Wallace and Gromit is Terrifying

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2021
  • I uncorked a whole lot of repressed nightmare fuel for this video, so I hope people like it.
    / dennigalla | ko-fi.com/dennigalla
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @sketchalater4656
    @sketchalater4656 Před rokem +904

    The lack of people around the town actually appealed to me as a kid. Being naturally shy and socially awkward, the lack of activity and people is comforting in a weird way. I especially remember the scene where Gromit was in the cafe. When I was little, I assumed no one was there and Gromit just walked in, and I was thinking how cool would it be to have a cafe all to yourself.

    • @whatdisd
      @whatdisd Před rokem +9

      It kinda sucks. You can chat with the Barista for like 5 minutes but if you run out of things to talk about it's dead silence from there on

    • @sketchalater4656
      @sketchalater4656 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@jacoboc2244 lol haha, totally forgot I even posted a comment here. Just to clarify, I was mainly talking about my kid self being shy and awkward. But now as an adult, I do enjoy going out and socializing. Soo all is good xD

    • @417Owsy
      @417Owsy Před 9 měsíci +10

      @@whatdisd isnt the point of having a cafe all to yourself is not talking to anyone? at least thats what it means to me

    • @geoffreyrichards6079
      @geoffreyrichards6079 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Disney’s “Pinocchio” is another pretty good example of it. We get the occasional glimpse of the other villagers and the throng of kids visiting Pleasure Island, but aside from them, most of the movie’s scenes take place in empty streets, deserted countryside roads, or in a spot where the locals are all off-screen (like in Stromboli’s puppet show). It definitely adds to the film’s rather dreamy atmosphere.

  • @HopPanaccio
    @HopPanaccio Před 2 lety +2537

    I was scared of a grand day out just because of the outdated models they had back then. Wallace just looked weirder. The scene where he's drawing blueprints for the rocket was always uneasy. Just the quietness and the dark basement. The scariest part of that short was when the robot was trying to break into the rocket to get off the moon. All that being said, none of the shorts that came after that one frightened me too much.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +166

      You're absolutely right about the robot breaking into the rocket being scary. It always frightened me how he just starts tearing shit up left and right in a panic.

    • @edwinreid8355
      @edwinreid8355 Před 2 lety +38

      I know what you mean. Only as I've gotten older, do I feel more sympathetic towards the Robot. I mean he had every right to be raging at first cos Wallace recklessly litters his planet ( although that magazine did get him fantasing about Skiing ) & even leaks rocket fuel onto it so it's fairly understandable as he reaches for the Trudgeon in his draw. At first.

    • @genesisspace5331
      @genesisspace5331 Před 2 lety +2

      @@dennigalla what’s your accent

    • @crusader8626
      @crusader8626 Před 2 lety +4

      That was the one wallace and gromit i ever had a problem with for some reason. The robot was the root of that n i have no clue why now i watch it back

    • @MrBryan-hr1rp
      @MrBryan-hr1rp Před 2 lety +10

      Funny, the sketchboard scene was my favorite part as a kid

  • @benjaminbuchanan7151
    @benjaminbuchanan7151 Před rokem +359

    This may seem pretty obvious, but I think the biggest redeeming factor of these movies is the slightly absent, but still very meaningful relationship between Wallace and Gromit. The scariest and most gut wrenching point in all of the shorts I think was when a defeated Gromit left Wallace in The Wrong Trousers.

    • @thelemmon
      @thelemmon Před 7 měsíci +20

      That scene still makes me tear up

  • @affanjamsari5752
    @affanjamsari5752 Před rokem +98

    “A Matter of Loaf and Death” is probably one of the most terrifying ones. This focuses on actual murder, death and conspiracy…on a franchise where our main characters go to the moon for cheese.

    • @georgedevries3992
      @georgedevries3992 Před 6 měsíci +14

      "This focuses on actual murder, death and conspiracy" This right here impressed me when I watched that short recently. A short, meant primarily for young audiences (right?), delves into things and concepts like actual, premeditated murder and death.
      Oh, and don't forget romance and love too. What with Wallace, despite being somewhat autistic and eccentric, falling in love in "A Close Shave" and even his canine friend, Gromit, getting a love interest of his own in the form of the poodle Fluffles, in "A matter of Loaf and Death"! Speaking of Fluffles, physical abuse. Another heavy theme that isn't shown on-screen but most certainly implied in that short!
      All of them, themes and concepts usually meant for more adult audiences!
      Can't wait for the new short coming on Netflix in 2024! Hope they keep Fluffles around though!

    • @emmastime2946
      @emmastime2946 Před 2 měsíci

      I think that episode was my favourite

    • @GothicEdgyRat
      @GothicEdgyRat Před 29 dny

      That was my favorite episode as a kid!

    • @GothicEdgyRat
      @GothicEdgyRat Před 29 dny

      But the penguin one scared me a bit

  • @spacegamer762
    @spacegamer762 Před 2 lety +767

    During the last scene of 'A grand day out' the rocket can be seen flying back to Earth, but what always bothered me is that there are little to no city lights shining on the dark side of the planet, which makes it seem as if Earth isn't populated.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +180

      I didn't have time to put this in the final video but if you look at the planet - that's not even Earth.

    • @spacegamer762
      @spacegamer762 Před 2 lety +63

      @@dennigalla I see what you mean, but earlier in the film when the Robot looks at the planet through the telescope, it’s clearly visible that it in fact is Earth with Europe, Africa and a part of Asia clearly visible

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +81

      @@spacegamer762 Yeah, you're right. I guess the planet they landed on wasn't the same one they took off from.

    • @r4h4al
      @r4h4al Před 2 lety +8

      @@dennigalla What?

    • @jean-michelmusli5669
      @jean-michelmusli5669 Před rokem +35

      @@dennigalla Its Earth but seen at a different angle. You can see europe in the middle

  • @NewOrderOfAlexandria
    @NewOrderOfAlexandria Před 2 lety +4157

    Creepiness is always more effective in non-horror because you don't expect it. Whenever you watch anything horror, you know it's trying to scare you and the scenery just screams "spooky", but when something innocent has a bizarre moment of surrealism or uncanniness, it's like seeing a giant spider staring at you in the corner of your eye, that you never expected to see on a summer's day.

    • @555droid6
      @555droid6 Před rokem +30

      So like how in Harry potter the werewolf and the spider are scary because they're in essentially innocent movies

    • @kevinmaurer3562
      @kevinmaurer3562 Před rokem +39

      The spider never scared me really but if you watch Chamber of Secrets and Prisoner of Azkaban back to back youll notice the complete change of mood due to the change in directors and I think thats what made the werewolf so scary as a kid to me. Its almost like a grotesque climax to the end of a movie where the whole time youre going “where did all the cheeriness of hogwarts go”

    • @kevinmaurer3562
      @kevinmaurer3562 Před rokem +8

      The scene in Devil’s Advocate where the lady’s face changes

    • @NewOrderOfAlexandria
      @NewOrderOfAlexandria Před rokem +11

      @@kevinmaurer3562 I actually ran out of the cinema when I was a little kid in the early 2000s when Voldemort shows up at the end of the first one.
      Me the whole movie: 🐶
      Voldemort's back head: 😭

    • @anerrorhasoccurred8727
      @anerrorhasoccurred8727 Před rokem +8

      If a non-horror work tries too hard it can also have an adverse effect bc the audience knows that nothing _too_ scary will happen, but the juxtaposition is still pretty damn effective.

  • @-Selcouth
    @-Selcouth Před rokem +534

    "Wallace may just be a lovable old guy who only wants to make inventions, eat cheese and crackers, and hang out with his dog... but he's also hideous."

    • @redpiller1099
      @redpiller1099 Před rokem +1

      He looks absolutely grotesque idk how anyone could enjoy a show with a protagonist that atrocious.

    • @user-xq5ul8mm3r
      @user-xq5ul8mm3r Před rokem +25

      Ikr that line actually got me hard😢

    • @supersonical8770
      @supersonical8770 Před 9 měsíci +15

      British people.

