The Wolf House (2018) Poster

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8/10
The wolf is always at the door
jfgibson7324 April 2021
This is a very artsy film that went all in on the visuals. Unfortunately, it was at the expense of the narrative. There will be some viewers who will enjoy this film for the animation alone, and it is a towering achievement, an art installation come to life. It is atmospheric and haunting, and many viewers will compare it to a nightmare. I personally wanted more story to go along with the incredible sights. They used many mediums to achieve the animation, but much of it involved what looked like paint to create characters and objects, then simulating motion by painting over that. Apparently, this is inspired by true events that occurred in a German cult located in Chile. Trying to describe this movie is like describing music--putting it into words will never be the same as experiencing it.
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6/10
Amazing stop motion
jdoane27 April 2021
One of the most amazing pieces of stop motion I've ever seen. I've not seen the like since the works Bruce Bickford. I can't even imagine how much time and dedication this took. In terms of the plot it's...confusing? I admit I didn't really get it. It's not really a horror movie, it's unsettling and surreal like a David Lynch movie. It definitely makes you feel like something awful is going to happen, but it never really does. That said, I'd recommend it to anyone on technical brilliance alone.
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8/10
Disturbing and fascinating
PaoloReaper3 May 2019
A lot of work went into this. That's something you notice right away.

Incredible visuals thanks to a craftsman's work, "La Casa Lobo" ("The Wolf House") enraptures us in a seemingly interminable nightmare, full of transitions and man-pigs. Weird, disturbing, interesting, breathtaking.

Recommended. Fantastic piece of stop-motion/animation(?
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A Dark, Disquieting & Disturbing Nightmare
CinemaClown8 April 2021
One of the darkest, creepiest & genuinely unnerving films to grace the medium of animation, The Wolf House (La casa lobo) is a powerhouse of endless imagination, persevering vision & top-notch execution that employs its stop-motion animation technique in ways that's equally unique & nightmarish, and offers a cinematic ride that's as surreal as it is disquieting.

Directed by Christobal León & Joaquín Cocina, the story takes its inspiration from an infamous & disturbing slice of Chilean history and unfolds like a fairy tale. But if one isn't familiar with the historical context in play here, then events may seem confusing & frustrating. Still, the uneasy vibe & foreboding aura this chiller brims with ultimately makes sure that the viewers don't leave the scene.

The most impressive thing about this Chilean horror is the stop-motion animation itself. The set pieces & characters constantly deconstruct, reconstruct & transform while the camera remains in perpetual motion, thus giving the film an appearance of a single take perspective. The visuals are distinct & uncanny to look at and with further assistance from its haunting soundscapes, it amplifies the film's dreamlike, vivid quality.

Overall, The Wolf House is no doubt an impressive feat of animation filmmaking as it renders its scenes in ways that's simultaneously fresh & freakish and blends true life, propaganda & fairy tale into a wicked tool for indoctrination. But it can also be overwhelming for some as there's plenty to unpack & absorb here, given its multitudes of layers & ever changing visuals. In short, this Chilean horror will fare better with arthouse enthusiasts than mainstream filmgoers.
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9/10
The Most Imaginatively and Creatively Satisfying Stop-Motion Film
chazthegamr3 November 2018
It's miraculous to watch a film that you started watching with little to no expectations, only to come out feeling influenced, your heart is in awe, while your mind reels.

I feel that it would be doing the film a disservice by simply comparing the film to a dream, yes that was the aim, and it is effective due to this. But not only is it a great dream, it's a dream you don't want to wake up from. It's a fantastic experience.

But most importantly, La Casa Lobo is the most imaginatively satisfying animation I've seen.

Prepare to be in awe at the pure insane creativity spun out before you, every set-piece is a work of Art. This may even be one of my favourite animated films.

