Flushed Away is a 2006 British-American computer-animated action-adventure comedy film directed by David Bowers and Sam Fell, produced by Cecil Kramer, David Sproxton, and Peter Lord, and written by Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais, Chris Lloyd, Joe Keenan and William Davies. It is the third and final film to be co-produced by Aardman Animations and DreamWorks Animation following Chicken Run (2000) and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), and was Aardman's first completely computer-animated feature as opposed to their usual stop-motion standard. The film stars the voice talents of Hugh Jackman, Kate Winslet, Andy Serkis, Bill Nighy, Ian McKellen, Shane Richie and Jean Reno.
Flushed Away | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | David Bowers Sam Fell |
Produced by | Cecil Kramer David Sproxton Peter Lord |
Screenplay by |
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Story by |
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Starring | Hugh Jackman Kate Winslet Ian McKellen Jean Reno Bill Nighy Andy Serkis Shane Richie |
Music by | Harry Gregson-Williams |
Edited by | Eric Dapkewicz John Venzon |
Production company | Aardman Animations DreamWorks Animation |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures1 |
Release date |
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Running time | 84 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $149 million |
Box office | $178 million |
The film was released in US on 3 November 2006 and in UK on 1 December 2006 and was distributed by Paramount Pictures.1 Despite receiving positive reviews from critics, Flushed Away underperformed at the box office, prompting DreamWorks to end their partnership with Aardman.
Screenplay
Roddy St. James is an upper class pet rat who makes his home in a posh Kensington flat. While his owners are away on holiday, a common sewer rat named Sid comes spewing out of the sink and decides to stay, especially as England is playing against Germany in the World Cup final. Roddy schemes to get rid of Sid by luring him into the toilet, but Sid is not fooled, instead throwing Roddy in and flushing him away into the sewer.
Roddy discovers a city resembling London, Ratropolis, made out of various bits of junk, and meets Rita Malone, an enterprising scavenger rat who works the drains in her faithful boat, the Jammy Dodger. Rita is irritated by Roddy initially, but ends up taking him along. Her archenemy The Toad sends his rat henchmen, Spike and Whitey, after her for stealing back her father's prized ruby. The Toad loathes all rodents, and plans to have Roddy and Rita frozen with liquid nitrogen inside an icemaker. The pair escape, and Rita takes a unique electrical cable that is required to control Ratropolis' floodgates.
Roddy finds that the ruby is a fake and breaks it in front of Rita, enraging her. Roddy offers her a real ruby if she takes him back to Kensington, to which she agrees, and the pair first stop to visit her family before setting off. During Roddy's stay, he overhears a conversation that causes him to think that Rita is selling him to The Toad, so he steals the Jammy Dodger. When Rita catches up to him, she is able to clear up the misunderstanding. The pair evade a pursuit from Spike, Whitey, and their accomplices, and incensed at his minions' repeated failures, The Toad sends for his French cousin, known as Le Frog. It is revealed that The Toad was once Prince Charles' pet, but was replaced by a pet rat and flushed down a toilet, resulting in his hatred of rodents. Le Frog and his subordinates intercept Roddy and Rita and retrieve the cable, sinking the Jammy Dodger in the process, but the duo use a plastic bag to lift themselves out of the sewer and return to Roddy's home.
Roddy pays Rita the promised ruby and an emerald, then shows her around his house. She at first believes he has family in the home, but notices his cage and realizes he is a pet. Rita tries to persuade Roddy to come with her, but he is too proud to admit that he is lonely. She departs, but is soon captured by The Toad. Talking to Sid about half-time, Roddy pieces together The Toad's plan: to open the gates during halftime of the World Cup, when all the humans will most likely be using their toilets. As a result, a great sewage flood will form and drown Ratropolis in sewage, allowing The Toad to use the city as a home for his tadpole offspring. Roddy gives Sid his cushy position and has Sid flush him back to the sewers. He frees Rita, and together they defeat The Toad and his henchmen and freeze the wave of sewage with his liquid nitrogen.
Rita and Roddy build the Jammy Dodger Mark Two and set off in her. In a post-credits scene, Roddy's former owner Tabitha returns home with a new pet cat, which scares Sid.
