Would my daughter be better off without me? This is the question explored in Rosemary A.D. (After Dad), a short film by Ethan Barrett that was completely drawn with crayons, leading to 23 film festival awards.
Category: 2D Animation Spotlight (Page 11 of 224)
Directed by Samantha Moore.
Synopsis: Visible Mending reclaims the role knitting plays in many peoples’ lives; helping them face adversity, calm anxiety, and make crucial social connections. A group of knitted objects tell stories about how they have used knitting to mend themselves, even if the repair was temporary.
Update: The short film is temporarily offline, so here’s the trailer.
Crab Day, winner of a BAFTA, is directed by Ross Stringer, written by Aleksandra Sykulak and produced by Bartosz Stanislawek.
Synopsis: As part of a fishing community’s annual ritual, a young boy must kill his first crab in order to become a man and gain his father’s approval.
High school seniors Mayu and Camille live in a world where your body inflates when you experience a stressful situation, such as a school exam. Will Mayu succeed or be defeated by stress?
A short film by Audrey Azemar, Andréa Brimboeuf, Baptiste Brotier, Clément Malbec and Mathis Milla-Diaz, students at ECV Bordeaux.
Where is Anna? That’s what her roommates want to know after she goes missing the day after a drunken evening.
A short film by Elisa Dogneton, Emma Irigaray, Martin Darrigrand and Mathilde Zanello, students at ECV Bordeaux.
Atif, a 17-year-old boy, slowly loses himself during a monsoon.
A short film by Emilie Ahouanto, Enorah Le Dallic, Barberine Marzat, Alix Rignault and Lou Riviere, students at ECV Bordeaux.
Directed by Mauricio Rodríguez Pons and Almudena Toral.
Synopsis: The Night Doctrine traces the story of Lynzy Billing, a young British journalist of Afghan-Pakistani origins who returns to Afghanistan to find out who killed her family 30 years earlier, only to stumble upon a secretive U.S.-backed program killing hundreds of civilians.
Written and directed by Leoluna Robert-Tourneur.
Synopsis: In the heart of a dark forest, while hunting, two silhouettes meet. These creatures move like predators, they attract and repel each other, seducing each other during an explosive parade. Hold Me Tight is a flamboyant and bitter romance where the violent attraction of the characters puts them in danger.
Director Héloïse Ferlay describes To the Dusty Sea as follows: “Left alone in the deepest of the summer, Malo and Zoe are trying their best to catch their mother’s elusive eye.”
Filmmaker Jack Gray describes his short film Menagerie as “a study of the daily motions and mundane tasks of contemporary city life. Featuring hundreds of looping animated characters, the film explores how the repetitive actions of our day-to-day lives quickly spiral into an endless kaleidoscope of abstraction.”
Slower Animals is an award-winning short film by John Christopher Kelley, an assistant professor at University of Tennessee.
The filmmaker describes Slower Animals as a short film that “explores the ways we are shaped; both by what we remember and what we forget.”
It’s a story about a professor who decides to follow a winter goose migration and in the process triggers memories of repressed childhood trauma.
Director Graham Mason describes The Quarry as “a soap opera about rocks.” He created it for Adult Swim Smalls.
Graham Mason’s short films have also been been featured on IFC, Viceland and Vulture, and he has received three Vimeo Staff Picks.
Directed by Oscar-nominated Andrew Chesworth (One Small Step), The Brave Locomotive is described by the filmmaker as an “Old West musical tale with 1940s flair, [in which] a fearless little train and his engineer confront obsolescence as bigger, faster, and more automated machines take center stage.”
Chesworth’s credits include Frozen, Zootopia, Moana, Big Hero 6 and Wreck-It Ralph.
Follow @andrew_chesworth for exclusive behind-the-scenes artwork.
Written and directed by Stephen Ong, who describes his short film as “the brief memoirs of a high-rise tower block, finding it’s way in the big city.”
Dying for Beginners is a short film which guides the viewer on a step by step journey through the process of dying.
It is voiced by Dr. Kathryn Mannix, a former palliative care physician who has spent her medical career working with people who have incurable, advanced illnesses.
Directed and designed by Emily Downe.