You may not feel the same, although it's hard to ignore such an astounding craft.
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9/10
A sly folk tale told in a way unlike any other
I_Ailurophile15 October 2021
The feature is realized with 2-D animation, stop-motion animation, and a combination of the two, using a variety of media, with somewhat inherently disconcerting, uneven camerawork. This distinct myriad style is itself extremely noteworthy, and enough to absolutely set 'The wolf house' apart from most any film that immediately comes to mind. More than that, it's the most emphatically noteworthy aspect of the movie, and enough by itself to make this worth watching. 'The wolf house' is utterly captivating for the mere fact of its craft. Factor in the way that scenes are constructed or deconstructed as we watch them unfold, and we gain another level of disquiet, without yet even considering the narrative. Moreover, the amount of visual detail that is imparted in this manner is rather astounding. Love it or hate it, there's no denying that this is truly extraordinary, in the most fundamental sense of the word.

'The wolf house' is a visual wonderland. The plot, such as it is, is light, and develops ever so gradually at its own leisure, but is intriguing. Told within an overarching narrative framework, this is perhaps best described as a folk tale, with a sense of dark fantasy about it. Most of the story moseys along with passing events that are eye-catching and hold our attention, though they may not be wholly grabbing. At long length some expressly unsettling events transpire before the tale concludes with what seems like a happy ending of the sort that we sometimes expect from fairy tales. And yet - to read of the inspiration for the film, and to educate ourselves to a small extent, adds another, more profound layer to the saga before us, and to that conclusion especially. Without betraying any spoilers, let it suffice to say that as one ponders more heavily what it was that protagonist Maria ran away from before finding the titular abode, a deeply understated sense of horror begins to develop about the exact course of events in the feature.

I think it probably goes without saying, but by no means is this going to be for everyone. Twenty minutes after I finished watching I had a stronger regard for it than I did when I first finished, and as I ruminate more on what I've watched I'm pretty sure my opinion will strengthen further. Yet even as I immediately fell in love with the imagery, my first thought as to the content was "so what." I won't begrudge anyone who views 'The wolf house' and doesn't like it; this is a feature for only the most patient and open-minded of viewers. I did use the terms "horror" and "dark fantasy" earlier, but the latter is simply flavor, and the former is more thematic than concrete, and wholly up to personal interpretation at that.

If nothing else, this much is true: this film is a painstaking labor of love, a feature years in the making with an unparalleled visual style. The grand effort alone makes it worth watching as far as I'm concerned, nevermind that it paid off, a feat that also helps to wash over a deficiency of storytelling. I think the narrative is strong, but it's a mistake to look to any particular genre label to help guide one's viewership here. Moreover, the very simplicity of it also leaves me marginally uncertain, and that the boost of outside context does so much to help solidify the tale also perhaps reflects poorly on the writing. Still, when all is said and done, I enjoy this so much more than I don't, and I'll absolutely be thinking on it for a long time to come. 'The wolf house' is both a great curiosity and a visual feast, and if you're receptive to all the wide variety of content that cinema has to offer, this is an absolute treat.
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6/10
"You're in the wrong house."
nickycarriker-341664 November 2020
The title of this review is a quote from one of my all-time favorite games. That game being "Knock-Knock," developed by Ice-Pick Lodge. And in a way, "The Wolf House" reminds me of "Knock-Knock," as It's a film encapsulated by surreal imagery and disturbing subject matter just as "Knock-Knock" is. But, unlike the game, the film's, technically impressive and surrealist style is only engrossing to an extent, after which it soon becomes boring and shows that their isn't much else happening in the movie when it comes to a narrative. If the film had made more of an effort to tell a compelling story along with showing off It's art style, I'm certain I would have enjoyed it much more.
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10/10
Should have been nominated and won an Oscar
Freethinker_Atheist26 August 2021
Simply amazing! I cannot imagine how much work these guys had making this film. Additionally, it is super disturbing and creepy. Some moments are even scary!
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9/10
Extremely dense, but visually stunning
salonsoab1 July 2021
The outstanding craftsmanship involved in one of the most mesmerizing animated films I have ever seen, in conjunction with a complex and invigorating narrative present one of the most intriguing films I have seen this year. Its a little to intricate for my liking, and although I dont believe I fully understand its vision, I really appreciate the work and passion put behind its creation.