- Hugh Jackman as Roderick "Roddy" St. James, a pampered but lonely pet rat living in a Kensington apartment with a wealthy English family. He is flushed down the toilet by Sid into the sewers.
- Kate Winslet as Rita Malone, a street-wise scavenger rat and the oldest child of a large family. She is the captain of The Jammy Dodger.
- Ian McKellen as The Toad, a haughty amphibian wanting the entire rat population to be killed off so he can make room for his hundreds of offspring.
- Jean Reno as Le Frog, The Toad's French cousin. He masters martial arts and is the leader of a team of hench-frogs.
- Andy Serkis as Spike, one of the Toad's two top hench-rats. He is the quicker-witted and most aggressive of the two.
- Bill Nighy as Whitey, another of the Toad's two top hench-rats. Whitey is an albino rat, and Spike's partner. Unlike Spike, Whitey is sympathetic and less vicious, but is also ignorant and gullible.
- Shane Richie as Sid, an over-weight and lazy rat from the sewers. He is an acquaintance of Rita and her family, and the one who flushed Roddy down the toilet into the sewers.
- Miriam Margolyes as Rita's grandmother, who has a crush on Roddy mistaking him for Tom Jones.
- Rachel Rawlinson as Tabitha, Roddy's human owner.
The idea for a film about rats which fall in love in a sewer was proposed by animator Sam Fell during the production of Aardman Animation's Chicken Run (2000). At the time, Aardman encouraged everyone at the company to come up with ideas for features for the DreamWorks partnership. Fell, development executive Mike Cooper, and producer Peter Lord then developed the concept into a story before pitching it to DreamWorks. Lord described the pitch as "The African Queen with the gender roles reversed." Comic writing duo, Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais were contracted to write the script for the film, which went under the working title of Ratropolis.
Traditionally, Aardman have used stop-motion for their animated features, but it is complex to render water with this technique, and using real water can damage plasticine models. It would have been expensive to composite CGI into shots that include water, of which there are many in the movie, so they chose to make Flushed Away their first all-CGI production. This is the third and final of three Aardman-produced films released by DreamWorks. Aardman's experience with DreamWorks during the making of the film led to a split between the two studios.
Soundtrack
On Halloween (31 October) of 2006, the Flushed Away: Music from the Motion Picture soundtrack was released by Astralwerks.
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
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1. | "Be Seeing You My Friend" | 3:49 | |
2. | "Dancing with Myself" | Billy Idol | 4:49 |
3. | "Are You Gonna Be My Girl" | Jet | 3:34 |
4. | "She's a Lady" | Tom Jones | 2:54 |
5. | "Ice Cold Rita" | Hugh Jackman & The Slugs | 0:44 |
6. | "Bohemian Like You" | The Dandy Warhols | 3:32 |
7. | "Marcel / That's Not Rice You're Eating" | Harry Gregson-Williams & The Slugs | 0:55 |
8. | "What's New Pussycat?" | Tom Jones | 2:17 |
9. | "Yakety Sax" | Boots Randolph | 2:01 |
10. | "Mr. Lonely" | The Slugs | 0:27 |
11. | "Don't Worry, Be Happy (with The Slugs intro)" | Bobby McFerrin | 4:22 |
12. | "Proud Mary" | Tina Turner | 5:25 |
13. | "Wonderful Night" | Fatboy Slim | 2:37 |
14. | "Life in the Sewer" | Harry Gregson-Williams | 4:40 |
15. | "Beware...Beware" | The Slugs | 0:35 |
Total length: | 36:16 |
Video game
Coinciding with the film's release, a video game adaptation was released on the PlayStation 2, Nintendo GameCube, Game Boy Advance, and on the Nintendo DS. Although having heavily negative reviews from critics, the game received an Annie Award for best animated video game.
Flushed Away was released on DVD 20 February 2007. It included behind the scenes, deleted info, Jammy Dodger videos and all new slug songs. It was released in the UK on 2 April 2007, where it was also packaged with a plasticine 'Slug Farm' kit.