• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 6, Saturday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment

At First, I Could Hardly Believe That This Bizarre New Movie Existed. Now I’m So Glad It Does.

Story Center by Story Center
May 7, 2026
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
Yahoo entertainment home

RELATED POSTS

Judge tosses Kennedy Center suit against musician who canceled Christmas Eve show

Assessing Caesars Entertainment (CZR) Valuation As Digital Growth Supports A 12.4% Undervaluation Estimate

“Buffy” star Alyson Hannigan mourns the death of Anthony Head: ‘This cut is so deep I fear it can never heal’

About a month ago, a friend sent me the poster for The Sheep Detectives and asked, “Are we sure this is a real movie?” The image, to be fair, does look like something an A.I. might spit out on a particularly lazy day, a chaotic grouping of midlevel movie stars arrayed in a grassy meadow with the grace of a stack of cardboard standees, surrounded by a motley flock of clearly digitized sheep. But having sat through all 109 minutes, I can verify that not only is The Sheep Detectives real; it’s spectacular.

OK, perhaps that’s taking it a bit far. (I can’t resist the pull of a Seinfeld reference.) But the movie, directed by Kyle Balda and adapted by Craig Mazin from Leonie Swann’s novel Three Bags Full, is endlessly charming and pleasingly clever, as well as surprisingly moving in spots. And, oh yes, it’s about death.

The sheep, who do indeed turn out to be detectives, know what humans think of them: Thanks to their long-standing relationship with the kindly shepherd George (Hugh Jackman), they understand English perfectly, certainly well enough to know that when a person is compared to a sheep, it’s never a compliment. But though they’re as timid as anyone might be whose life has been confined to a few square miles of turf, they’re not simply mindless followers. The movie’s strangest conceit isn’t that the sheep understand English, or even that they’ve so internalized the tropes of the mystery novels that George reads them every night that they can use them to solve a real-life crime. It’s that the flock has the power to wipe their own memories clean, to willfully and seamlessly forget anything unpleasant that might cross their path. It’s not that they don’t understand the world; it’s that they’ve decided it’s best not to.

In the sheep’s scrubbed-clean minds, no one ever dies; they just turn into clouds, as a glance at the fluffy white sky will instantly confirm. So it’s a shock on multiple levels when George suddenly turns up dead—not least to the audience, who’ve been up to that point watching a nice little movie about a handsomely rugged loner and his woolly little pals. It’s a bloodless death, and not just because the murder weapon turns out to be poison. This is, at least nominally, a movie for children, as Balda’s history as the director of several installments in the Despicable Me franchise might make you think. But it’s one seasoned with a dash of adult wisdom, easing its naive protagonists into the understanding that the world is a rougher and meaner place than they’ve been led to expect, and that greed and treachery aren’t only things you read about in books.

George’s favorite sheep are Lily (voiced by Julia Louis-Dreyfus), a boundlessly chipper, russet-haired ewe, and Sebastian (Bryan Cranston), a gruff, forbidding ram. While the residents of the picturesque village of Denbrook, including police officer Nicholas Braun and innkeeper Hong Chau, are compelled to affect some variety of English accent, the sheep are blessedly free to speak in their native dialects—since they are, of course, not speaking at all. Patrick Stewart, as a wise old sheep called Sir Ritchfield, gets to keep his sonorous Royal Shakespeare Company purr, just as Rhys Darby’s brassy New Zealand bleat underlines the anxiety of the perpetually confused Wool-Eyes. But the movie wisely concludes that simply because sheep share a meadow doesn’t mean they all need to speak the same way, especially if it’s making the point that they’re not as alike as shortsighted humans tend to think.

Instead, it’s the humans who blur together. Led by Lily, who has always been the best at guessing the murderer in George’s “nighttime stories,” the sheep try to sort their suspects into familiar categories. Could it have been the neighboring shepherd (Tosin Cole), looking to get his hands on George’s land and his flock? What about the butcher (Conleth Hill), who cast a disapproving eye on George’s decision to raise sheep only for their wool, and a positively scornful one on the fact that George was a vegetarian? Or the long-lost daughter (Molly Gordon), who turns up just as George’s will is about to be read? (As one mystery-novel-informed sheep observes, “There’s always a will.”) Or even the lawyer (Emma Thompson) in charge of reading it? In an ideal mystery, the killer could be any of them. But that’s also true of a lackluster mystery, in which none of the suspects are drawn sharply enough to make either guilt or innocence seem like a stretch. Some actors, like Thompson, burst onto the screen with such ferocity that their characters are established in a matter of seconds; others are allowed to linger around in the background without making much of an impression at all. (The distinguishing feature of Cole’s shepherd is that he’s fond of sweaters.) Perhaps they’re merely being given the sheep treatment, smooshed into one undifferentiated mass because they’re all vaguely the same shape. But the mystery would be more fun to solve if the potential killers didn’t have all the depth of Clue cards.

