A Town Called Panic (film)

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FrenchPanique au village
Directed by
Written by
  • Stéphane Aubier
  • Guillaume Malandrin
  • Vincent Patar
  • Vincent Tavier
Based onA Town Called Panic
by Stéphane Aubier and Vincent Patar
A Town Called Panic
Belgian theatrical release poster
FrenchPanique au village
Directed by
Written by
  • Stéphane Aubier
  • Guillaume Malandrin
  • Vincent Patar
  • Vincent Tavier
Based onA Town Called Panic
by Stéphane Aubier and Vincent Patar
Produced by
  • Philippe Kauffmann
  • Vincent Tavier
Starring
CinematographyJan Vandenbussche
Edited byAnne-Laure Guégan
Music by
  • Dionysos
  • French Cowboy
Production
companies
  • La Parti Productions
  • Coproduction Office
  • Beast Animation
  • Gébéka Films
  • Les Films du Grognon
  • Made in Productions
  • Mélusine Productions
  • RTBF
Distributed by
  • Cinéart (Belgium)
  • Gébéka Films (France)
Release dates
  • 21 May 2009 (2009-05-21) (Cannes)
  • 17 June 2009 (2009-06-17) (Belgium)
  • 28 October 2009 (2009-10-28) (France)
Running time
76 minutes
Countries
  • Belgium
  • France
  • Luxembourg
LanguageFrench
Box office$505,699[1]

A Town Called Panic (French: Panique au village, lit.'Panic at the Village') is a 2009 stop-motion animated fantasy adventure comedy film directed by Stéphane Aubier and Vincent Patar from a screenplay co-written by Aubier, Patar, Guillaume Malandrin and Vincent Tavier. The film is based on the French-language Belgian animated series and stars the voices of Aubier, Jeanne Balibar, Nicolas Buysse, Véronique Dumont, Bruce Ellison, Fred Jannin, Bouli Lanners, Patar, Benoît Poelvoorde and David Ricci.[2]

The film premiered at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival and was the first stop-motion film to be screened at the festival.[3] The film was released theatrically in Belgium on 17 June 2009 by Cinéart and in France on 28 October 2009 by Gébéka Films. The film received generally positive reviews from film critics.

Friends Cowboy, Indian, and Horse live in a rural house together peacefully. Cowboy and Indian forget Horse's birthday, and come up with the idea of building him a brick barbecue. Not wanting Horse to find out they forgot, they get him out of the house by convincing their neighbor Steven to ask Horse to pick his animals up from the nearby music school. There, Horse meets his love interest, Mrs. Jacqueline Longray, a fellow horse who is also a music teacher. When he attempts to play piano for her, she offers to give him lessons.

Back at the house, Indian attempts to order the fifty bricks needed for the grill, but Cowboy accidentally orders fifty million. They get rid of the excess bricks by building them into a cube and putting them on top of the house, then build the grill. That night, the house collapses under the weight of the bricks. Irate, Horse makes Cowboy and Indian help rebuild the house. When they try to put up the walls, an unknown figure continues to steal them. When staking out the house to find the culprits, the trio discover the walls are being stolen by a family of aquatic creatures whose heads are shaped like cones. All but one of them escape with the wall. They chase the straggler, Gerard, off of a cliff, where they fall into the Earth's core. Gerard escapes.

Climbing out, they find themselves in the middle of a tundra. While wandering throughout, they are sucked into a giant penguin robot that is being used by incomprehensible, super-strong scientists to make and throw giant snowballs. They catch up with Gerard, but they are all subsequently captured and put to work by the scientists. While the scientists battle a rogue mammoth, the group escapes by setting a snowball to launch at the house and climbing into it. At the last second, Gerard sets it for his home under the sea.

Gerard swims off when the snowball lands and the three give chase, donning scuba masks (Cowboy simply puts a TV on his head) and swimming after him. They find an underwater version of their house, revealing Gerard and his family wanted the walls to build their own house. The creatures chase the trio off with a group of barracudas, but they come back and trick the creatures into a hole by Horse posing as Santa Claus. They use a sawfish to destroy their house and escape to the surface, but the creatures follow them and attack with swordfish. Steven, his wife, and his animals help fight back. In the process, Steven's house explodes with water and the countryside is flooded.

One year later, Gerard's family is an accepted part of the community, and Horse is now a skilled piano player and dating Longray, who throws a surprise birthday party for him in an underwater department store. Cowboy and Indian accidentally set off Horse's birthday present, a giant firework, causing a giant fireworks display that destroys the landscape as the credits roll.

Voice cast

  • Stéphane Aubier as Cowboy, Max Briquenet, Mr Ernotte
  • Jeanne Balibar as Madame Jacqueline Longrée (spelled "Longray" in some English subtitles)
  • Nicolas Buysse as Sheep, Jean-Paul
  • François De Brigode as Sportscaster
  • Véronique Dumont as Janine
  • Bruce Ellison as Indian
  • Christine Grulois as Cow, Student
  • Frédéric Jannin as Policeman, Gérard, Brick Delivery Man
  • Bouli Lanners as Postman, Simon, Cow
  • Christelle Mahy as Chicken
  • Éric Muller as Rocky Gaufres, Music Student 1
  • François Neyken as Pig
  • Vincent Patar as Horse, Mother Atlante
  • Pipou as Michel's laugh
  • Franco Piscopo as Bear
  • Benoît Poelvoorde as Steven
  • David Ricci as Donkey, Michel
  • Ben Tesseur as Scientist 1
  • Alexandre von Sivers as Scientist 2

Production

The film was made over the course of 260 days in a studio on the outskirts of Brussels. 1500 plastic toy figures were used during filming.[4]

Release

A Town Called Panic premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on 21 May 2009 and was released theatrically on 17 June 2009 in Belgium by Cinéart and on 28 October 2009 in France by Gébéka Films. It was also released on DVD on 20 July 2010 by Zeitgeist Video.[5]

Reception

References

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