    • @a14yearold
      @a14yearold Před 9 měsíci

      ​​@@supersonical8770that's a Irish accent you twat

    • @Autistic-Noice-Panda-2023
      @Autistic-Noice-Panda-2023 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Wallace isn’t hideous that’s just the way he was born as even without the hair he used to have he still like a fun jolly good person in my opinion

  • @katelynpringle5506
    @katelynpringle5506 Před 9 měsíci +59

    I really love the original shorts because they’re so goddamn creepy. The lighting always looks like it’s straight from a horror movie and I remember being particularly spooked by the penguin as a kid. I think it’s because he’s got those soulless beady little eyes that contain no human emotion. Also Preston the robot dog is just a full on Terminator-style nightmare.

  • @skakid0
    @skakid0 Před 2 lety +2395

    I always had that weird, unnerving feeling from Wallace and gromit too. It's the dark fuzziness and warm yet slightly washed out colour pallette. The "where is everyone", liminal vibe like the duo existed in a vacuum. I think half the point of were-rabbit was to address those things, showing more of the world and making it feel more alive.
    I've still always adored them, from the moment I first saw them and I think for me its slightly uncomfortable feeling is part of the charm.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +142

      I never really talked about use of colour but that's a good point too. Very drab.
      And I see what you mean with Were-Rabbit but I'm pretty sure they scarred another generation with the transformation sequence.

    • @keylimetea
      @keylimetea Před 2 lety +15

      It’s always given me an unsettling vibes

    • @lydiajulianprower8356
      @lydiajulianprower8356 Před 2 lety +11

      I'm so glad I'm not the only one...

    • @marioslawyer8936
      @marioslawyer8936 Před 2 lety +13

      I Never Really Paid attention to the blankness of the city that wallace and gromit live in.
      I Always Found the short films very amusing (how the robot on the moon needs to have a coin inserted to hit wallace on the head).
      I honestly don’t think your crazy when you describe your feelings about the series.
      When i was younger only the curse of the were rabbit would either make me scared or feel sorry for one of the characters (especially wallace at the end)

    • @lizurhd5202
      @lizurhd5202 Před 2 lety +8

      @@dennigalla They did. I went over to tend to some younger cub scouts at a camp.
      One was a 9 yo who had ADHD, who was generally annoying, but for some reason, he always screamed whenever I said the words "rabbit", "bunny", or "Wallace and Grommit". When me and the older kids asked him why, he said it was because of something called the Were-Rabbit. We didn't know what it was, but one of us looked it up later, and we burst out laughing discovering it was a Wallace and Grommit cartoon. We spent half of that camp trying to show him the transformation sequence and getting him to get over his fear.
      Probably a waste of our time 😅

  • @Maus_122
    @Maus_122 Před 2 lety +1861

    Theory: Wallace used to work in a factory and had a degree in engineering he lost his job as a result of Margaret Thatcher's policies he tries selling small inventions to the slowing depopulating town. As the years go by the town is nearly abandoned and only a few businesses have survived and now he is a depressed inventor trying to replicate the town in his mind he once loved and knew so he moved out to a more populated town (wear rabbit)

    • @yetanotherrandomyoutubecha4382
      @yetanotherrandomyoutubecha4382 Před 2 lety +271

      Worse version: Wallace lost his mind long ago, and Gromit is just a normal dog that Wallace projects his schizophrenic delusions onto.
      And the cheese is an allegory for heroin.

    • @Maus_122
      @Maus_122 Před 2 lety +141

      @@yetanotherrandomyoutubecha4382 no he forgot the crack gromit

    • @Maus_122
      @Maus_122 Před 2 lety +82

      @@yetanotherrandomyoutubecha4382 and his dealer is called wenslydale

    • @RhinoTTH
      @RhinoTTH Před 2 lety

      Margret fukin thatcher...

    • @killingmewillnotbringbacky9177
      @killingmewillnotbringbacky9177 Před 2 lety +49

      this is some salad fingers shit now

  • @jgjg5182
    @jgjg5182 Před rokem +69

    Honestly the "theres no people around" thing is something you can get used to if you watch low budget media because hiring extras or animating background characters is a lot of work for little benefit, so people either use to make it seem like people are in the background or situations which wouldn't have people in the background or just have the background empty, which is the only real option for small claymation projects

    • @cumaproto9466
      @cumaproto9466 Před rokem +5

      Yeah, as someone who pretty much exclusively watched Wallace and Gromit when I was like 5 I probably got used to the lack of extras pretty quick.

    • @GregJamesMusic
      @GregJamesMusic Před 10 měsíci +4

      Even the movie, which did have extras, only had about 30 of them. I don't think anyone really complained, especially since the writers and animators did a lot to give the townspeople distinct characteristics and personalities.

    • @rickydiscord7671
      @rickydiscord7671 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I have realized this as a kid for watching movies. the lower the budget the less people in the background the higher the budget the more people in the background. but there cases even if some movies have a low budget they would still be lazy to add any people in the background.

  • @LorenzoRaider
    @LorenzoRaider Před rokem +123

    I LOVE Wallace & Gromit, I've seen the short films probably 10 times each, and yet somehow I've never noticed the lack of people! I think it's a credit to how engrossing their stories and characters are (I'm adamant the penguin is one of the best villains in any media) but it's very creepy now I think about it.

  • @Hazgoblin
    @Hazgoblin Před 2 lety +452

    4:23 don't know if anyone else has talked about this, but the timing of his words with the clip of gromit is perfectly synced

    • @TVINC.
      @TVINC. Před rokem +27

      Absolutely perfect

    • @every2464
      @every2464 Před rokem

      :O Almost as if, completely on purpose! Which just goes to show you that there's actually nothing to this guy's theory whatsoever. In fact it actually counters the argument brilliantly by showing how much humanity/expression is captured in Aardman's work.

    • @elizakeating8415
      @elizakeating8415 Před rokem +14

      @@every2464 That's not what this video is saying at all.... Like I'm not sure to what extent I personally agree with this video or not, but "Aardman characters lack expression" is categorically not what's being argued here

    • @every2464
      @every2464 Před rokem +1

      @@elizakeating8415 it is. Listen to 2:15 and then you got a demonstration of Gromit through the cardboard box completely solidifying my point.

    • @hanoic
      @hanoic Před rokem +4

      @@every2464 no you did not pass the verbal comprehension test

  • @CozyVemgeance
    @CozyVemgeance Před 2 lety +2359

    I feel the opposite way. I always thought these two had such charismatic personalities and timeless rustic designs. Watching this show feels like visiting my grandmother’s house, if that makes sense.

    • @VectorCultistCaptainVector
      @VectorCultistCaptainVector Před rokem +107

      Yeah it never bothered me either

    • @richard38618
      @richard38618 Před rokem +94

      it never really bothered me,I thought it was just oddly wholesome

    • @aspie1996
      @aspie1996 Před rokem +68

      I actually enjoyed Wallace and Gromit

    • @Jacotomo2222
      @Jacotomo2222 Před rokem +31

      I've watched quite a bit of their stuff and it never bothered me either, and I was the kid who could barely get halfway through luigi's mansion cause it was to scary. It's fascinating how certain things make people feel certain ways, like, I've heard one guy feels sick when they watch claymation, perhaps due to them watching that while ill as a child.

    • @LexaeusV5
      @LexaeusV5 Před rokem +5

      Yes just my childhood I loved the wear rabbit even more

  • @EzraAlexander
    @EzraAlexander Před rokem +173

    nothing is more disconcerting than the shot of Wallace walking down the basement stairs in a grand day out. Incredible video putting voice to a perspective many of us have had to live with in our nightmares for years. 🙏

  • @calluminkster6892
    @calluminkster6892 Před rokem +48

    I always felt a deep, strong uneasiness and loneliness in "The Wrong Trousers" when Gromit is reading the newspaper in that empty Cafe; I think your video explained perfectly why that is.

    • @geoffreyrichards6079
      @geoffreyrichards6079 Před 2 měsíci

      It might’ve been intentional on the creatives’ part. The scene is meant to be unnerving since Gromit is secretly following a suspected criminal and trying to keep a low profile. Filling the scene with background characters would’ve kinda lessened the suspense.