ADVERTISEMENT

Fortunately, the sheep are more engrossing than the crime they’re solving, because what they’re really trying to understand isn’t who killed George but what it means that he’s dead. We’re watching not a jaded detective who comes upon a bloody corpse and starts dispassionately scouring it for telltale clues, but characters who’ve willfully convinced themselves that no one ever ends up that way finally coming to an understanding that it’s better to reckon with heartbreaking truths than embrace a life of cozy ignorance. It’s a hard lesson wrapped in a soft warm blanket, one that cushions the blow and might even mop up the occasional tear.

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.yahoo.com ’

Tags: grassy meadowKyle Baldamystery novels
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Judge tosses Kennedy Center suit against musician who canceled Christmas Eve show
Entertainment

Judge tosses Kennedy Center suit against musician who canceled Christmas Eve show

June 6, 2026
Richard Bowman
Entertainment

Assessing Caesars Entertainment (CZR) Valuation As Digital Growth Supports A 12.4% Undervaluation Estimate

June 6, 2026
Anthony Head and Alyson Hannigan on 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'Credit: 20th Century Fox Film Corp./Courtesy Everett
Entertainment

“Buffy” star Alyson Hannigan mourns the death of Anthony Head: ‘This cut is so deep I fear it can never heal’

June 6, 2026
Toby Keith's hometown Golf Classic charity event returns for its 22nd year
Entertainment

Toby Keith’s hometown Golf Classic charity event returns for its 22nd year

June 6, 2026
Netflix’s Top 10 Most Popular Shows Of All Time
Entertainment

Netflix’s Top 10 Most Popular Shows Of All Time

June 6, 2026
Caelon Colbert (from left) plays Benny, with Fernanda Posadas as Nina, Jacob Rivera as Usnavi and Gabriella Martinez as Vanessa in Actors Theatre of Little Rock’s production of “In the Heights.”

(Special to the Democrat-Gazette/Caroline M. Holt)
Entertainment

ENTERTAINMENT: ‘Heights’ onstage in SoMa; ‘Onegin’ moves to Ozarks | The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

June 6, 2026
Next Post
Pittsburgh summer music festivals 2026: What you need to know

Pittsburgh summer music festivals 2026: What you need to know

TV host Savannah Guthrie mysteriously disappears mid-show as search for mother Nancy continues

TV host Savannah Guthrie mysteriously disappears mid-show as search for mother Nancy continues

Recommended Stories

Top 20 OPM Love Songs With Lyrics 🎧 Trending Tagalog Music 2026 (Hot Hits On Spotify & Youtube)

Top 20 OPM Love Songs With Lyrics 🎧 Trending Tagalog Music 2026 (Hot Hits On Spotify & Youtube)

March 18, 2026
‘Gilmore Girls’ Stars Lauren Graham & Alexis Bledel Tease ‘ER’ Rivalry During Emmys Reunion

‘Gilmore Girls’ Stars Lauren Graham & Alexis Bledel Tease ‘ER’ Rivalry During Emmys Reunion

September 15, 2025
Yahoo entertainment home

Benny Blanco’s Comment on Selena Gomez’s Latest Post Is Everything

August 16, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Harriet Sperling marries Peter Phillips in the Cotswolds

Harriet Sperling marries Peter Phillips in the Cotswolds

June 6, 2026
Iddharu Pellalatho || Election పంచాయితీ ||  ఇద్దరు పెళ్ళాలతో | EP-10 | Gossip Gowtham | Tamada Media

Iddharu Pellalatho || Election పంచాయితీ || ఇద్దరు పెళ్ళాలతో | EP-10 | Gossip Gowtham | Tamada Media

June 6, 2026
Person in pink beachwear stands on a balcony at sunset.

Kylie Jenner Brings Her Bombshell Style to Turks and Caicos

June 6, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land