<P> Wallace, as the were - rabbit, creates chaos at the fair . Victor grabs the Golden Carrot trophy to use as ammunition . Wallace carries Lady Tottington atop Tottington Hall, where she discovers Wallace's connection to the were - rabbit . Victor gives chase, revealing that he only wants to impress Lady Tottington for her money . When Gromit arrives, Victor's dog Philip engages him in a dogfight in aeroplanes taken from a fairground attraction . Gromit sends Philip's plane to the ground, then steers his plane into Victor's line of fire as Victor fires at Wallace . Wallace jumps, grabs Gromit and sacrifices himself to cushion their fall into a cheese tent . </P> <P> Victor gloats about his victory, but Lady Tottington hits him with her giant carrot and he falls into the tent too . Gromit quickly disguises Victor as the were - rabbit and the mob of townspeople chase him away . Wallace transforms back to his human self and appears dead, but Gromit uses some Stinking Bishop cheese to bring him around . Lady Tottington awards Gromit the Golden Carrot and converts the grounds of Tottington Hall into a habitat for Hutch and the other rabbits . </P> <Ul> <Li> Peter Sallis as Wallace, an eccentric and absent - minded inventor with a great fondness for cheese, who runs Anti-Pesto with his dog, Gromit . <Ul> <Li> Sallis also provides the voice of Hutch, a captive rabbit who gradually becomes Wallace - like after an attempted mind - alteration goes awry and who serves as the initial suspected Were - Rabbit . Sallis's voice was digitally accelerated to create that of Hutch's . <Ul> <Li> Gromit is Wallace's silent, brave and highly intelligent dog, who saves his master whenever something goes wrong . </Li> </Ul> </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Ralph Fiennes as Lord Victor Quartermaine, a cruel upper class bounder and a prideful hunter . He wears a toupee and despises Anti-Pesto . His surname is similar to Allan Quatermain, the British novelist H. Rider Haggard's big - game hunter character . <Ul> <Li> Philip is Victor's vicious but dimwitted hunting dog who resembles a Bull Terrier . </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Helena Bonham Carter as Lady Campanula "Totty" Tottington, a wealthy aristocratic spinster with a keen interest in vegetable horticulture and' fluffy' animals . For 517 years, the Tottington family has hosted an annual vegetable competition on their estate . Lady Tottington asks Wallace to call her "Totty" (which is a British term for attractive women) and develops a romantic interest in him . Her forename, Campanula, is the scientific name of a bellflower, and her surname is taken from the Lancashire village of Tottington . </Li> <Li> Peter Kay as Police Constable Albert Mackintosh, the local village policeman who judges the Giant Vegetable Contest . </Li> <Li> Nicholas Smith as Reverend Clement Hedges, the local vicar and the first resident to witness the Were - Rabbit . </Li> <Li> Dicken Ashworth and Liz Smith as Mr. and Mrs. Mulch, vegetable contestants and clients of Wallace and Gromit's Anti-Pesto . </Li> <Li> Edward Kelsey as Mr. Growbag, an elderly resident of Wallace and Gromit's neighbourhood and a founding member of the town's veg grower's council . </Li> <Li> Geraldine McEwan as Miss Thripp, an Anti-Pesto customer . McEwan reprised her role in A Matter of Loaf and Death . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Peter Sallis as Wallace, an eccentric and absent - minded inventor with a great fondness for cheese, who runs Anti-Pesto with his dog, Gromit . <Ul> <Li> Sallis also provides the voice of Hutch, a captive rabbit who gradually becomes Wallace - like after an attempted mind - alteration goes awry and who serves as the initial suspected Were - Rabbit . Sallis's voice was digitally accelerated to create that of Hutch's . <Ul> <Li> Gromit is Wallace's silent, brave and highly intelligent dog, who saves his master whenever something goes wrong . </Li> </Ul> </Li> </Ul> </Li>

Wallace and gromit the curse of the were rabbit characters
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