  • @mariagiordano9150
    @mariagiordano9150 Před 2 lety +661

    5:28 “the horror that comes from things that aren’t intended to be scary are the strongest” YES I FEEL THE SAME WAY

    • @janzacharias3680
      @janzacharias3680 Před 2 lety +12

      it's the ambiguity, you can't assess the risk, unlike with visible, obvious threats

    • @Zeagods-CyberShadow
      @Zeagods-CyberShadow Před 2 lety

      Yeeee

    • @Cross_0ver
      @Cross_0ver Před 2 lety +2

      that claymation thing that was played in that time made me jump as well

    • @sergeantsainsburys9181
      @sergeantsainsburys9181 Před rokem +1

      Fr all those kids tv shows and films that were light hearted but had one or two scary scenes just became a whole lot scarier, I vividly remember being scared out of my socks In the scene where the trousers are in the wrapping paper and they surprise gromit, because I wasn’t expecting it, if you put it into the context of an actual horror movie it seems less scary

    • @Galidorquest
      @Galidorquest Před 4 měsíci

      That's how I feel about Hunter The Cheetah in Spyro 2: Ripto's Rage. It's innocent, but those bulging eyes and wide mouth are so unsettling. Several years ago, I had a dream that I was being chased by it on an empty highway and all the humans had disappeared. Kind of like Nextbots In Backrooms.
      I also had a dream in 2003 at the age of 7 where I was chased by a frozen image of Tommy Pickles in a school parking lot.

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian Před 2 lety +249

    I was never overly scared of Wallace and Gromit, mostly because Wallace was so bumptious and affable, and Gromit so level headed and serious, which always grounded the duo as the central focus enough for me not to be overly concerned with the smaller details gnawing at my subconscious.
    But what did eventually break me from this was the Techno-Trousers movie. When Gromit is going for a walk with the trousers, he goes to a park. It immediately struck me how fuckin' weird it was for there to a park with no one at all there. Then I noticed the town, which previously I'd managed to subconsciously rationalise as simply being the wrong time of day. But it was that otherwise emptiness that became the thing I could no longer unsee. Where were the security guards in the museum Feathers McGraw steals the jewel from? Where are the people in the town when Gromit ran away from home? Where were the police in the station? Where were the zoo employees or the patrons? Where were the kids and parents in the park?

    • @user-gw1mr2cs3i
      @user-gw1mr2cs3i Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's really unsettling when Those Stupid Trousers were walking in the sunset during the end credits

    • @Anglomachian
      @Anglomachian Před 8 měsíci

      @@user-gw1mr2cs3i I remember that. With the theme song and credits rolling.

  • @kalkuttadrop6371
    @kalkuttadrop6371 Před rokem +32

    3:02 I remember noticing this as a kid, always found the town kinda empty and quiet. A Grand Day Out was creepy due to atmosphere and Wrong Trousers had such emptyness.
    The movie and the latter two shorts never had that vibe as the world is a lot more populated

  • @CraigSpannier
    @CraigSpannier Před rokem +53

    I completely understand this. You laid out pretty well how i've always felt; the eyes and the lack of people are a huge part of it. I'd also add the lighting is also sort of terrifying.

    • @heisenberg6142
      @heisenberg6142 Před rokem +3

      Idk why but i feel like this with finding nemo and idk why

  • @tabi122
    @tabi122 Před 2 lety +954

    I was always creeped out by the many silent scenes in A Grand Day Out, and as for the other shorts, the whole plot was just disturbing without being deliberately scary. If you watch all of the shorts and think about the events that occurred for even a second, you realise that they hold many similarities to the genre of psychological horror. A homicidal robot on the moon, a killer robot dog, unpredictable robot trousers, a crazy mass murderer girlfriend and a narcissistic penguin. They're all horrific and "off" but are meant to be funny. Unpredictability sets me on edge without fail. The Curse of the Were-Rabbit comforted me with more characters but the Rabbit itself was absolute nightmare fuel to look at, rendering the human characters futile. Most of this never occurred to me as a child, but some did. Great video!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +45

      Cheers for watching. A lot of stuff that's played for surreal laughs ends up horrifying when you think about it in the cold light of day.

    • @EternaMidnight
      @EternaMidnight Před rokem +6

      Omg yeah that killer robot dog was TERRIFYING

    • @prehistoric-fan
      @prehistoric-fan Před rokem +8

      I used to be scared of the curse of the were-rabbit

    • @tabi122
      @tabi122 Před rokem +2

      @@prehistoric-fan me too, it just looks so scary to me

    • @joewoods532
      @joewoods532 Před rokem +2

      I was so terrified of the were rabbit as a kid, to the point I couldn't even get to the point when it appears. Just the way they suggested it was too much for me

  • @TheWritersBlocOfficial
    @TheWritersBlocOfficial Před 3 lety +804

    This was fantastic! That penguin's beady little eyes still haunts my nightmares.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 3 lety +51

      Thank you very much. When I was grabbing footage for this video I made sure there was a whole lot of Feathers McGraw. What a presence.

    • @TheWritersBlocOfficial
      @TheWritersBlocOfficial Před 3 lety +19

      @@dennigalla Apparently the design was inspired by Mrs. Danvers from Hitchcock's Rebecca. Which explains my night sweats.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +10

      @Khaled Shanshal I feel the same, man. I watched them all when I was a kid but going back to them when I was older and able to properly appreciate all the work and vision it takes to put them together really put it in a new perspective. To this day I think The Wrong Trousers model train chase scene is a top 10 movie setpiece of all time. Thanks for watching, mate.

    • @XD_yt4453
      @XD_yt4453 Před 2 lety

      must be very sensitive

    • @jb6725
      @jb6725 Před 2 lety +4

      @@dennigalla kind of forgot the penguin had a name to be honest

  • @lanabarone5092
    @lanabarone5092 Před rokem +12

    I have this recurring nightmare -- I've had it ever since I was a kid, maybe around 5 or 6 -- it's just wallace and gromit driving around in their little car in this town with no people, no one except me. And they kidnap me. It is TERRIFYING. And I've never been able to articulate why it was so terrifying until I saw this. Wow.

  • @couldntthinkofanoriginalna2734

    Aside from the scary factor. The obvious 1950's theme of Wallace and Gromit has always weirdly comforted me.

  • @sabikdaosum
    @sabikdaosum Před rokem +608

    I always felt that creepy vibe, but i loved it for that. Honestly i felt sympathetic towards the robot in a grand day out, all he wanted was to get back to earth and ski. What terrified the shit out of me was the penguin.

  • @williamhanekom9882
    @williamhanekom9882 Před 2 lety +447

    One of the things that always spooked me about the shorts were the mid 20th century look of the machines and inventions, yes half of them for mundane, whimsical purposes but the earthy colour palletes, mechanical arms, pistons etc. make them feel like WW2 machines that can kill you in the wrong hands.
    The techno trousers are hacked and controlled to abduct Wallace and the knitting machine's design is re-used to skin sheep for meat processing. Not to mention Preston and The Oven are two robots that go rogue, makes me wonder what a robot uprising would look like in this universe.

    • @jamesgravil9162
      @jamesgravil9162 Před 2 lety +9

      "makes me wonder what a robot uprising would look like in this universe."
      Like the Terminator movies, obviously. Only somehow funnier.

    • @THETURKISHKEBAB1
      @THETURKISHKEBAB1 Před rokem

      That's a whole movie ides there

    • @moonmeadow
      @moonmeadow Před rokem +4

      You’re so right actually! The funny thing is my parents watched these and so did I when I was a child and I usually really loved them, even chicken run. But parts of the show creeped me out (like the machines, same for chicken run) and I was terrified of the were rabbit movie as well

    • @Lunettarose
      @Lunettarose Před rokem +2

      I'd watch the absolute hell out of a Wallace and Gromit robot uprising.

    • @alexwells6876
      @alexwells6876 Před rokem +2

      The film coming in 2024 is supposed to be about an out of control AI gnome that Wallace built (or something along those lines), so you might just get your wish. Will it have the quietly menacing quality that the penguin and Preston had though? That's why those villains work so well, they don't speak and that's what makes them so interesting. After A Close Shave, Aardman and Nick Park seem to be more focus on faster paced story. I'd love to see a return to form with the slow moving narrative, that's W&G to me. Don't give the gnome a voice, just eyes that light up and it'll be creepy for all the right reasons.

  • @UberDragon
    @UberDragon Před rokem +29

    I never noticed it before, I can say though that the dog endo skeleton was extremely frightening. Not just its looks, but also how it was introduced to the viewer. I only vaguely remember, but I think it was that lady telling them that the dog wasn't a real dog and that it must have a malfuction or something and then it drops into that machine and I believe gets canned, but then that scene you showed with the robot hand just shooting out. It's pretty scary in my opinion.

