Set in the 1990s, Tricky begins in a London animation studio run by a husband-and-wife team famous for creating beloved cereal mascots. Their world crumbles when new regulations ban sugary ads targeted at children, effectively cancelling their entire industry overnight. The husband flees to America, leaving behind his wife and their daughter, Maya. Decades later, Maya’s 12-year-old daughter, Charli, discovers a VHS tape of the old commercials. Hoping to connect with the grandfather she’s never met, she uploads digitized clips to TikTok using AI tools. But the experiment goes horribly wrong: her viral videos open a portal between worlds, unleashing the once-cute mascots, now twisted, AI-enhanced monstrosities, into the real world.
What if the thoughts that weigh so heavily on you literally prevented you from moving forward? Ale leaves her life behind and arrives in a new city to study at university. He is followed by a cloud of thoughts that constantly draw comparisons between what he has and what he no longer has, becoming a burden that literally prevents him from moving forward into the comfort of his new stage in life. In his routine of coming and going on the subway, he will eventually sink into reconciliation with those thoughts until they cease to weigh on him. In short, learning to let go.
A young couple’s relationship is tested by their struggle to communicate. Will they find their way back to one another, or will the tides pull them apart?
Armed with an old song and old photographs, Nora travels through time, trying to relive the memories of her life with her loved ones. But inside her head, darkness looms, ready to take everything away.
In a 17th century Swedish Livonian village, constant rain and drunkenness prevail. When a stolen relic sparks witchcraft accusations, an 80-year-old self-proclaimed werewolf named the Dog of God arrives with a mysterious gift: The Devil’s Balls.
A young fairy leads a boring life at the fairytale castle. She’d rather be a witch and get really messy. She therefore decides to run off to the witch forest.
When the meanest, nastiest villains pull a trick to take over their town, two brave children team up with a family of magical animals to bring them down.
A short animation inspired by Kazimir Malevich's poem of the same name. Using cut-out and rotoscope tech-niques, the film brings to life a surreal and fragmented visual narrative that reflects the poem's illogical structure. The piece transforms Malevich's experimental poetic language into motion, rhythm, and typographic form, offering a sensory journey through the abstract world of Ukrainian avant-garde.
A woman who lives alone in a house in the middle of the sea, makes herself a little girl from her own hair. One day, a ship appears, attracting the child's attention and upsetting the harmony.
A woman drives into a city where she used to live, to meet a man she once cared about. Their meeting takes place in a coffee shop, where they have met many times before. The woman realizes that the man is still not indifferent to her. Seemingly trivial elements and gestures bring back memories. In the man's yellow socks, she suddenly sees all the different socks he once used to wear. A common gesture of him rolling up the sleeves multiplies in front of her eyes, as if the past was there together with the present. Their conversation briefly tells the story of their relationship.
An eccentric, philosophical story, in which the boundary between absurdity and existential reflections blurs in an inapparent way. The protagonist, deliberating her sister's exceptionally tiny hands, ponders about alternative modes of her sister's existence - for example as a pigeon.
The story follows Thibault, a 46-year-old blind man, who crosses an old alley in Bordeaux, France. What begins as a simple journey becomes a sensory and visual adventure where the perception of the world takes on another dimension.