Humdrum | |
Director: | Peter Peake [1] |
Producer: | Julie Lockhart Carla Shelley Michael Rose David Sproxton Peter Lord |
Starring: | Moray Hunter Jack Docherty |
Music: | Andy Price |
Cinematography: | Jeremy Hogg Toby Howell Andy MacCormack |
Editing: | Nick Upton Ben Jones James Mather Tamsin Parry |
Studio: | Aardman Animations Channel 4 Television Corporation Canal+ Premiere |
Runtime: | 7 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Humdrum is a 1998 British animated comedy short film directed by Peter Peake.[2] It was released in 1998 and produced by Aardman Animations and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Short Film and a BAFTA nomination in the same category.[3]
The film features two anonymous Scottish-accented Shadow Puppets (voiced by Jack Docherty and Moray Hunter) who are sitting around a table with nothing to do. They explore and reject several options including watching television (the only thing on is 'some weird animation thing'), listening to the radio (but 'it's all the same rubbish these days' - in this case La Cucaracha) and playing chess (the white pieces have been eaten due to a bet). This is briefly interrupted when the doorbell rings and one character answers it to find a pesky dog (who is, in fact, a double-glazing salesman) before the other persuades him to enter into a game of shadow puppets. The first character is frustrated by his acquaintance's appalling representation of a cow and later his failure to recognize a rather fantastic rabbit (His misled guesses include a 'fireman chasing an igloo' and an 'Otter with two sausage strapped to his head'). After an amusing outburst from the poor fellow, his annoying partner accuses him of being 'shirty'. This leads him to explode, furiously crying "I'm stuck indoors playing 'Guess the misshapen beast' with someone who clearly wouldn't recognise a rabbit if it came to his house for tea, said 'What's up Doc?' and started burrowing into his head! There are blind people with no fingers who are better at shadow puppets than you! No wonder I'm a tad miffed!" An awkward silence follows this, until the doorbell rings and the first character goes to answer it and finds the second character's 'cow' shadow puppet, which moos. Despite being disappointed with being wrong about a cow's appearance, he simply responds to this with a cheery "Not today, thank you." and closes the door in front of the camera, thus ending the animation.[4]
The film employs a distinctive stop-motion cutout animation technique to animate the shadow puppets,[6] making them move in ways that traditional shadow puppets cannot but retaining the impression of being projected onto everyday backgrounds.