    • @vernerikerppola4438
      @vernerikerppola4438 Před rokem +2

      Yes that was really the one and only scary part for me back when i watched Wallace and Gromit

  • @Pseudotaxus34
    @Pseudotaxus34 Před rokem +16

    The biggest thing with claymation, and especially the W/G shorts that lend themselves to being scary, is the lighting. *Real* (and often very harsh, bright, shadowy) lighting on "fake" characters that move lends a very uncanny noir feeling that enhances whatever is on screen. Look at the behind the scenes of A Close Shave and you'll see some of the rigs they set up with the main and backlight plus scene lights and it starts to make more sense.

    • @tim68453
      @tim68453 Před 7 měsíci +1

      oml you're right. The only 2 scenes across all their films that gave me bad dreams was 1. Wallace walking down the basement steps in A Grand Day Out and 2. when Gromit spies on the penguin in The Wrong Trousers, especially the shots of Gromit hiding behind that wall with only light casted on his fixed, almost soulless eyes and ears fully extended upwards. the lighting in both scenes was always so disturbing and I never noticed it as a child

  • @nicholasward6454
    @nicholasward6454 Před 2 lety +374

    Another thing as well is the food that they eat too! It always made me feel really weird, especially when they go to the moon and literally eat the moon. Also, in 'A Grand Day Out' there a fair few scenes without music which is unintentionally unsettling. My last thought would be that, in all the shorts I feel like we're meant to sympathise with Gromit, who has to put up with literally everything. It's really disquieting watching Wallace be completely oblivious to their own actions and easily manipulated. I think the intention was for it to be funny but actually it just comes across as this fear and realisation that usually those that have power cannot see the consequences of their actions & there's little we can do to change that. It's actually a feeling of hopelessness and sadness, watching Gromit endlessly clean up after Wallace and never truly being seen.
    ALSO: the penguin having literally no facial expression at all haunts me still.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +41

      There's definitely a purgatorial vibe to it, yeah. Gromit has no mouth, but wants to scream sometimes when Wallace is inches from death.
      Speaking of music, the upbeat yet muffled music that Feathers McGraw plays when he takes over Gromit's room always, always freaked me out. The distant hum of voices.

    • @Eshajori
      @Eshajori Před 2 lety +3

      @Nicholas this is a really amazing take.

    • @loolfactorie
      @loolfactorie Před 2 lety +4

      The penguin was supposed to be emotionless and unsettling. The music in the show is always 40's and 50's traditional English music you'd dance to in a "dance hall".

    • @furrettheferret9562
      @furrettheferret9562 Před rokem

      apparently the next film is gonna be about gromit getting tired of wallace’s inventions and going on his own journey

    • @physical_insanity
      @physical_insanity Před rokem +1

      > always made me feel really weird, especially when they go to the moon and literally eat the moon.
      That's literally a play on the gag that the moon is made out of cheese, there's nothing weird about it.

  • @averagejoe8358
    @averagejoe8358 Před rokem +715

    Say what you like, it's still incredibly genius and inspiring that the first two short films were done with only one voice actor and still got two Oscar awards. Praise to Nick Park!

    • @dj71162
      @dj71162 Před rokem +25

      Nick Park has more Oscars than Steven Spielberg.

    • @HolyFreakinDragonSlayer
      @HolyFreakinDragonSlayer Před rokem +13

      Nick park and ardman animations are genius

    • @averagejoe8358
      @averagejoe8358 Před rokem +18

      @@HolyFreakinDragonSlayer Aardman are godly. Honestly, I even managed to get some enjoyment out of flushed away, even if it scored a poor rating.

    • @HolyFreakinDragonSlayer
      @HolyFreakinDragonSlayer Před rokem +1

      @@averagejoe8358 im more of the OG before they went digitalised in all fairness. Ive not really watched much of the digital things as it didnt captivate me as much.

    • @averagejoe8358
      @averagejoe8358 Před rokem +1

      @@HolyFreakinDragonSlayer I am aswell, that's just the specific example I wanna give, cause somehow it didn't tske too well.

  • @Johnno9989
    @Johnno9989 Před rokem +7

    I think the main reason why the Wallace and Gromit episodes and most stop-motion animated projects lack background characters is mainly due to budget related reason. Plus, it would be a right faff for the production team to build all those extra characters.

  • @brenda0006
    @brenda0006 Před rokem +72

    I never liked Wallace and grommet as a kid and I never realised why, like they creeped me out, but I always put it down to the art style. I wasn't really an easily scared kid I read scary books and watched some of the more kid friendly scary movies like gremlins, so I never understood why I was creeped out by wallace and grommet. This makes so much sense to me though! It kinda makes me want to rewatch them actually and see if I feel the same still.

  • @fbob987
    @fbob987 Před 2 lety +127

    It's comforting to know that you might run into Wallace and Gromit in some undiscovered level of the backrooms.

  • @owenwolfco.8344
    @owenwolfco.8344 Před 2 lety +240

    Another kind of creepy but sad thought, the robot on the moon in A Grand Day Out (canonically known as “The Cooker” because it resembles an oven) would shortly run out of coin power after the end, meaning it would be just an inert machine sitting on the moon with skis

    • @SuperLabelPerson
      @SuperLabelPerson Před rokem +41

      My grandparents showed me these shorts when I was a kid, and my first question was if the robot would run out of time soon and become inert again. My grandfather said, "Best not to worry about it."

    • @destroyer.m8499
      @destroyer.m8499 Před rokem +3

      @@SuperLabelPerson best not to worry about it indeed what a surprisingly disturbing thing to think about

    • @TheBrandonn
      @TheBrandonn Před rokem

      @@SuperLabelPerson lol

    • @Big-Chungus21
      @Big-Chungus21 Před rokem +1

      it appears to be sentient or at least intelligent. Creepy to think it goes in and out of living, with small moments of life between longer moments of nonlife? Sleeping? Death?

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor Před rokem +1

      @@Big-Chungus21
      You run out of coin power. Everything goes dark.
      Then you wake up again. You don't know how long it's been. Maybe an hour. Maybe hundreds of thousands of years. You have little time before your coin power runs out again, and no idea whether you will ever wake up again once it does run out.

  • @JMarieCAlove
    @JMarieCAlove Před rokem +14

    Hello from Southern California! I don’t see Wallace and Gromit as terrifying. I think they are too funny, especially Gromit who is a dog but has a personality of saving the day for Wallace. Or when he rolls his eyes or shakes his head. Gromit is the smart one in that duo. I think the people who created Wallace and Gromit did just make it about them, focus on them because they are the main two characters, it’s not about the other people (if there were any). Plus, I’m sure if they had more claymation characters, can you imagine how much time and effort it would take for each short video they create. Hours and hours in one day just to get each movement just right. Wallace is out there with his ideas and loves cheese too much, not always good for the system! Lol… But I could see Gromit with his own series on t.v., or even continuous short videos on CZcams. Claymation can be awesome in a different setting. Not all claymation is scary. My brother did a stop and go claymation short video for just about 50 seconds about an Eskimo fishing in a pond, accidentally slipping on the ice, smoothing out his little fur hooded coat, it took him a few hours just for those 50 seconds! That’s just crazy and it definitely teaches you patients. It was so good and funny and my brother was only 10 at the time. That was in the early 80s. He got an A+ for his project and an award ribbon. It’s funny how some people aren’t really afraid to watch scary movies but freak out with even a funny cartoon or characters made of clay. I would say, Wallace and Gromit don’t frighten me but why did the creators of W&G, make Wallace look that way? Lol. No one has a head like that! I’m sure it’s just for character and exaggeration with his features…. btw, I absolutely love how Scottish people sound. I really can’t say, love a Scottish accent because we all have an accent or dialect. My moms best friend was from Edinburgh but her and her family moved to Southern California and they were our neighbors. Her three boys were absolute terrors, loud, noisy, bratty and talked back to their parents. I always wanted to visit Scotland. Someday. 😁❤️

  • @clemfandango619
    @clemfandango619 Před rokem +15

    It has always given me a sense of existential dread thinking about the amount of time it takes to put a scene together.

  • @elder-woodsilverstein7716
    @elder-woodsilverstein7716 Před 2 lety +239

    2:58 Actually I noticed this too. When I was watching, I was wondering why do we don't see very much people. Honeslty Wallace, especially in the wrong trousers, seems like the only human in this world. They correct this problem later with having more extras, but as with the original shorts, the town seems like a wastleland with no living soul in sight.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +30

      Looking back, I think it is The Wrong Trousers that's the main offender. So many signs of life but no bodies. Cheers for watching.

