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Wolfwalkers follows the story of Robyn Goodfellowe, a young apprentice hunter who arrives in Ireland with her father during a time of superstition and magic to wipe out the last wolf pack. While exploring the forbidden lands outside the city walls, Robyn befriends a free-spirited girl, Mebh, a member of a mysterious tribe rumored to have the ...
Honor Kneafsey is a British actress, best known for her voice role as Robyn Goodfellowe in Wolfwalkers.. Kneafsey started her career as a child actress, featuring in such roles as June, the youngest child of historical figure George Mottershead, in the BBC1 drama Our Zoo (2014), [1] [2] and the young character Christine who works in, and later burns down, the eponymous The Bookshop (2017).
GKIDSGiven that Sunday’s Oscars ended on an Anthony Hopkins headshot and a genuinely shocking Chadwick Boseman snub, I won’t say that Wolfwalkers losing out on Best Animated Feature was the ...
Honor Kneafsey – Wolfwalkers as Robyn Goodfellowe (Apple / GKIDS) Maya Rudolph – The Willoughbys as Linda a.k.a. The Nanny (Netflix) Phillipa Soo – Over the Moon as Chang'e (Netflix) Octavia Spencer – Onward as "Corey" The Manticore (Disney+) Eva Whittaker – Wolfwalkers as Mebh Óg MacTíre (Apple / GKIDS)
The “wolfvision” sequence in Cartoon Saloon’s Oscar-nominated animated feature “Wolfwalkers” is perhaps one of the most striking animated moments this year. Set in 1650 Ireland, the film ...
Since releasing its debut film “The Secret of Kells” in 2009, Irish animation studio Cartoon Saloon has been proudly waving the flag of hand-drawn animation at a time when feature films have ...
Robyn Goodfellowe and her father Bill Goodfellowe, characters in the animated film Wolfwalkers; References This page was last ...
The etymology of puck was uncertain. [1] The modern English word is attested already in Old English as puca (with a diminutive form pucel).Similar words are attested later in Old Norse (púki, with related forms including Old Swedish puke, Icelandic púki, and Frisian puk) but also in the Celtic languages (Welsh pwca, Cornish bucca and Irish púca).