping them find a way home while dodging government agents trying to track down the extra-terrestrial. The retro world of Aardman harks back to the good old days when conspiracy theories were about UFO sightings and crop circles instead of whether or not the prime minister lied to the Queen in order to prorogue Parliament.
The film is also steeped in cinematic nostalgia, recalling Aardman’s own heritage by nodding at Wallace and Gromit’s debut A Grand Day Out, and back further through ET and 2001, all the way to A Trip to the Moon. As soon as cinema was invented, it was aiming for the stars.
Since Shaun is a sheep of few words (bleating is provided by Justin Fletcher aka kids’ favourite Mr Tumble) silent films are constant touchstones. “We watch and study Keaton, Chaplin, Harold Lloyd and Laurel and Hardy,” Phelan says, “looking at how they composed their shots to tell the stories and the jokes, but especially at how they put the emotion in with no dialogue.”