    • @finnaberjanski4649
      @finnaberjanski4649 Před 2 lety +17

      @@dennigalla I mean, there's a practical reason for that- that they didn't have thebudget to create and animate more characters. In claymation, it can be very, very hard to have too many things moving at once, and Aardman in their earlier works have very focused shots with one or two things moving. I also think the stories themselves are so self contained to Wallace and Gromit that making more characters unnecesarily wouldn't have been worth it.
      That being said, I do think this is to the show's credit- the very charming, cozy, personal feeling is one side of that coin, and the strangely quiet, mysterious, empty feel is the other side. I have loved Wallace and Gromit formany years, and I do think it's a great example of limitations on a work of art working to its credit.

    • @jamesgravil9162
      @jamesgravil9162 Před 2 lety +5

      "the town seems like a wastleland with no living soul in sight."
      That's the north of England for you, mate. Thatcher really did a number on this country.

    • @elder-woodsilverstein7716
      @elder-woodsilverstein7716 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jamesgravil9162 Oh, sorry.

    • @jamesgravil9162
      @jamesgravil9162 Před 2 lety +2

      @@elder-woodsilverstein7716 No problem!

  • @mattiabaccolo
    @mattiabaccolo Před rokem +230

    I've always been terrified of Wallace and Gromit. When I was little my parents made me watch it, and while my brother was amused and relaxed, I was on constant alert. You managed to explain and finally make me rationalize why I felt this way.

    • @haileyann001
      @haileyann001 Před rokem +2

      Me I was terrified of the animation and for some reason my mom loved it

    • @thegreenembers
      @thegreenembers Před rokem +6

      Same the one with the penguin scared the crap out of me

    • @Spyziy
      @Spyziy Před rokem +5

      I loved the show when I was little I remember getting home and asking for my daily cheese and crackers while watching Wallace and Gromit! Def seems more scary now that I’ve seen this video but I just remember always wanting cheese and crackers bc of this show 😂

    • @Joosher56
      @Joosher56 Před rokem +2

      @@thegreenembers same I fucking hated that one

    • @Sailor-Khione
      @Sailor-Khione Před rokem

      Made you watch it? I thought I was the only one who was made to watch something. I was stuck with watching the orphan

  • @NoIax
    @NoIax Před rokem +70

    I have religiously watched CZcams for 10 plus years and have probably seen millions of videos over the years but I can definitively say this is my favourite CZcams video ever. I love your editing, the music you choose, the clips, your arguments. This is simply incredible. THANK YOU!

  • @00McMuffin00
    @00McMuffin00 Před rokem +6

    Wallace's face alone gave me nightmares as a kid but I still watched them over and over again for some reason.

    • @user-gw1mr2cs3i
      @user-gw1mr2cs3i Před 8 měsíci

      I can't stand that narrow mouth, can't even tell if he's showing emotion

  • @dotfoxtom5942
    @dotfoxtom5942 Před 2 lety +143

    I never had a feeling of loneliness when it came to Wallice and Gromit. It was actually sort of comforting, I don't know why but something about there only being two main characters and hardly seeing any others had me kind of relaxed, like I was in my element. I was a very lonely child, friends weren't easy to make and my mother restricted where I could go for a long time leaving me confined to the house most of the time. In that sense I suppose the lack of other people in the shorts never really bothered me because being alone although not something I nessisarily enjoy is something I am very much used to and have grown accustomed to.
    The only negative emotion that I have gotten from Wallace and Gromit if any is the feeling of sadness in a grand day out. The oven on the moon was and still is a character that makes me shed a tear for and it being for a few reasons. One reason being the fact that I could relate with him, he was all alone. But really the thing that made me the most upset was that when we see him Skiing over the hills of the moon at the end I always had a feeling of dread and sadness that he would shut down again. As we see in the film the oven is only operational for so long until he just suddenly stops working because of his built in clock. Each penny that is put into him only kept him on for so long and as A kid the idea of him suddenly stopping again upset me as the oven wasn't evil and it was clear it had dreams and ambitions like a human so the sad idea of him enjoying what little time he had before suddenly shutting down again even has me feeling a little sad now. I always tried to make myself feel better and head cannoned the idea that maybe the penny got stuck and messed with his clock so he wouldn't turn off again so he could keep enjoying himself on the moon. If that were true I would feel a lot better in that case but something always told me that he stopped shortly after Wallace and Gromit left.

    • @chucklesdeclown8819
      @chucklesdeclown8819 Před rokem +3

      poor oven :(

    • @zhaviyah84
      @zhaviyah84 Před rokem +1

      Omg you really are lonely lol you’re thinking waaaay to in-depth about what happened to a non existent oven robot bro.

    • @louisemcateer1314
      @louisemcateer1314 Před rokem

      That moment when the spaceship handles come off in the robot's hands and it realises it is being left behind on the moon is, to me, the most gut-wrenching moment in cinema. It just wanted to be happy!!! 😭

  • @curbstompzombiekillerz
    @curbstompzombiekillerz Před rokem +567

    i really wish that someone makes a horror series with this uncanny vibe

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před rokem +67

      You should check out the films Mad God and Junk Head. They're films, not series, but make great use of Claymation to be deliberately surreal.

    • @InternetMameluq
      @InternetMameluq Před rokem

      It reminds me of this: czcams.com/video/Ntf5_ue2Lzw/video.html&ab_channel=DavidRidlen

    • @wegwerfacc8496
      @wegwerfacc8496 Před rokem +3

      Stranger Things Season 1 is a lot like that at times

    • @waleed7338
      @waleed7338 Před rokem

      I don’t think it would work because you’d already know it’s meant to be scary where as with the uncanny feeling Dennis talks about can only be felt when you don’t expect it or when the stuff you’re watching isn’t meant to be scary

    • @taraxanoid
      @taraxanoid Před rokem

      Angel's Egg has a similar liminal uncanny vibe

  • @AcousticJuice93
    @AcousticJuice93 Před rokem +11

    I always loved how otherworldly it felt as a kid. Compared to other run of the mill kids TV shows Wallace and Gromit was entirely unique. It always felt like stepping into some kind of bizarro dimension where nothing but everything made sense.

  • @DK-bw5dr
    @DK-bw5dr Před rokem +5

    Creepiest thing was when my primary school did Wallace and Gromit pasta. Just imagine how terrifying that is for a kid

  • @kikikrazed
    @kikikrazed Před 3 lety +235

    wow...i can't say i ever had any negative associations with wallace and gromit growing up, but this video has definitely convinced me to see it from your perspective. love your voiceover as well, very expressive. please make more videos - you've earned a sub and i'm eagerly awaiting more from you!!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 3 lety +14

      Cheers very much, I'm fully planning to make more videos soon. I was worried my voiceover sounded a little robotic since it's my first attempt, so it's nice to hear that you liked it.

  • @joshojojo7
    @joshojojo7 Před 2 lety +118

    I was terrified of Wallace and Gromit the first time I watched it as a child, although I've never looked at it from your point of view before. Cool video and a great insight :)

    • @joshojojo7
      @joshojojo7 Před 2 lety +5

      Alien Mr Burns was pretty spooky too. ;)

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks a bunch, man. It was fun trying to logically lay out what scared me about it, because especially as a kid it's hard to explain where the fear really comes from.

  • @cpt.marcusronaldthe3rd274

    "Overlooked by chimney shadows cast long by sunset." Bloody hell, wasn't expecting this to be so poetical

  • @gtduck5618
    @gtduck5618 Před rokem +9

    Wallace and Gromit is amazing. It may be creepy, but it's still a phenomenal watch.

  • @diggoryjaydark97
    @diggoryjaydark97 Před 2 lety +93

    The fear your describing in the second fear is called kenopsia, which is the fear that stuff like the backrooms is based on. Also why source games feel weird.

    • @Keatoil
      @Keatoil Před rokem +11

      Not everyone is scared of walls and air

    • @faithpearlgenied-a5517
      @faithpearlgenied-a5517 Před rokem +9

      @@Keatoil Nowhere in his comment did he claim 'everyone' is. Learn to read.