8.5/10.
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9/10
Visual Insanity
theworstcritic30 October 2021
This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. Stop-motion is generally a cool medium, but "The Wolf House" takes it to a whole new level. The film comprises of wall paintings and rough models, that morph into each other throughout the film. As the camera moves, the set around it changes. The wall colour changes, furniture moves around, etc. Its so visually striking that you can't take your eyes of it. It took 5 years to make, and I can see why. Everything is so detailed. They could have made it easy for themselves, but instead went as far as possible to make an incredible film. The jolty camera and rough models make the film very eerie to watch. Despite not having any jump scares or violence, it is very grotesque and terrifying. On top of that the dialogue is chilling. The characters whisper into your ear, it literally gave me chills. I'd say use headphones or surround sound speakers to watch this, cause hearing the dialogue like it's coming from a person whispering into your ear really adds to the experience. Story wise, it's very weird. There's obviously a hidden meaning behind, buts It's not very clear. The dialogue is very ambiguous at times so don't worry if you're not getting the story, this films more about the visuals.
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5/10
Visually stunning, but that's it.
ebrackene14 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This film has a great aesthetic vision and sustains creepiness for most of it but it became fairly obvious to me halfway through that the 'wolf' would not come into the house. I perhaps would have been less disappointed had the story been about a girl lost in the woods and not the more exciting story of a woman escaping from a Nazi colony in Chile. It's all style over substance and overstays its welcome. I've really never seen anything like it and love the animation style but found it otherwise boring to watch. The horror version of a joke without a punchline.
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10/10
A masterpiece of Chile
Hawbash_Movie27 October 2018
When you're in electric age and watch a movie in the same age but it looks like 70's animated movie , with an incredible story , i will tell you to watch this movie as soon as possible , because it maybe win an Oscar !!!
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9/10
Impressively Animated Dark Fairy Tale
max4movie25 October 2020
Full review on my blog max4movies: La Casa Lobo (international title: The Wolf House) is basically an animated dark fairy tale that achieves a wonderfully haunting atmosphere due to the unique and disturbing animation. It's an art movie in the truest sense of the word and the art direction - namely stop-motion animation with three-dimensional paintings and papier mâché characters - is stunning. While the characters remain mostly vague and the plot cryptic at best, the dreamlike quality and eerie atmosphere really take the crown. All in all, La Casa Lobo feels like you're watching a slowly evolving nightmare that, although it's not entirely yours, is still terrifyingly creepy.
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10/10
Stop Motion Animation at it's Darkest
AJ_Nel3 February 2022
Using stop motion animation Chillean directors Joaquin Cociña, Cristóbal León tells a dark and menacing fable underscoring the events of and mentality behind Paul Shäfer Schneider's Colonia Dignidad. No other movie has dealt with "cult mentality" in this manner. Various fables are weaved together using stop motion in a number of formats (including 2D drawing, paper mâché, dolls etc), each format is carefully used to in real time unfold a deeper meaning associated with the use. Truly a unique work of art.
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8/10
The Wolf is always at the door. Warning: Spoilers
I actually rewatched this movie several times.

I liked a lot, but I had no idea on how review it properly.

It's a pretty unique film in many ways. The type of film Hollywood would never dare to make, and the kind of movie you either love or hate.

The only similar works I can think of are the previous shorts made by Joaquin Cociña and Cristobal Leon (Such as Lucia and Luis) and maybe some of the stuff by Jan Svankmajer.

The very unusual way in which it is animated using different stop-motion techniques (Via pixilation, or using real life size puppets that constantly disintegrate and reintegrate according to the plot) helps to create an uneasy atmosphere of opression, even at the "happy" moments of this twisted propaganda fairytale.

When I watched this by the first time, I had zero knowledge about the horrible acts committed by the Colonia Dignidad sect; while the historical context certainly helps to understand a couple of elements from the plot, most of the film remains as a weird, surreal nightmare where things can be either taken at face value or from a symbolic perspective.

