Wallace and his endlessly patient, endlessly clever dog Gromit return to the big screen in this collection of their classic claymation adventures. Nick Park's stop-motion creations have entertained generations with their gentle British humor, ingenious contraptions, and that particular brand of visual comedy that rewards close attention—watch for Gromit's expressive eyebrows doing more acting than most humans manage with full scripts. These shorts, handcrafted frame by frame with the kind of tactile charm that only claymation can deliver, hold up remarkably well against anything digital animation has produced since.
The Beverly Theater's intimate 150-seat main theater offers a fitting setting for this kind of screening, where the craftsmanship of each frame can actually be appreciated rather than lost on some massive multiplex screen. Whether you're introducing kids to Wallace and Gromit for the first time or revisiting them as a longtime fan of cheese-obsessed inventors and their unflappable canine sidekicks, the shorts move at a brisk, satisfying pace packed with visual gags and Rube Goldberg-style inventions that never really go out of style.