Away | Flushed

And what a villain he is. The Toad is a masterclass in animated antagonists. Once the celebrity mascot of a children’s amusement park ("Frogland"), he was replaced by a pop-singing frog boy band, leaving him bitter, vengeant, and obsessed with French culture (despite a hatred of the French). His master plan is delightfully absurd: freeze Ratropolis with a giant icicle cannon and flood it with his army of hench-rats, led by his hapless cousins Spike and Whitey (Andy Serkis and Bill Nighy).

While Flushed Away is a DreamWorks picture, it was co-produced by Aardman Animations, the British stop-motion legends behind Chicken Run and Wallace & Gromit . The film’s visual DNA is pure Aardman. Although the characters are rendered in CGI (a necessity due to the watery environments that would have melted physical clay), the animators preserved the signature textures, rubbery movements, and expressive, slightly wonky teeth of their clay creations. Flushed Away

In an era where animated films increasingly rely on pop-culture shortcuts and manic energy, Flushed Away feels refreshingly original. It has slapstick for kids, wordplay for adults, and genuine pathos for anyone who has ever felt out of their depth. And what a villain he is