A lot of the imagery still burns in my memory, particularly during its most haunting moments.

Watch at your own risk, but don't expect a happy ending in this fairytale: From the very beginning, it's made clear the big bad wolf controls this story.

His final words are taunting, cruel, a bitter reminder how evil often triumphs in our world, and how it often presents itself as the greater good.
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10/10
Good pig
raben-8114619 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This is Peppa Pig in the animated art house style for adults, and this is like movies where some evil kids they are taking the control over parents in movies like Gooodbye Mommy. A woman she is running away from a wolf in a forest, and she ends up in an abandoned house as she raised two pigs that becomes kids. For years they can´t leave the house, as the wolf is outside or is it? This movie was Oscar snubbed for best Art Direction and best Visual Effects, as this movie has taken so many years to make. Wolf House would have made Bogart an old Danish art house TV show reviewer on Danish DR1 proud.
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2/10
I couldn't finish it
Delrvich30 January 2021
Some of the most impressive stop animation and creepy whispered dialogue throughout the movie got old real quick. Tried to finish but finally shut it down two thirds into the movie.

Should have been a film short or music video.

------------------------------ My IMDb ratings 1 Deliberately botched 2 I don't want to see it 3 I FF'd through it 4 Bad 5 I don't get it 6 Good 7 Great but with a major flaw 8 Great 9 Noir with moral 10 Inspiring with moral.
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8/10
Never seen anything quite like this before
Jeremy_Urquhart27 December 2021
If you're like me you might not always know what's going on exactly, but what is immediately apparent and consistent throughout is the tense, eerie atmosphere, and the creepy visuals that are excellently conveyed thanks to the film's sound design, music, and it's incredibly unique stop-motion animation.

A simple story of a woman escaping a cult and hiding in a house somewhere in a forest becomes intensely psychological and extremely surreal very quickly. The presentation and the short runtime ensures it's just about always captivating, and words can't describe how impressive and creepy the animation is.

Worth watching from a technical perspective alone, it also feels like the kind of movie where a lot's going on under the surface (I spotted a couple of interesting things going on in the background here and there), and it's something I'm probably going to have a hard time forgetting.

Would've been perfect for October, but hey, November deserves to have some creepy films watched throughout it too.
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9/10
The Wolf House Review
jramirez-6690630 May 2022
One of the most terrifying and unsettling animated films that I had ever watched. Purely original and almost makes you feel frightened the first time that you are immersed in this story.
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10/10
Disturbing and Facinating Masterpiece
M-rates-horror8 August 2023
This Movie is beautiful. The stop motion is executed exquisitely and the characters are well rounded. Never once during this movie was I bored. The Style choices made for this film could not have been better. I think this story in another format would be awful, not because its a bad story but only hand crafted art can properly portray the emotions meant to be shown. Every detail in every scene is clearly well thought out and with a purpose. This movie unlocked a whole new subsection of horror for me and I love it. Please give this movie a chance as any seasoned horror lover will see the macabre beauty this film has to offer.
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9/10
An Explanation of the Movie: a brilliant self-indictment of the Fascist Mindset
Armin_Nikkhah_Shirazi16 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
THE WOLF HOUSE tells an allegorical fairy tale reminiscent of those of the Brothers Grimm in a unique stop-motion/2D animation style that is as indescribable as it is spell-binding.

The story, though very simple, veers into the surreal fairly quickly, making it hard to discern what the movie is all about. It does not help that the hints strewn throughout are subtle, that the movie freely switches between German and Spanish (though it has English subtitles), and that a knowledge of the historical context is essential to appreciating what the movie is trying to say.

So here is how I would explain it:

In short, my understanding of the movie is that it exposes and indicts the evil of a fascist mindset by letting it speak for itself.

Now to the details.

