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Babe

A little pig goes a long way.
1995 | 92m | English

(139519 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Babe is a little pig who doesn't quite know his place in the world. With a bunch of odd friends, like Ferdinand the duck who thinks he is a rooster and Fly the dog he calls mum, Babe realises that he has the makings to become the greatest sheep pig of all time, and Farmer Hoggett knows it. With the help of the sheep dogs, Babe learns that a pig can be anything that he wants to be.
Release Date: Jul 18, 1995
Director: Chris Noonan
Writer: Chris Noonan, George Miller, Dick King-Smith
Genres: Family, Comedy, Fantasy, Drama
Keywords alarm clock, cat, duck, sheep, pig, farm, affection, piglet, heroism, anthropomorphism, based on children's book, dog, separation, farmer, grandson, sheepdog, talking pig, christmas
Production Companies Universal Pictures, Kennedy Miller Productions
Box Office Revenue: $254,100,000
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 30, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Christine Cavanaugh Babe (voice)
Miriam Margolyes Fly (voice)
Danny Mann Ferdinand (voice)
Hugo Weaving Rex (voice)
Miriam Flynn Maa (voice)
James Cromwell Farmer Hoggett
Magda Szubanski Esme Hoggett
Russi Taylor Cat (voice)
Roscoe Lee Browne Narrator (voice)
Evelyn Krape Old Ewe (voice)
Michael Edward-Stevens Horse (voice)
Charles Bartlett Cow (voice)
Paul Livingston Rooster (voice)
Zoe Burton Daughter
Paul Goddard Son-in-Law
Wade Hayward Grandson
Brittany Byrnes Granddaughter
Mary Acres Valda
Janet Foye Country Woman
Pamela Hawken Country Woman
Karen Gough Country Woman
David Webb The Vet
Marshall Napier Chairman of Judges
Hec McMillan Lion's Club Man
Ken Gregory Lion's Club Man
Nicholas Lidstone Sheep Rustler
Trevor Read Electrical Linesman
Nicholas Blake Electrical Linesman
Matthew Long Sheepdog Trial Official
Mike Harris TV Commentator
Ross Bagley Puppy (voice)
Gemini Barnett Puppy (voice)
Rachel Davey Puppy (voice)
Debi Derryberry Puppy (voice)
Jazz Raycole Puppy (voice)
Courtland Mead Puppy (voice)
Kevin Jamal Woods Puppy (voice)
Jane Alden Sheep (voice)
Kimberly Bailey Sheep (voice)
Patrika Darbo Sheep (voice)
Michelle Davison Sheep (voice)
Julie Forsyth Sheep (voice)
Maeve Germaine Sheep (voice)
Rosanna Huffman Sheep (voice)
Carlyle King Sheep (voice)
Tina Lifford Sheep (voice)
Gennie Nevinson Sheep (voice)
Mary Linda Phillips Sheep (voice)
Paige Pollack Sheep (voice)
Kerry Walker Sheep (voice)
Barbara Harris Other Character Voices (voice)
Jacqueline Brennan Other Character Voices (voice)
Doug Burch Other Character Voices (voice)
John Erwin Other Character Voices (voice)
Doris Grau Other Character Voices (voice)
Tony Hughes Other Character Voices (voice)
Linda Janssen Other Character Voices (voice)
Daamen J. Krall Other Character Voices (voice)
Charlie MacLean Other Character Voices (voice)
Justin Monjo Other Character Voices (voice)
Antonia Murphy Other Character Voices (voice)
Helen O'Connor Other Character Voices (voice)
Neil Ross Other Character Voices (voice)
Scott Vernon Other Character Voices (voice)
Kay E. Kuter Man Sitting in Crowd at Sheep Trial (uncredited)
Karl Lewis Miller Man Buying 3 Pups (uncredited)
John Doyle TV Commentator
Name Job
Chris Noonan Director, Screenplay
George Miller Screenplay
Andrew Lesnie Director of Photography
Kate Dennis Script Supervisor
P.J. Voeten Second Unit First Assistant Director
Simon Whiteley Visual Effects Designer
Marcus D'Arcy Post Production Supervisor, Editor
Jay Friedkin Editor
Nigel Westlake Original Music Composer
Roger Ford Costume Designer, Production Design
Simon Warnock Second Assistant Director
Vanessa Brown Production Coordinator
Sue Wild Unit Production Manager
Philip Hearnshaw First Assistant Director
Steve Newman Camera Operator
Liz Mullinar Casting
Valerie McCaffrey Casting
Jane Maguire Post Production Coordinator
Julius Chan Sound Supervisor
Antony Gray Dialogue Editor
Libby Villa Dialogue Editor
Steve Burgess Foley Artist
Jerry Long Foley Artist
Gavin Myers Foley Editor
Robert Deschaine ADR Mixer
Dana Porter ADR Recordist
John Penders Sound Effects Editor
Andrew Plain Sound Effects Editor
Angus Robertson Sound Effects Editor
Lawrie Silvestrin Sound Effects Editor
Robin Morgan Key Grip
Gerry Nucifora Boom Operator
Carolyn Tyrer Makeup & Hair
Louise Wakefield Assistant Costume Designer
Kerrie Brown Set Decoration
Peter Pound Storyboard Artist
Jim Townley Still Photographer
Barry Peake Still Photographer
Colin Deane Focus Puller
Nick Watt Clapper Loader
Katrina Crook Focus Puller
Chris Hobbs Clapper Loader
Toby Copping Key Grip
Ken Arlidge Second Unit Director of Photography
Dick King-Smith Novel
Ben Osmo Sound Recordist
Colin Gibson Art Direction
Tex Kadonaga Modeling
Name Title
George Miller Producer
Doug Mitchell Producer
Bill Miller Producer
Philip Hearnshaw Associate Producer
Catherine Barber Associate Producer
Daphne Paris Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor James Cromwell Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 40 66 23
2024 5 43 71 27
2024 6 49 107 33
2024 7 50 70 30
2024 8 44 84 25
2024 9 25 37 19
2024 10 29 45 18
2024 11 28 37 19
2024 12 30 48 22
2025 1 31 51 21
2025 2 23 36 5
2025 3 8 31 2
2025 4 6 11 3
2025 5 5 11 4
2025 6 5 9 4
2025 7 4 5 3
2025 8 3 4 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 407 594
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 735 735
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 918 918
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 816 896
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 58 593
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 592 836
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 593 818

