A Diverse Selection of Exceptional Short Films
The ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS, a curated selection of the “best of the best” animated short films created by students and professionals around the world, returns to theaters across North America this fall. Featuring 10 films from seven countries, the 2019 edition of the program offers an array of highly imaginative, thought-provoking, and moving works that reflect the filmmakers’ unique perspectives and their relationship to the world.
Short Film Schedule
Kids - Dir. Michael Frei, Mario von Rickenbach | SwitzerlandRubicon - Dir. Gil Alkabetz | GermanyPortrait of Gil Alkabetz (Rubicon) - Dir. Marta Trela | GermanyFive Minutes to Sea - Dir. Natalia Mirzoyan | RussiaRécit de soi (Self-Narrative) - Dir. Géraldine Charpentier | BelgiumLe jour extraordinaire (Flowing through Wonder) - Dir. Joanna Lurie | FranceHounds - Dir. Amit Cohen, Ido Shapira | IsraelPortrait of Amit Cohen and Ido Shapira (Hounds) - Dir. Shlomi YosefThe Fox and the Bird (Le renard et l’oisille) - Dir. Sam & Fred Guillaume | SwitzerlandDaughter - Dir. Daria Kashcheeva | Czech RepublicPersonal relationships are at the heart of several of the films in this year’s program, including Daria Kashcheeva’s International Student Academy Award-winning puppet animation Daughter, a deeply moving exploration of the ties between a father and daughter. Charting a very different, but related, course, “The Fox and the Bird” by Sam & Fred Guillaume, is a beautifully observed fable about an unlikely friendship between the two eponymous characters. Filmmaker Michael Frei and game designer Mario von Rickenbach provide a more clinical view of human behavior in their mesmerizing KIDS, which explores the nature of group dynamics.
The question of individual identity informs both Hounds by Amit Cohen & Ido Shapira and (Self-Narrative) by Géraldine Charpentier. In the former, a highly domesticated dog undergoes a disturbing change when a pack of wild hounds gathers near his house, while the latter offers a clear-eyed and heartfelt look at a young girl’s journey to self-realization as a transgender person.
Animation has often been the medium of choice for artists seeking to explore abstract ideas or philosophical issues, and these themes are well represented in the program. Joanna Lurie’s mysterious and transcendent Flowing through Wonder chronicles an extraordinary ritual and celebrates the transformative mystery that underlies life and death. Natalia Mirzoyan’s Five Minutes to Sea in which a young girl waits impatiently to go back in the sea, takes a more lighthearted approach, while playing with conundrums of time and perspective.
The program is rounded out by Gil Alkabetz’s Rubicon, a frenetic and very funny hand-drawn animation based on the classic riddle about how to ferry a wolf, a sheep, and a cabbage across a river without something getting eaten. In addition to the slapstick, the film also serves as a parable about the convoluted nature of political negotiations, specifically those related to the Middle East.
The program also includes two mini-documentaries about the creative process featuring Alkabetz and Amit Cohen & Ido Shapira (Hounds).
Now Showing
February 3 – February 10 / View All