Bob Baker Movies
Puppeteer Bob Baker may not be as well known to the public as, say, Bill Baird, Gerry Anderson, or Jim Henson -- he never had a weekly television show. He has entertained audiences since the early '40s, however, and his movie and television work includes such highly regarded cult films as Edgar G. Ulmer's Bluebeard (1944), George Pal's renowned Puppetoons films of the 1940s, appearances in (and on) such '60s pop culture touchstones as the original Star Trek television series and Bewitched, and work with the Disney studio for decades. His theater and production company, Bob Baker's Marionettes, founded in 1963 by Baker and his partner, Alton Wood (1912-2001), has become one of the more renowned sources of puppet-based entertainment in the country, and has served as a training ground for artists who have gone on to work with George Lucas and other major producers and directors in the field of fantasy films. Baker's own interest in puppets started before the age of eight -- he was already a budding puppeteer before he was in his teens and worked with local companies in Los Angeles. While a student at Hollywood High, he also began designing and manufacturing marionettes that were sold in America and overseas. Baker gave his first professional performance for director/producer Mervyn LeRoy. At the age of 18, soon after graduating from Hollywood High, Baker went to work for producer/director George Pal on the latter's near-legendary Puppetoon shorts, which delighted audiences during the early and mid-'40s. Baker's talents also got him a showcase in one of the most beautifully played B-pictures of the decade -- in 1944, he was engaged by director Edgar G. Ulmer and the art department at Producers Releasing Corporation to design and, in association with another puppeteer, perform the puppet show attributed to John Carradine's mad Gaston in the film Bluebeard (1944). Meanwhile, he advanced quickly through the ranks of Pal's organization, moving from apprentice to head animator on the Puppetoons in barely a year. Baker was employed by several movie studios (including the Disney organization) after WWII as an advisor in the art of animation. In 1949, he met his older contemporary, Alton Wood, a musician who switched his field to puppetry -- the two formed Bob Baker Productions, with Wood serving as the chief performer as well as business manager and Baker doing the designing and manufacturing.
They played county fairs and art festivals and, beginning with the B-thriller Hunt the Man Down (1950) at RKO, their work also moved them into feature films, 400 at last count, including Disney's Bedknobs and Broomsticks and the Elvis Presley feature G.I. Blues. Almost as soon as television became a viable medium, they moved onto the small screen, in commercials, series, and variety shows, including The Hollywood Palace and The Dinah Shore Show. Baker's puppet of a one-eyed, tentacled sea monster graced Roger Corman's first film as a producer, Monster From the Ocean Floor (1954), and was just convincing enough to make the ultra-low-budget movie a success. He also provided the giant bat-rat-spider that moved so eerily and hauntingly through Ib Melchior's The Angry Red Planet (1959); and it was Baker manipulating Beauregard, the highly animated plant spooked by the "salt-vampire" in the first Star Trek episode ever broadcast, "The Man Trap." His work was featured in "Night of the Puppeteer," an episode of The Wild Wild West TV series; and Baker made an on-camera appearance as a puppeteer in the 1971 Bewitched episode "TV or Not TV." Bob Baker's Marionettes, which Baker founded with Wood in 1963, is the oldest children's theater company in Los Angeles, and has been a training ground for such renowned younger special effects and puppetry experts as Trey Stokes. Baker continues to work with film organizations, including Disney; he has designed a line of collectable marionettes that are still sold by Disney, and he was also responsible for the marionettes in the movie Geppetto (2000), starring Drew Carey. In 2000, he was interviewed on camera for the DVD release of Ulmer's Bluebeard, and provided color home movies that he had taken at the time, of the shoot and the cast and set, and, of course, his puppets. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

