I'm not sure if I would call Dreamworks' animated films as a group classics. They've all been produced within the past 10 years, and only a few have really become iconic or critics' darlings. Disney's animated features (as in the ones which both the company and fans call as a group "animated classics", excluding
The Wild 
) are a bit different. A lot of them are over twenty years old, and a good number of the newer ones (as in made within the last twenty years or so) are iconic and/or critics' darlings. Needless to say, here's my mini-reviews for the Dreamworks films that I've seen:
The Prince of Egypt: Wonderful. Along with
Spirited Away, this my favourite non-Disney/non-Pixar animated film (I don't consider Studio-Ghibli films Disney films, for the record).
10/10
Antz: I haven't seen this in ages, but it felt a bit too-new age and subsequently...a bit unsettling. I'll stick with the superior
A Bug's Life.
6/10
The Road to El Dorado: I only saw the last 20 minutes of this, but it looked okay, despite some awquard clashes with CGI and traditional animation. No rating here as I've not seen it all the way through.
Shrek: This is going to horrify some, but when this was released, this was my favourite film and along with
Chicago, the only film since the end of my first living decade that I saw more than once in a cinema. Over time, it's definetely lost the status as my favourite film, and I haven't seen it in a while, but even though it had lost the status as my favourite film the last time that I saw it, I still liked it very much, and I predict that if I saw it again, I'd like it.
8.5/10
Shrek 2: I loved this film in 2004, yet when I watched it again recently, and I wasn't that impressed, to tell the truth, feeling that it was more a cash-in than a follow-up. Whereas the first
Shrek was lots of twisted fun yet had a genuinely warm story, the sequel seems to elevate the twisted fun to the point where it sometimes gets too high and strings it together with a bit of a generic story. The humour here relies more on parodies of modern things than sendup on classic story conventions as opposed to the other way round (like the original). And whilst the Lord Farquad/Duloc subplot of the first film provided understandable satire on the sometimes daft nature of Disney management, a lot of the Disney digs in the sequel seemed pointless and cocky in nature, especially since most Disney films are better than this title. And the modern and medieval elements of life portrayed in Far Far Away don't blend properly. There is some good stuff in this film, on the whole, yet it just feels a bit half-baked. Oh, and I am so annoyed with the fact that Dreamworks iconicised Puss in Boots before Disney could. His original story would have made a great traditional Disney film (if retuned here and there, naturally)! I could imagine the tone of it being
Aladdin in 18th century Continental Europe.
5.5/10 (maybe 6)
Shark Tale:
Not a good film at all. I rented it and couldn't be bothered finishing it (even though there were only twenty minutes or so left). It makes
Shrek 2 look up there with
Snow White and
Pinocchio. Obnoxious characters, messy story. Stick with
Finding Nemo. Even if you're not a fan of Dory and pals, stick with
Finding Nemo.
4/10 (maybe 3.5)
The Madagascar Penguins in a Christmas Caper:
I haven't seen
Madagascar yet, but I saw this with
Wallace and Gromit. Delightful!
8.5/10
Over the Hedge
The best Dreamworks film since
The Prince of Egypt. It's not your run of the mill funny animal CG picture, mainly due to the much needed social commentary on the obnoxious lifestyle sometimes found in Western suburbian/middle class life.
9/10
As for Aardman's films (Dreamworks are the distributors here, but probably due to Aardman's iconic status over this side of the Atlantic, I'll never consider these films to be true Dreamworks films like some of you American people are), I really like them, despite the currently low film count. My ratings of the two films...
Chicken Run:
An unusual little flick, yet equally rather entertaining, suiting the medium perfectly.
9/10
Wallace and Gromit: Curse of the Ware-Rabbit:
This is very good, and generally deserved the best animated feature win at the Oscars (
Corpse Bride and
Howl's Moving Castle are great films, though, so it was a tough choice), but as someone who grew up with the original Wallace and Gromit featurettes, I felt that the film lacked a little bit. Still, only a little bit.
8/10