    • @Keatoil
      @Keatoil Před rokem +5

      @@faithpearlgenied-a5517 "which is also why source games feel weird" implying everyone feels this way, he should have used "which is why I feel that source games feel weird" Learn English

    • @Mollymauking
      @Mollymauking Před rokem +11

      oh my god no one cares, you still understand what the original commenter means

    • @benjaminbronnimann3966
      @benjaminbronnimann3966 Před rokem +6

      @@Keatoil you must be fun at parties

  • @darkforestzombie218
    @darkforestzombie218 Před 2 lety +51

    I used to be TERRIFIED of the Aardman intro where the half of the face drops into the frame. I never really was scared of the show itself although I do remember being creeped out at the bit where the wrong trousers were jumping around and running, probably so scary because it was sped up.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +4

      It's like double abstract - the claymation is weird, and what they do with it is weird.

    • @darkforestzombie218
      @darkforestzombie218 Před 2 lety +3

      @@dennigalla yeah

  • @randomness928
    @randomness928 Před rokem +4

    When I was a kid, I developed a strange fear of wallace and gromit seemingly out of nowhere. I’m still not quite sure where it came from, since I watched those shorts incessently as a young kid. It got so bad to the point that my sisters could torment me by literally naming wallace and gromit shorts. Even watching a grand day out as an adult gives me a weird, soulless vibe that shakes me to my core. It’s hard to pin down, but I know what you mean.

  • @andrewpackham8236
    @andrewpackham8236 Před rokem +5

    Totally agree, the whole style of the show has an ever-so-slight grimdark aesthetic that is just a bit uncanny

  • @juliabaggins1960
    @juliabaggins1960 Před rokem +57

    This comes to show just how subjective art is. I was also an easily scared kid, I couldn't even watch TV around Halloween season because I was genuinely terrified of the commercials. I also remember being creeped out by some CGI, like in this short film by Blue Sky Studios called "Bunny" (it played after the Ice Age credits in the VHS).
    However, I remember this warm feeling watching Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run, it even inspired me to attempt claymation at home. Never picked up on the liminal space thing until now and I kind of see where you're coming from but I just don't feel it (except on A Grand Day Out, that one does look kinda creepy lol).

  • @rad6841
    @rad6841 Před rokem +33

    I never had this reaction when watching Wallace and Gromit, but in looking back I can see how and why others could have felt that way.
    I actually found the silence more comforting if anything. I always saw it as being peacefull, with nothing else to distract or stress over, except the story of "today's wacky hijinks."
    It was really cool to see such a different opinion on these stories.

  • @ryzacobalion3622
    @ryzacobalion3622 Před rokem +2

    For the reason why we never see any other people in Wallace and Gromit in the Wrong Trousers and Close Shave is mostly due to budget and time limitations. Stop motion animation is time consuming so animating a whole of people during those original episodes would take longer to animate and produce. When watching Curse of the were-rabbit there's definitely a big difference from the original show to the movie. With the movie, they have a higher budget and show a lot more with their world. However looking back at the show, they show more with so little. They show more of the environment in a grander scale than the movie did.

  • @khalidmonzur5333
    @khalidmonzur5333 Před rokem +4

    1:53 The pie machine was one of the best bits when I was a kid.

  • @user-gw3bs2in5i
    @user-gw3bs2in5i Před 2 lety +38

    Wasn't there a weird live action Wallace and Gromit short that was put on tv? Wallace may already look a bit odd, but this short goes strait into uncanny valley. As for the official stuff, I've definitely questioned where everyone else is. In The Wrong Troulsers, there's a bit where we hear Wallace bump into somebody and say "sorry," and I just wondered who it was. It never really disturbed me, but I definitely felt off. That's not even mentioning Feathers McGraw, Preston the cyber dog and how the main villain in A Matter of Loaf and Death is quite literally a psychopath. Like, it's goofy and fun, but there's definitely a side of me that feels slightly unnerved

    • @mrpay4444AYypIgEDLbwfZm4kjaQk
      @mrpay4444AYypIgEDLbwfZm4kjaQk Před 2 lety +1

      I have a video explaining it here czcams.com/video/y1JpylHsSto/video.html

    • @greenbanana1001
      @greenbanana1001 Před rokem +2

      I always loved Wallace and gromit as a kid but even I noticed straight away as a kid where is everyone.

  • @BNStudios1
    @BNStudios1 Před 2 lety +41

    Just watched this 3 times it was that good! It’s so rare that I find a video that confirms exactly the way I feel about something - I think I realised in the back of my mind that it was the lack of people that made me so unsettled by Wallace and Gromit growing up, but I was never able to put my finger on it until I saw your video!
    I just thought YES when you gave your punchline of ‘where is everyone’! Every analogy was spot on, especially the one about being in a city on New Years Day - I went for a drive around the financial area of London this New Years Day and got exactly the same feeling. I’m fascinated by liminal spaces too.
    Something else that affected me especially in A Grand Day Out was how sad and distant it felt - just this lonely, slightly angry, uncanny robot on its own thousands of miles away…so unsettling!
    I haven’t watched any Wallace and Gromit for at least 5 years as I know just how spooked it will make me for a while after - no one ever seems to understand why I find it so creepy though! I’ll just show them your video…
    Brilliant editing, commentary, and music too so well done!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +8

      Thanks for the lovely comment, man. It took me a long time to really put how I felt into words but I'm glad I did because the video clearly resonates with people. Cheers.

  • @ponderingpeach
    @ponderingpeach Před rokem +4

    So glad I found this video. I adore Wallace and Gromit as an adult, but as a child I was terrified, especially of characters like preston and feathers. They have an intensely quiet concentrated menace. The commentary on liminal spacing and eye movement for stop motion animation is spot on. I think as well there's not just sadness but deep melancholy in the shorts, plus the later films; wallace and gromit are brimming with beautiful ideas but are inherently lonely, almost shunned by others. Its definitely creepy. Maybe its that middle ground of a quintessentially british setting coupled with that loneliness (both very relateable) that makes it so creepy.

  • @givenfool6169
    @givenfool6169 Před 7 měsíci +2

    It's crazy to me that for some 20-23 years of my life, this show has somehow lingered as an unsettling terrifying memory. I always remembered the show as extremely scary to me. I even just tried to watch the first episode again and couldn't help but feel the uneasiness from my past well up despite knowing there's really nothing horrifying about it. If it was any other cartoon with the same plot I probably would have never felt that way. But yeah this show is just unsettling to me.

  • @RustyAymes
    @RustyAymes Před rokem +35

    I LOVED W&G when I was really young. Then aged 3 or 4 it suddenly freaked me out. Until about aged 9, if I saw a picture of them I’d have nightmares that night.
    Claymation can just be really creepy. I think it’s often used to create grotesque characters (that Babylon short) but there’s a bit like opposite of uncanny valley, because your brain knows they’re something real.
    The porridge hitting Wallace’s face was what changed everything for me and freaked me out for some weird reason.
    Also the frame rate has always been creepy to me. Lends itself to jerky movements and a feeling of panic or lack of control as the audience.

    • @tim68453
      @tim68453 Před rokem +2

      i feel the exact same way. What you said about seeing a picture of them, and having night sweats, I can relate to.

    • @meemdoggoriginallongdrink
      @meemdoggoriginallongdrink Před rokem +2

      I searched that porridge scene and now I understand why you were terrified.

    • @jennabernice
      @jennabernice Před rokem +1

      No same!!! I remember loving them when i was really little, then once so watched them again when i was maybe 8 or 9 and I couldn't ever again. Keep in mind that as a small child I thought that animated people were real and just looked different than people people. So maybe because I knew it was fake, it made it much scarier? Idk.

  • @chris-zilla2113
    @chris-zilla2113 Před 2 lety +110

    Glad I'm not the only one who found wallace and gromit really scary when I was a kid. Now that I think about it probably was just all the uncanny stuff that freaked me out. I used to have nightmares where their eyes blankly staring at me where very prevalent. I love watching the animations now though. Thanks for the video.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +5

      Sorry if I provoked another series of nightmares, haha. Cheers for watching.