- 2008
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- Add Wallace & Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death to Queue
Add Wallace & Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death to top of Queue
In this outing from Aardman Animation, Wallace has converted his home into a granary complete with a fully functional, old fashioned windmill (patent pending) on the roof, and as a result "Top Bun" has become one of the hottest bakeries in town. But all is not well in the neighborhood, because more than a dozen local bakers have gone missing in the last few months alone. Now, as Wallace falls head over heels for former Bake-O-Lite bread girl Piella Bakewell (voice of Coronation Street star Sally Lindsay), Gromit attempts to solve the case of the missing bakers before his hapless master becomes the latest dough-roller to vanish without a trace. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2008
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Trouble At Mil is the first thirty-minute short featuring the beloved characters Wallace and Gromit since their first feature-length film. Nick Park, who has won numerous Oscar for previous Wallace and Gromit films, returns as the director once again. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Peter Sallis

- 1995
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The third film to feature the claymation adventures of Wallace and Gromit, A Close Shave finds the inventor and his dog with a new business, new friends, and a new adversary. As the story begins, the team has decided to open a window-washing service, with Wallace providing clever gadgets while Gromit does the real work. Yet Wallace continues inventing in his spare time and has recently built a new device, the Knit-O-Matic, to clean and shear sheep -- which comes in quite handy when a lost lamb takes refuge in their home. Wallace and Gromit soon discover that this lamb has escaped from a pair of evil sheep rustlers who want him back. The mastermind of the rustling scheme turns out to be Preston, a dog belonging to local wool-shop proprietor Wendolene Ramsbottom; complicating things further is the fact Wendolene is also the object of Wallace's romantic affections. When Preston frames Gromit as the rustler and plots to steal the Knit-O-Matic, the pair must find a way to save the sheep and themselves. Director Nick Park once again mixes inventive animation with deviously clever plotting and whimsical humor, a combination that won him his third "Best Animated Short" Oscar. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Peter Sallis

- 1993
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The second short film to feature the claymation antics of eccentric inventor Wallace and his dog Gromit, The Wrong Trousers sees the duo become unwitting accomplices to a jewel theft. The trouble begins when, struggling to make ends meet, Wallace decides to take in a boarder - a mysterious penguin. At first, Wallace and his new tenant get along famously; indeed, the penguin forces Gromit out of his room and into the doghouse, literally. However, the bird is not what he seems: Gromit discovers that the penguin is actually the infamous burglar Feathers McGraw. Feathers has his eye on Wallace's most recent invention -- a pair of mechanical trousers that can be programmed to automatically walk on their own -- believing the device will help him steal a world-famous diamond at the local museum. When Feathers traps Wallace inside the trousers, Gromit must find a way to stop the malicious penguin and save his friend. This Oscar-winner for "Best Animated Short" works both as a hilarious parody of film noir and as an exciting, action-packed adventure in its own right, combining skillful visual design and superb animation with inventive, witty storytelling. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Peter Sallis

- 2005
- G
- Add Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit to Queue
Add Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit to top of Queue
Eccentric inventor Wallace (voice of Peter Sallis) and his faithful if often perplexed dog Gromit are back in their first feature-length adventure from animator Nick Park. Wallace and Gromit have launched a new business venture just in time for a major gardening competition in their neighborhood of West Wallaby. "Anti-Pesto" is a humane pest-relocation service in which Wallace and Gromit capture rabbits and other critters who have been eating the produce from local gardens and give them new homes somewhere else. Business has been going well, and when the woman hosting the garden show, Lady Tottington (voice of Helena Bonham Carter), discovers a massive tribe of rabbits has been making a mess of her garden, she calls in Wallace and Gromit to move the bunnies elsewhere. Wallace is quite taken with Lady Tottington, but he's not the only one -- Victor Quartermaine (voice of Ralph Fiennes) is a slick but arrogant upper-class type who wants to win Lady Tottington's hand (and fortune) and is convinced he can do a better job capturing the rabbits than Wallace. However, Wallace's attempts to brainwash the rabbits away from veggies using his latest invention has disastrous results, and soon Wallace has to deal with a beastly bunny as well as a heavily-armed Quartermaine. Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit followed Park's previous film with the duo, A Close Shave, by ten years, and was produced after Park broke through to mainstream success with the feature Chicken Run. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Peter Sallis, Ralph Fiennes, (more)