SPOILER ALERT

Before the movie proper, we see a prologue in the style of a restored older movie which owes much of its inspiration for its bucolic and harmonious atmosphere to Nazi propaganda films.

We are shown an idyllic community in the southern part of Chile, a colony of happy people in traditional clothing working, helping and singing, along with serene scenes of nature, farmland, livestock and pies. The colony even has a motto:"Helping makes Happiness", which, however, uneasily echoes "Arbeit macht Frei" ["Work makes Free(dom)"], the infamous slogan which adorned the entrance to Auschwitz and other Nazi labor and concentration camps.

The narrator identifies himself as the "shepherd" of the community and tells us that the film we are about to see is meant to dispel "horrible rumors", a "dark legend", that have plagued it. This tells us that the movie is trying to convince us of something, and is not necessarily objective.

The movie begins by briefly recounting how a young girl, Maria, lost three pigs, and upon the prospect of punishment, chooses to flee the colony instead. It is at this point that we are properly introduced to the unique artistic style of the animation.

The animation has a disorienting effect in at least two respects: first, a lot of times, 3D objects, including the main characters, are represented at various points by 2D animations on background walls, and second, everything undergoes a continual process of change, flow and transfiguration.

I interpret the first to mean that often, the movie is merely showing us a literally shallow representation of a thing. The failure to grasp the fleshed-out 3-dimensional richness of something is a shortcoming which reflects something about the narrator, since this telling is not meant to be objective but reflects the narrator's point of view.

I interpret the second as a device to impart a dream-like aura to the entire story, since it resembles what often happens in a dream: things or people at one moment may "morph" into other completely different things.

Maria is chased by a wolf but finds an empty house with two pigs, and decides to make it her home. She also decides not to eat the pigs but instead to care for them. While the wolf outside is trying to persuade her to come back to the colony, Maria's new dwelling slowly transforms into her dream home.

Upon her command, the hooves of the pigs transform into human hands and feet. She tells them her name and that she is "a mother, an angel; Maria is care and love". Then she decides to give the pigs clothing, and shortly after that they transform into full-fledged people, albeit with ethnic features and black hair. Later, she gives a choice to be "better, stronger, healthier and more handsome" or to "stay small and ugly", and they transform once more, into the Aryan ideal, with blonde hair and blue eyes, indeed like Maria herself.

Shortly after this last transformation, Ana and Pedro begin to distrust Maria as she realizes that she needs to go out and search for food. They convince her not to go out and before long she finds herself tied to a bed, and realizes that Ana and Pedro are getting ready to eat her.

She implores the Wolf to come and rescue her, which he does, albeit in a very impersonal manner: Ana and Pedro transform into trees, recalling an earlier tale Maria tells about a tree with a hole near it into which animals would happily fall and get eaten.

In a sort of epilogue by the narrator, we find out that Maria finds her way back to the community, helping and presumably living happily ever after, and "taken care of". A cheeky concluding remarks invites the audience, whom the narrator calls "pigs" to join the colony to be "taken care of", against an animation that looks ominously like the entrance to a concentration camp.

In terms of analysis, the prologue is essential for understanding that this is a tale told by a fascist with a fascist value system, self-conception and outlook of life.

The historical context is that there is an actual colony in Chile founded by a German Expat who fled Germany over child molestation charges. His name was Paul Schäfer, whose last name translates from German to "Shepherd".

Without going into too much detail, Schäfer founded the colonia Dignidad ("Dignity Colony") which soon transformed into a cult compound and a haven for escaped Nazis. During the reign of the fascist dictator Pinochet, the colonia was also used as a camp to interrogate, torture and kill political dissidents. Schäfer was eventually convicted both of political and child sexual abuse crimes and spent the last few years of his long life in prison.

So, the movie is the telling of a story in the voice of a through-and-through fascist. From that point of view, a "good" person can only be another fascist, and that is exactly what Maria turns out to be.

The pigs she finds in the house represent uncultured natives which she considers on par with animals. She has a profoundly self-aggrandizing conception of herself: only by her grace of not "eating" them and commanding them to become more human-like do they approach something like humanity.