    • @Jurassicparkatmospheres
      @Jurassicparkatmospheres Před 2 lety +2

      I have found my people

    • @user-gw1mr2cs3i
      @user-gw1mr2cs3i Před 8 měsíci

      It's so uncanny with Wallace always flapping his hands countless times

  • @ellaviolettta
    @ellaviolettta Před rokem +6

    I felt this way about The Snowman....it always freaked me out, especially the theme song. Wallace & Gromit was always spooky, especially "a grand day out", that basement was freeeeeaky, and the way the robot on the moon chases them? Nah, that's terrifying stuff

  • @Texicus_Reddicus
    @Texicus_Reddicus Před rokem +1

    Let's not forget the way the villains are allways completely silent

  • @MoreOre563
    @MoreOre563 Před rokem +31

    I always loved Wallace and Gromit growing up, staying at my nan's place and watching "A grand day out" on VHS was one of the best things to do as a kid. The only thing that ever scared me was the opening to Wear-Rabbit and any scene that had to do with Bake-O-Light girl.
    This video just made me relive those memories, and although I don't find them as scary now as an adult, there is some sort of uncanny feeling when showing them in a different light like this video.

  • @coolcatcartoons
    @coolcatcartoons Před 2 lety +19

    There was always that vibe that everything was very much held together by string and duct-tape. All those crazy machines and contraptions so whimsically composed in a light element juxtaposed by some quite dark colour pallets at times always created quite a stark and unsettling contrast, especially in the final act of A Close Shave. The jaunty camera-quality of the 80s/90s in the first two never helped either.

  • @kristiansd70
    @kristiansd70 Před rokem +6

    i absolutely loved wallace and gromit as a child but a part of me was always terrified of it. Like you said, I was never scared of the water rabbit film or even a matter of loaf and death, it was just the earlier ones like close shave, wrong trousers and a grand day out. i could never really put a finger on why but man they were so scary, still didn’t stop me watching them all the time though

  • @morecoffee2463
    @morecoffee2463 Před rokem +52

    I never thought Wallace and Gromit wasn’t supposed to be scary. I always thought they made it uncanny and creepy on purpose

    • @BrunoBluthgeld
      @BrunoBluthgeld Před 8 měsíci +2

      Is there a way of knowing for sure? Judging by the mature aardman productions, I'd say that's exactly what they did. As professionals, they had to estimate the kind of impression a given scene was going to cause.

  • @ShyGuyXXL
    @ShyGuyXXL Před rokem +6

    Maybe it's because I grew up in a small rural town, but it never bothered me that the streets were empty. They're empty where I live all the time.
    It's very common to walk down the street and not meet any person or see any cars for quite a while. Also, many outdoor scenes took place in the morning, so I just assumed everyone was still at home, having breakfast or whatever.

  • @celestialcat1171
    @celestialcat1171 Před 2 lety +18

    im so glad you made this video, i’ve always found this cartoon weirdly creepy and my family always laugh at me when i say i don’t want to watch it. as a child i turned on the tv to see the man (either wallace or gromit i dont know) stomping around his house in those robotic trousers and it creeped me out so much, i had dreams about it for days even though the actual concept of it isn’t ‘scary’, there was just something about it that seemed really uncanny and uneasy. you have put it into words perfectly why i got the uneasy feeling, maybe i will show this to my family and they will take my fears seriously 😂

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +1

      Hope I help them to see things your way. I never found Wallace and Gromit too scary to watch, but that Ident short is another story.

  • @sambarry6772
    @sambarry6772 Před rokem +4

    I thought I was the only one until I stumbled upon this video. Absolutely adore them but they used to scare me so much when I was younger but couldn’t put a finger on why. I think you’ve really captured it. Never noticed the liminal aspect before but that combined with the uncanny valley-ness of Wallace definitely unsettles

  • @AdamsAutoAlchemy
    @AdamsAutoAlchemy Před rokem +1

    Man, you just articulated so much stuff from my childhood, which I didn’t realise I needed to articulate

  • @frederickiiprussia7699
    @frederickiiprussia7699 Před 2 lety +18

    This man is giving a full review of claymation, including Wallace and Gromit, but I'm just here to listen to a genuine thick Scottish accent

  • @adamfleetwood3980
    @adamfleetwood3980 Před 2 lety +18

    So glad to see that someone else felt the same lingering dread as I always have watching W&G, theres just something slightly wrong and it haunted me as a kid. Earned yourself another sub!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks for subbing, hope there's something else on my channel you can enjoy too. I'm glad I finally managed to put it in terms other people can understand.

    • @adamfleetwood3980
      @adamfleetwood3980 Před 2 lety

      @@dennigalla ive watched basically all of your content dude, so far so good! Best of luck with the channel!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +1

      @@adamfleetwood3980 Cheers Adam, it means a lot. I'm glad to hear that because sometimes I worry that the like randomly changing subjects of my videos will mean people just watch the one video relevant to them and then leave, so I'm very glad you stuck around to check them all out. Cheers, more coming soon!

    • @adamfleetwood3980
      @adamfleetwood3980 Před 2 lety

      @@dennigalla ive had a lot of fun with your content so far! You should check out a game called The Forest, I really enjoy your vibe and would like to see some content on that, just a suggestion =)

  • @Commander_Raveth
    @Commander_Raveth Před rokem +2

    "Okay, I'm actually afraid of *_clay_* "

  • @fighterfunk8317
    @fighterfunk8317 Před rokem +6

    3:09 literlly england. ENGLAND MOMMENT LITERLLY ENGLAND

  • @lovedella6483
    @lovedella6483 Před rokem +41

    I actually grew up in a household where my granddad absolutely adores wallace and gromit, so i've never felt fear towards the show at all. We used to watch these movies all the time whenever they played them on the BBC, and we still do if we get the chance. It's really interesting to see other peoples thoughts on the franchise since a lot of people didn't have that sort of upbringing, but i an 100% understand why and how people feel this way. It's very interesting indeed!

  • @MauricioJara
    @MauricioJara Před rokem +13

    When I was little, I had a DVD which contained all the Wallace and Gromit films. I loved watching those films all the time. And would rewatch them over and over.
    But in the far corner of the back of my mind, little me found them unnerving at times to watch, especially with the thought that these towns are completely desolate and the claymation just adds a sort of uncanniness. But even then, I would still watch them.
    Revisiting these films give me a huge amount of nostalgia and joy, but there’s always that lingering feel in that back of my mind.

  • @serge4692
    @serge4692 Před rokem +3

    What song did you use in the background at around 1:40? Also great video, I remember watching Wallace and Grommit as a kid and hating how creepy it looked

    • @joshuarhodes5647
      @joshuarhodes5647 Před 3 měsíci

      I too am searching for this song. I just can't find it

  • @yannickleloux8096
    @yannickleloux8096 Před rokem

    Does anyone know the name of that dreamy song at 1:10? I've had it in my playlist but forgot the name of it

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před rokem +1

      It's "Aglow (Intro)" by Karamel Kel.

  • @thomasfield8543
    @thomasfield8543 Před rokem +12

    You're not the only one. This show was so terrifying to me as a kid. Especially the video game for the game cube. I couldn't stomach it

  • @mr.boombox5021
    @mr.boombox5021 Před 2 lety +46

    I got this same feeling from Mario 64 as a tiny child. The noise of trying to open a locked door followed by Bowser's laugh terrified me - it felt like I was being caught trying to go somewhere I wasn't supposed to. Also, you don't think about it much, but you DIE in games a lot. Mario 64 made me scared of that sudden loss of life, not just as a punishment for missing a jump, but that Mario would cease after simply stepping on lava, quicksand or water.
    Liminal spaces? Mario 64 is full of them. I had dreams where there would be a door I never had seen before in the castle, only to find another endless staircase with Bowser laughing all throughout it.

    • @ShyGuyXXL
      @ShyGuyXXL Před rokem +9

      It also doesn't help that the castle has really weird architecture to begin with.
      There's no furniture, no windows to look out of, every room just has portraits, the Toads fade out of existence when you're far enough away, the whole building seems to be non euclidean, and it just doesn't look like a place you could actually live in.
      I mean, there isn't even a throne room for the princess to sit inside, let alone a bedroom for her to sleep in. Even Super Mario RPG had those two rooms.

    • @m00nl1ghtj3w3l
      @m00nl1ghtj3w3l Před rokem +8

      I think part of the uneasiness of it is also because the game's story is literally you being alone. It's not just a "feeling", that's literally how it starts, Mario and his brothers are locked up in dark rooms, and Peach is God-knows-where.
      With that being said I'm glad I wasn't the only one who had dreams based on the game lol.

    • @ghhn4505
      @ghhn4505 Před rokem +3

      Mario 64 (DS for me) was honestly the King of Liminal Spaces in video games. You're not alone, a LOT of people found Mario 64 unnerving.