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Reviews

kdumers
1.0

Truly disgusting type of entertainment that inspires vegetarianism! It also has a scene too much to be in a children’s film that reflects on domestic violence (between two dogs). The producers who made this sort of junk were obviously nuts in the head to put such a scene like this into such family o ... riented film. Please do not watch after seeing this review. You do not especially want to get inspired by such propaganda about using certain animals as food.

Dec 07, 2022
FilipeManuelNeto
10.0

**Absolutely wonderful, and suitable for the whole family.** Usually, people look at this movie as just another movie for kids. This is not my opinion. It is true that it is a fantasy film, with animals that talk and have human postures and behavior. However, it was built and developed in a way t ... hat turns out to be very pleasing to adults as well. Perfect to be seen with the whole family, it is a regular presence on television, especially during Christmas. The script couldn't be more delicious: Babe is a baby piglet who, on his lucky day, was taken from the slaughterhouse where he would inevitably die (as happened to his parents and siblings). The little pig ends up in the hands of the owner of a sheep farm, who thought of fattening him up with the intention of killing him. However, and through a series of funny adventures, the little pig turns out to reveal a special talent for helping to herd the sheep, which will put the natural position of the animals and the reputation of the sheepdogs in the spotlight. Through this story, the film approaches, with humor and feeling, serious questions such as the meaning of life, death, the place of each one in the world, evil, reward and punishment. Making this film as an animation, traditional or computerized, would have been easy. However, the production made the film with real animals and used technology to perfect the material and file rough edges. At the time, the film received some harsh criticism for making strong insinuations about meat consumption (after all, we are not used to seeing our lunch speak to other animals about the nobility of the food purpose for which it was created), and the truth is that it seems that there were really people to stop eating meat because of this. If animals are the main protagonists of this film, where do humans come in? It's not the protagonism, I believe, that changes things a lot. The main human role in this film goes to James Cromwell, an extremely competent and talented actor who had no difficulty with his character, the owner of the farm where Babe will live, and who understands how special his piggy is. And despite speaking little, the way the actor communicates with his body and face is excellent. Magda Szubanski also does a good job, and it's interesting to see how the actress has aged so that she can play the character, which is a woman much older than the actress. Technically, the film is exquisite and achieves some feats worthy of mention. To begin with, the number of animals, trainers and handlers that were used in the film is extraordinary. The logistical effort alone must have been enormous, in order to guarantee not only continuity (they could not all be different animals) but the hygiene and health of the animals. The make-up department, with her work, not only aged Szubanski but she humanized some of the animals, which is no small feat. The film has excellent sets and props, recreating well the childhood imagination and the idyllic bucolic rural life, very different from the life of hard work in the countryside. But what delights and surprises us most is the extraordinary cinematography, with vibrant colors, high contrast and radiant beauty. Although I'm not particularly a fan of mice, they serve their purpose. As for the soundtrack, it is solidly based on pieces from the classical repertoire such as the waltz “The Blue Danube”, by Johann Strauss II, “Cantique de Jean Racine” from Gabriel Fauré's Requiem and, particularly, the adaptation of the most famous chords of the last movement. from Symphony No. 3 Op. 78 for Pipe Organ and Orchestra by Camille Saint-Saenz. It is a piece that seems to have been chosen at random, but that may be explained by the fact that the composer is also the author of the famous work “Carnival of the Animals”, which could very well be here.

Mar 13, 2023
Geronimo1967
7.0

Who doesn’t like a bit of Camille Saint-Saëns and his rousing third symphony to get a movie going? It’s the ideal start to this entertaining story that reminded me a little of the “Charlotte’s Web” tale of farmyard antics. It’s the runt of the litter who is destined for the farmer’s table - via a ra ... ffle - but “Hoggett” (James Cromwell) senses that “Pig” might be more useful out of the oven than in it! That might be because this young critter is an inherent friend-maker. He chats with the geese, the cattle, the horses and even “Ma” - the cranky ewe-in-chief. Indeed it’s that very skill that alerts the farmer to some rustlers and makes him realise that this could be the world’s first ever porcine flock-herder. With his wife (Magda Szubanski) soon to go on a Women’s Guild trip and the local sheepdog trials looming, perhaps it might be time to check in that rule book - even if your own (now rather jealous) dog “Rex” things you’ve gone barking mad. Now if you’re of a grumpy disposition, you will probably hate the rampant sentimentality on display here, but I’m not and I liked it. The fellow creatures that share his farm, yes - even the annoying mice, all work well together to extol the definite virtues of looking out for each other and for caring. With the bacon slicer never far away, there’s the merest hint of teatime menace now and again but in the main this is just a cheerfully celebratory story that sort of superimposes a pig into a role that can pretty much mean whatever you want it to in terms of animal, surrogate child, pet - you name it. It’s an engaging watch that marries the live acting with the animation creatively and it’s one of those creature features that can make you cringe a little, but it’s still a joyous and charming film that it’s hard not to like.

Apr 20, 2025