I used to have mixed feelings about this animated short: On one side, I admired the unique use of different animation styles and the great homage done to the history of animation, but on the other side, I didn't know what to think the heavy-handed story and the preachy last segment. However, now I consider that, even with a flawed plot, this short deserves to be recognized as an incredible effort that was ahead of its time. Done as an homage to "Bambi" and "Fantasia" this movie uses different animation styles, but instead of using those styles in different segments (Like most of anthology animated movies tend to do) this movie follows a single storyline, something that was done several years later by anime movies such as "Mind Game" and ""Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic".
Several references are made here, from the early animated shorts done Émile Cohl and Gertie the Dinosaur to the classic animated films done by Disney...And the result is really impressive: While this kind of experimental anime is nothing unusual in the recent years, in the time where this made (1987) it was something incredibly risky and rare. I'm not even sure if modern animators will take the risk to do something so ambitious as this.
Now, the dark thing about this fascinating short is the story: While at first it looks like it was something borrowed from Disney, several darker elements are shown, such as death and tragedy. But also, there is some certain level of cynicism in the story: While there are indeed some degree of demonization in the portrayal of the human beings (Especially in the last part) the animals from the forest aren't innocent creatures either, being shown to be arrogant, violent and vengeful. From a certain point of view, it could be a deconstruction of how other animated movies with ecological themes tend to portray the animals as completely innocent characters. Sadly, at the ending, the demonization of humans is played straight and that affects the overall content of this short. However, this doesn't make it any less interesting. Similar themes are explored in the movie "Princess Mononoke" from Hayao Miyazaki.
Several references are made here, from the early animated shorts done Émile Cohl and Gertie the Dinosaur to the classic animated films done by Disney...And the result is really impressive: While this kind of experimental anime is nothing unusual in the recent years, in the time where this made (1987) it was something incredibly risky and rare. I'm not even sure if modern animators will take the risk to do something so ambitious as this.
Now, the dark thing about this fascinating short is the story: While at first it looks like it was something borrowed from Disney, several darker elements are shown, such as death and tragedy. But also, there is some certain level of cynicism in the story: While there are indeed some degree of demonization in the portrayal of the human beings (Especially in the last part) the animals from the forest aren't innocent creatures either, being shown to be arrogant, violent and vengeful. From a certain point of view, it could be a deconstruction of how other animated movies with ecological themes tend to portray the animals as completely innocent characters. Sadly, at the ending, the demonization of humans is played straight and that affects the overall content of this short. However, this doesn't make it any less interesting. Similar themes are explored in the movie "Princess Mononoke" from Hayao Miyazaki.