She attempts to inculcate the persona of loving mother figure into the pigs, while at the same time seeing them as inferior, weak and ugly, so long as they fail to reach the Aryan ideal. These sorts of contradictions reflect the fact that the narrator is biased in favor of turning a blind eye toward them. Lying, or making up a narrative in order to make oneself look better, and specifically more Carina and loving in one's own and other people's eyes, is a key element of fascism.

Though Maria arrives at her situation through an act of disobedience, she is profoundly intolerant of it, as driven home by a story she recites of a puppy which disobeys the admonishment of a loving house not to run to far and gets lost, leaving the house "sad".

This continues this element of a the fascist narrative: any evil carried out, if it is even recognized as such-and a whole lot of evil even isn't-, is something that is absolutely necessary, even if it makes the fascist "sad".

The seemingly unexpected turn where once Ana and Pedro reach the Aryan ideal, they plot to eat Maria illustrates two other aspects of the fascist mindset: envy and paranoia. Because these are so natural to the narrator, of course he is going to expect that once Ana and Pedro becomes something like equals to Maria, they will act to remove her. People who see the exploitation of others for one's benefit as something approaching a duty will naturally expect that others will think likewise.

The wolf is an allegory for the fascist mindset, a hallmark of which is the notion of "eating" others for one's benefit, something illustrated both for Maria when she explicitly considered it upon finding the two pigs, and then Pedro and Ana, once they reached the Aryan Ideal.

For most of the movie, the wolf is presented as an agent of the colony trying to get Maria back, but in the climax, she realizes the wolf was always inside her, though as discussed above, it was already plain for anyone to see if one put the hints together.

So, in the end, the title of the movie refers to nothing other than Maria's abode: she escaped from the fascist colony to make her dream home, but this turned out to be nothing other than a miniature version of the place from which she escaped, a house where she was about to be eaten by the two other wolves she raised.
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9/10
One of the my Favourite Psychological Horror of All Time
ongoam12 June 2023
If Max Payne Trilogy was my favorite Psychological Thriller Video Game that I have ever played, La Casa Lobo was my favorite Psychological Horror film that I have ever watched, the film followed a Young German Girl who fled from Sexual Abuse in the German Colony in Chile, and hiding in the Hut. Still, this thing was hell; I know this movie was Uncanny and Disturbing. It details the Atrocities of the Pinochet Regime and how the director can use this movie to show how dangerous the Pinochet regime is. I love how the movie uses Two Languages, Spanish and German, which is why I loved this film because it was beautiful.
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2/10
One Positive
westsideschl8 February 2021
Positive: The production crew spent a lot of time focused on their stop motion animation with confusing but interesting results. Negatives: The storyline is very obscure. Is it a horror adaptation using fairy tales such as The Three Little Pigs; Little Red Riding Hood; Hansel & Gretel as the vehicle? Or, is it about Paul Schafer's commune in Chili where mistreatment of followers & extreme illegal activities took place? Read a wiki review of his activities. The explanation booklet (and one is needed) was red colored font on light red background; very difficult to read - dumb, and shows a further lack of caring for the viewers. The special features where they talk about the film was entirely on filming technique and not explaining the story. If Shafer's horrific activities were the main plot point it would have been far more impactful, interesting & informative to simply document his life.
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9/10
Creepy wolf wants to knock at your door
buzzy_bob6 November 2021
You know jaw-dropping is supposed to be an expression... For me it was literal during the whole movie!

I've never seen this kind of stop-motion. The images plus the sound adjust perfectly to the horror and weirdness of this german fairy tales.

It's not perfect on storytelling, but it deserves its 5 stars for me! Just bravo to the team for their work. Amateur of creativity, you have to see this animation!
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8/10
Incredible and almost unwatchable for the faint of heart
geonosianindustries7 December 2021
Constant impressive visuals that will strick with you that are tied into an, at times, disturbing story. You kay want to look away but it is very gripping.
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