    • @rainpooper7088
      @rainpooper7088 Před rokem +2

      @ghhn
      64 DS at least had the mini game bunnies. I remember just hanging around these guys because everything else seemed so empty.

    • @CornishCreamtea07
      @CornishCreamtea07 Před rokem +1

      I generally find older games are better at horror than modern games. The lack of NPCs and emptiness of the worlds give it a very lonely feeling. And the early 3D models give off a more scary look.

  • @georgeosborn421
    @georgeosborn421 Před 10 měsíci +1

    80% of my nightmares to this day are wallace and gromit idk why

  • @AverageCloneEnjoyer
    @AverageCloneEnjoyer Před rokem +1

    I saw a comment here saying about how cheese was a substitute for cocaine and now I have "we've forgotten the needles gromit!" Stuck in my head.

  • @chlochlo742
    @chlochlo742 Před 2 lety +19

    You're an incredible writer pal, got your point across so clearly with great imagery. I agree with your point about the emptiness of the town and how were-rabbit having so many people made it lack a certain charm.
    Anyways this gives me an excuse to rewatch all the shorts and be scared shitless now :)

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +2

      Cheers man, glad I could give you a new way to look at them. Really appreciate the kind words.

  • @lif6737
    @lif6737 Před 2 lety +37

    Claymation is nightmare fuel. I certainly was traumatized that dream episode of Pingu as a young kid and that was a show geared at the most young. It’s no surprise they stopped airing that one soon after

    • @Mar-pe9kx
      @Mar-pe9kx Před 2 lety +6

      It really is! I still have a hard time watching movies like Coraline without feeling spine-chillingly queezy watching it. Don't even get me started on the scene with the dead girls' ghosts, freakin' terrifying!

    • @MediaLoverChris02
      @MediaLoverChris02 Před rokem +2

      @@Mar-pe9kx GOD WHY DID YOU REMIND ME OF THAT SCENE

    • @Jennigrace11
      @Jennigrace11 Před rokem +1

      Nightmare before Christmas is a movie I refuse to watch to this day LOL. Terrifying

    • @MediaLoverChris02
      @MediaLoverChris02 Před rokem

      @@Jennigrace11 Watch it it’s an absolute masterpiece

    • @Jennigrace11
      @Jennigrace11 Před rokem

      @@MediaLoverChris02 oh no I mean I’ve seen it but was traumatized 😭. It had a good storyline but I just can’t get over the creepiness of the claymation and the faces of the monsters. The lab professor scared me the most for some reason lol

  • @Dynoids
    @Dynoids Před rokem

    2:55 Thank you for this video. The whole time you were talking about the claymation just being scary I was thinking to myself that it never scared me as a kid, and that I always remembered being wierded out wondering where everyone was, why it was so quiet and lonely.

  • @MrBathLegit
    @MrBathLegit Před rokem +2

    3:03 can you imagine animating all those characters at one time, especially if most people wouldn't even care that the extras are there. This is why the struggle of animating lots of characters is saved for scenes like what we see and the Curse of The Ware Rabbit movie, where we require many towns folk and extras in one spot to drive the plot forward.

  • @DoomSprite236
    @DoomSprite236 Před 2 lety +11

    You nailed exactly what I felt about it watching as a kid, but I didn't necessarily think they were scary. I was very introverted and shy as a kid and I loved the feeling of those empty spaces and I felt comfort when I saw it in W&G. Perhaps other children were the same way and maybe that was a small part of the appeal as well?

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +2

      I wish I'd made it clearer in the video that I absolutely love these films. Even though everything Aardman made freaked me out a wee bit.

  • @Lawizardofnoz
    @Lawizardofnoz Před 2 lety +9

    I always felt this way when watching Wallace and gromit always felt like there was something very unsettling, like they were inside an empty void a somewhat of an experiment being watched and followed from the shadows and they were completely unaware of it, to them everything was normal and perfect.

  • @andyrharris
    @andyrharris Před rokem

    I've never seen it this way, but great video essay, love how you put it together.

  • @ToriKo_
    @ToriKo_ Před rokem +2

    Man there’s so much to say. I loved how u made this video. Loved how u talked about the people in the penthouse party. I think when I was a kid, my mind filled in the gaps for cartoons that didn’t have background characters, which added to the ambience, not took away from it. But now, whenever I watch any Netflix movie/show, which never has any extras, maybe for budget reasons, it looks so hollow and empty and fake. And it’s so lonely that I can’t watch a lot of Netflix stuff. It reminds me of this thought I had, that if they remade The Exorcist as a Netflix property, it would only contain the mum and daughter, and the two priests. But watch the original, it had thick overflowing crowds for no reason, scenes of a whole community of workers in the desert, just because. I miss when films were made like that

    • @Starkl3t
      @Starkl3t Před rokem

      Films are still made like that my man you just be watching shit movies

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ Před rokem

      @@Starkl3t what’s ur reccs?

  • @CalebHigginbotham
    @CalebHigginbotham Před 2 lety +26

    wow! I watched them as a kid. Sure I found them creepy in parts and I guess I never understood why but this makes a lot of sense. I just never consciously thought about it at all before. Crazy. I do remember being scared some. But they were always one of my favorites to watch.
    Shaun the Sheep is way less creepy in this aspect. In fact I was never creeped out by it and always laugh a lot when watching it.

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +4

      I haven't really watched much of Shaun's show but I'm sure it's up the the usual Aardman standard. Cheers for watching.

  • @cratertheunknown
    @cratertheunknown Před 2 lety +13

    i wouldve never thought anyone found wallace and gromit scary! i LOVED it as a kid, still do. i can see how, i mean, claymation has that eeriness to it. but i dont know how, i was a scaredy cat as a kid, but i loved it!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 2 lety +2

      I still love it, man.

    • @moonmeadow
      @moonmeadow Před rokem

      Same! Except for the penguin (I think), the oven in chicken run and the were rabbit movie I can’t remember being scared while watching, and I was scared very easily as a child

  • @brisgeek
    @brisgeek Před 9 měsíci +1

    Always used to wonder why there were no people in the streets of the Wallace & Gromit films. Even as an 11 year old I just assumed it was the budget constraints. Since visiting England and seeing how bustling even the country towns can be, I can see why this would be unsettling to the viewer.

  • @Paulysolo
    @Paulysolo Před 3 měsíci

    This is probably one of the strongest first videos by any CZcamsr I have ever seen. Short, hilarious and makes it's point very very well. Definitely indicitive of the rest of the channel content.

  • @xSolitari
    @xSolitari Před rokem +13

    i always had a wierd feeling in the back of my mind when i watched these as a kid... i alsways wondered why i would get creeped out by a childs film, but nlw i know what it is. thanks Dennis!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před rokem +1

      You're welcome man, cheers for watching.

  • @LiteWrites
    @LiteWrites Před 3 lety +52

    I used to live near a Welsh industrial estate and I FULLY get your sentiment here about the uncomfortable history of this thatcher stricken area of the country that feels hauntingly abandoned. It should feel welcoming, there's a history here that implied that it was but it's no longer there. Kind of reminds me of Rhyl or Blackpool in that they were popular resort/beaches that were left to decay as the abroad holiday rose in popularity. Great video!

    • @dennigalla
      @dennigalla  Před 3 lety +9

      Cheers. I've got family in Northern England so I've been around there a whole lot and that heritage is definitely still present. Wallace and Gromit doesn't exactly go into the socio-political, but little background details sort of cause you to fill in the blanks like this.

    • @loolfactorie
      @loolfactorie Před 2 lety

      Please stop saying "Thatcher-stricken", those towns were on the brink of collapse and were decaying anyway, there was no money there and the country was in crippling debt from WW2.

    • @anerrorhasoccurred8727
      @anerrorhasoccurred8727 Před rokem

      As someone who lives Norf’, it’s definitely a strange vibe that we _still_ encounter literally everywhere as well. Working class towns have a contrast between fairly busy populations and downright apocalyptic-looking areas. The factories are very creepy at night. I’d best describe the atmosphere as “cheerful depression” 😂💀

  • @Staralium
    @Staralium Před 7 měsíci

    I love this series it’s so iconic. I loved the stop motion vibe it gave off, the story telling was excellent and voice acting was incredible

  • @glooon4113
    @glooon4113 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This is something I hate and still hate about tv shows is when they don’t have the budget so they make a plain backround with nothing for miles and there just in the middle of nowhere