A loving mom, Paulette, who feels guilty after unfairly punishing her daughter Linda and would do anything to make it up to her. She sets off to make a chicken with peppers, even though she ... Read allA loving mom, Paulette, who feels guilty after unfairly punishing her daughter Linda and would do anything to make it up to her. She sets off to make a chicken with peppers, even though she doesn't know how to cook.A loving mom, Paulette, who feels guilty after unfairly punishing her daughter Linda and would do anything to make it up to her. She sets off to make a chicken with peppers, even though she doesn't know how to cook.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 8 nominations
Mélinée Leclerc
- Linda
- (voice)
Clotilde Hesme
- Paulette
- (voice)
Laetitia Dosch
- Astrid
- (voice)
Patrick Pineau
- Jean-Michel
- (voice)
Claudine Acs
- Mémé
- (voice)
Jean-Marie Fonbonne
- Le chef
- (voice)
Antoine Momey
- Kevin
- (voice)
Pietro Sermonti
- Giulio
- (voice)
Scarlett Cholleton
- Annette
- (voice)
Alenza Dus
- Carmen
- (voice)
Anaïs Weller
- Afia
- (voice)
Milan Cerisier
- Fidel
- (voice)
Nahil Mostefa
- Castor
- (voice)
Anna Parent
- Pablo
- (voice)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt the 41:14 mark, Jean-Michel (voiced by Patrick Pineau), a potential love interest for Paulette (voiced by Clotilde Hesme), quotes from Les Amours, a 16th century collection of verse about an unattainable love, Cassandre, by the poet Ronsard: "I wish I could die for this blonde hair, For the swell of your most chaste breast, For the strictness of this sweet hand".
Featured review
Adamant animal advocates (especially for a certain eponymous poultry), vegans, and vegetarians need not apply. Everyone else, prepare to be stunned by what a simple story and simple animation can create!
This is my second feature film from these directors (after the most excellent The Girl Without Hands), and I am officially Team Laudenbach & Malta! Their unique animation style sounds like it would be limited or subpar, but it looks so seamless, smooth, and therefore spectacular! Especially love their use of colors; each character has their own color, families share the same general color, extended family like to be close in color. Their masterful use of angles and lines, lighting and shading is simply ingenuous. Take, for example, when the lights go out. In a blink, the colors appear to be inverted, the black now filling the space where color used to fill the frame. This is what it is like in real life, of course, but to see if in this carefully hand drawn animation bright to life is simply amazing. Something one needs to see to understand, because my description and any textbook definition of their animation sounds like it would be pretty limited or second best to animation from technologically advanced tools and bigger studios with richer budgets. But that would be selling their talents short.
A real pleasure to watch. The story is at turns heartfelt and poignant, but somehow manages to be humorous throughout the short runtime. Ostensibly a story about a mother and daughter doing their best to heal and love each other after the loss of their husband and father respectively, it becomes so much more with the additional characters, creative side stories, engaging plot twists, and playful musical numbers- even accompanied by one quite magical candy dream sequence! This is a perfect example of a film that tries to do so much at one time; under any other less capable guidance, would easily turn into a chaotic mess- but with three impressive animators and storytellers, it inexplicably works and comes together beautifully.
The only explanation I have for this masterpiece not having more acclaim is that, understandably, animal lovers, vegans, and vegetarians are not the target audience and would likely be appalled by the unabashed determination to kill the chicken, even if it is for a good cause for a young girl trying to remember her late father.
The big studios better watch out. Because Laudenbach & Malta have undeniably shown audiences that big money isn't necessary to make a superior work of art.
This is my second feature film from these directors (after the most excellent The Girl Without Hands), and I am officially Team Laudenbach & Malta! Their unique animation style sounds like it would be limited or subpar, but it looks so seamless, smooth, and therefore spectacular! Especially love their use of colors; each character has their own color, families share the same general color, extended family like to be close in color. Their masterful use of angles and lines, lighting and shading is simply ingenuous. Take, for example, when the lights go out. In a blink, the colors appear to be inverted, the black now filling the space where color used to fill the frame. This is what it is like in real life, of course, but to see if in this carefully hand drawn animation bright to life is simply amazing. Something one needs to see to understand, because my description and any textbook definition of their animation sounds like it would be pretty limited or second best to animation from technologically advanced tools and bigger studios with richer budgets. But that would be selling their talents short.
A real pleasure to watch. The story is at turns heartfelt and poignant, but somehow manages to be humorous throughout the short runtime. Ostensibly a story about a mother and daughter doing their best to heal and love each other after the loss of their husband and father respectively, it becomes so much more with the additional characters, creative side stories, engaging plot twists, and playful musical numbers- even accompanied by one quite magical candy dream sequence! This is a perfect example of a film that tries to do so much at one time; under any other less capable guidance, would easily turn into a chaotic mess- but with three impressive animators and storytellers, it inexplicably works and comes together beautifully.
The only explanation I have for this masterpiece not having more acclaim is that, understandably, animal lovers, vegans, and vegetarians are not the target audience and would likely be appalled by the unabashed determination to kill the chicken, even if it is for a good cause for a young girl trying to remember her late father.
The big studios better watch out. Because Laudenbach & Malta have undeniably shown audiences that big money isn't necessary to make a superior work of art.
- ASuiGeneris
- Aug 8, 2024
- Permalink
- How long is Chicken for Linda!?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $21,500
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,329
- Apr 7, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $705,616
- Runtime1 hour 13 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content