Cute and fluffy Shaun the Sheep 
with tush tag and regular tag.
Approximately 11" inch long 
measuring from front leg hoofs to hind hoofs 
stretched out. Long Legs!

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Shaun the Sheep

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shaun the Sheep
Shaun the Sheep.PNG
GenreAnimated children's comedy
Created byNick Park
Developed byRichard Goleszowski
Alison Snowden
David Fine
Directed byRichard Goleszowski
Christopher Sadler
Voices ofJohn Sparkes
Justin Fletcher
Kate Harbour
Richard Webber
Jo Allen
Theme music composerMark Thomas
Opening theme"Life's a Treat", performed byVic Reeves
Ending theme"Life's a Treat (Whistling, Instrumental Version)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Originallanguage(s)English
No. of series4
No. of episodes140 (List of episodes)
Production
Executiveproducer(s)

Miles Bullough
David Sproxton
Peter Lord
Nick Park

Michael Carrington
Producer(s)Julie Lockhart, Gareth Owen
Running time7 minutes
Productioncompany(s)Aardman Animations
BBC
Westdeutscher Rundfunk
Broadcast
Original channelCBBC
Picture format16:9 Widescreen PAL (576i)(2007)
16:9 HDTV (1080i(2009–10, 2013–)
Audio formatDolby Digital 5.1
Original run5 March 2007 – present
Chronology
Related showsA Close Shave
Timmy Time
External links
Website

Shaun the Sheep is a British stop-motion animated children's television series spin-off of the Wallace and Gromit franchise, starring the sheep character of the same name from A Close Shave. The show follows Shaun, now the leader of his flock, on madcap adventures around a small farm. It first aired in the UK on CBBC in March 2007 and has been broadcast in 180 countries around the world. It currently consists of 100 seven-minute episodes and is in its fourth series.

The show has also inspired its own spin-off, Timmy Time, which follows the adventures of Shaun's small cousin and is aimed at younger viewers. A feature film based on Shaun the Sheepis scheduled to be released in 2015.

Plot[edit]

The series revolves around the adventures of Shaun the unusually bright sheep, now living with his flock on a traditional rural British farm. In each episode, their latest attempt to add excitement to their mundane life as livestock somehow snowballs into a fantastic sitcom-style escapade, most often with the help of their fascination with human doings and devices. This usually brings them into conflict--and occasionally into partnership--with the grumpy sheepdog Bitzer, while simoultaneously trying to avoid discovery by the Farmer.

Production[edit]

The show was produced by Aardman Animations, and commissioned by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)[1] and Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR), a constituent member of the consortium of German public-broadcasting institutions, ARD. It has aired on CBBC in the UK from 2007 onward.

The show is entirely shot in Aardman's distinctive stop-motion animation style. The comedic tone is a combination of slapstick and classic silent comedy, similar to that used in theWallace & Gromit shorts. In this series there is no spoken dialogue at all, even from the human characters; simple grunts, bleats, sighs, mutterings and similar wordless inflections are all used to indicate each character's moods and motives.

Shaun the Sheep's first appearance was in Wallace & Gromit's third short feature, the Academy Award winning A Close Shave, as the youngest member of a flock of sheep Wallace and Gromit work to save from being turned into dog food. He was named Shaun as a pun on the word "shorn" after he was accidentally subjected to Wallace's automated sheep shearingmachine. This early version of Shaun shows a hint of his characteristic human-like bravado—among other things, wearing a sweater knitted from his own shorn wool—and he proves to be a major help in saving the day.

At the end of this short, Shaun and the entire flock are seen living with the duo; Shaun later made a brief cameo appearance in the "Shopper 13" episode of Wallace & Gromit's "Cracking Contraptions" web series. No official explanation has been given for the flock's later transfer to the farm.

Characters[edit]

Series director Richard Goleszowski at Canterbury's Anifest 2008 with models of a generic sheep, Bitzer, Timmy, and Shaun.

Major characters[edit]

  • Shaun is the protagonist of the series and, despite being the smallest of them all, the leader of the flock. He is a clever, confident sheep, prone to mischief but equally adept at getting himself and/or his friends out of it. He has a good friendship with Bitzer, though this does not stop him from playing pranks on him at times.
  • Bitzer is the farmer's loyal, long-suffering sheepdog, dressed for work in a blue knit cap, black collar, knitted wristlet and large official-looking wrist-watch, and walking upright or on all fours as needed. He takes his job very seriously, to the point of occasionally letting his power go to his head, but is generally a good friend to Shaun and does his best to keep the whole flock out of trouble.
  • Shirley is the largest member of the flock. A gentle giant, she is usually seen placidly eating, though she's intimidating enough to have defended Shaun from Pidsley the cat. She's so big that large objects routinely disappear into (or are deliberately hidden in) her fleece, and she quite often gets stuck herself, needing the other sheep to push, pull or even sling-shot her out of trouble. However, her size can also come in very handy when what's needed is a battering ram or similarly immovable object.
  • Timmy, Shaun's cousin, is the flock's only lamb, and thus often the innocent center of the chaos. He appears to be a toddler in this series, and is often seen sucking a pacifier. The spinoff series Timmy Time chronicles his later adventures in preschool.
  • Timmy's Mother, Shaun's aunt, wears curlers in her topknot and is a bit careless about maternal duties, even using Timmy once as a makeshift paint brush. But when her offspring goes astray, she is inconsolable until he is safely back in her care.
  • The Flock, like typical sheep, tend to follow Shaun and one another, are obedient to orders and generally form one big happy if sometimes fractious family group. Unlike Shaun, however, they are not particularly bright, which becomes a problem when combined with their ongoing fascination with the human world. It's usually Shaun and Bitzer who sort out the resulting mess.
  • The Farmer is a bespectacled, balding man (voiced by John Sparkes), who runs the farm with Bitzer at his side and acts as the flock's primary if unwitting nemesis. Their main concern is to ensure he remains completely oblivious to their unusual intelligence, a task made easier by his conventional, unobservant nature but complicated by his enthusiasm for picking up new hobbies. His disastrous attempts at dating are a running joke of the series.
  • The Naughty Pigs, whose pen is adjacent to the sheepfold, are bullies to Shaun and his flock, always trying to antagonise them and get them into trouble. They are, however, scared of Bitzer (though they still take the chance to bully him whenever possible), and they get told off by the Farmer in "Pig Trouble".
  • Pidsley is the Farmer's enormous yellow tabby cat, a minor character in series 1 and a major antagonist in series 2. He desires to be the sole recipient of the Farmer's attention, and thus is jealous of Bitzer. He also dislikes the sheep, thinking of them as stupid and beneath him.

Other recurring characters[edit]

  • Mower Mouth the Goat is an unstoppable eating machine. While not an unfriendly character, all his considerable energy is focused on his next meal. He appears in an episode named after him, and also on "Saturday Night Shaun". He also routinely causes trouble for Shaun and the flock, as in "Shaun the Farmer".
  • The Aliens appear in "Shaun Encounters", "The Visitor" and "Cat Got Your Brain" They are green and have one large eye on the top of the head. Despite their clearly advanced scientific technology--which frequently causes trouble for the farm animals--they exhibit human-like behaviour and generally jovial personalities.
  • The Bull is belligerent, powerful, and easily provoked by Shaun’s antics and the colour red. He appears in "The Bull", "Saturday Night Shaun", "Who's the Mummy?" and "Heavy Metal Shaun".
  • The Ducks make frequent appearances. In the first series, a single duck suffers collateral damage due to Shaun’s exploits in "Off the Baa!", "Tidy Up", and "Bath Time". Sometimes he is seen with his lady friends. In series two there are two main ducks; in series three, they have once again been replaced with a single, pure white duck.
  • The Granny is a short-tempered, short-sighted old lady, appearing in "Takeaway" and "Save the Tree". She also appears in "Two's Company", holding a cart and "The Big Chase", forcing the pigs to give her a lift in their car. She is renowned for hitting people (or animals) with her handbag when they annoy her.
  • The Pizza Delivery Boy is a young man who rides a moped (which Bitzer often "borrows" to chase after the sheep) and works in the local pizzeria. He also moonlights as a postman in "Saturday Night Shaun".
  • The Farmer's Girlfriend appears for the first time in Series 2. She appears to be adventurous and an animal lover, patting Bitzer and Shaun and offering food to Timmy.

Episodes[edit]

The first two series consisted of 40 seven-minute episodes each, and the third 20 episodes. The fourth series debuted on 3 February 2014.[2] A series of 15 1-minute 3D shorts were released on Nintendo's Video service for the Nintendo 3DS between March and June 2012.[3] Another series of 21 1-minute sports-themed shorts, named Championsheeps, aired on CBBC during the Summer of 2012.[4]

SeriesEpisodesOriginally aired
Series premiereSeries finale
1405 March 200714 September 2007
24023 November 200917 December 2010
32025 February 201321 March 2013
4403 February 2014

References to popular culture[edit]

As with the series' parent show Wallace and Gromit, there are many allusions to other aspects of popular culture. These include:

  • Shirley's training in the episode "Shape Up with Shaun" is based on the film Rocky.
  • The paintings parodied in "Still Life" include the Mona Lisa and Constable's The Hay Wain.
  • In "Buzz Off Bees", the Farmer appears in his hooded beekeepers outfit, with accompanying Darth Vader-style heavy breathing.
  • The infamous shower scene from Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho is spoofed in the episode "The Little Sheep of Horrors", whose name is itself based on the film and play The Little Shop of Horrors.
  • In "Hiccups", Shaun turns his guitar amplifier up to 11 in a reference to a scene in This Is Spinal Tap.
  • In "Fleeced", the sheep break out and accompanying music is very reminiscent of British World War II prisoner of war films (e.g., The Great Escape)
  • In "The Visitor", the alien thrashes his car with a tree branch à la Basil Fawlty.
  • In "Mountains out of Molehills" a sheep is reading a magazine called "Bleat", a spoof of celebrity gossip magazine "Heat". In the same episode, Shaun tries to catch a mole with a fishing rod and line. When the first "bite" is shown, the first two notes of the Jaws theme are played.
  • Near the end of "Off the Baa", the "Nessun Dorma" theme from Puccini's opera Turandot is used, which was the musical theme of the 1990 FIFA World Cup.
  • At the end of "Mower Mouth" the shrubs are clearly reminiscent of those in Edward Scissorhands.
  • In "Saturday Night Shaun" Shaun rips off his coat and tosses it away as he is dancing, only to have tossed back. This is reminiscent of the scene in the 1980 movie Airplane!, where Robert Hays tosses his white sport-coat away, only to have it tossed back in his face.
  • in "Party Animals", one of the sheep is dressed as a crude version of a Dalek trying to get up some stairs but failing because of the suit.
  • in "Zebra Ducks of the Serengeti", the Farmer's signpost over the gate falls over Bitzer - à la Buster Keaton in Steamboat Bill Jr.
  • in "An Ill Wind", when the power supply to the farmhouse blows up, the Farmer grabs an axe and chops his wind turbine in a similar fashion to The Shining

Reception[edit]

Reviews of the series were consistently positive. Harry Venning of "The Stage" found "characterisation charming and the animation superb. All this before even a mention of how funny and splendidly slapstick the script is."[5] The Guardian noted that the series "hits the four-to-seven-year-old age group smack in the eye."[6] Charles Arthur wrote "classic Aardman style th