Have you seen this hidden gem? Or do you have another piece of underrated European animation to recommend? Let me know in the comments.
What makes Avril so compelling is her quiet resilience. She isn’t a warrior or a chosen one; she is a scientist. Her weapons are curiosity and logic. In a world that has outlawed learning, she is a revolutionary simply because she asks, "Why?" Directed by Christian Desmares and Franck Ekinci (with a script co-written by graphic novelist Benjamin Legrand), the film’s aesthetic is a love letter to the ligne claire (clear line) style of Hergé ( The Adventures of Tintin ). The characters are simple, round, and expressive, but the backgrounds are impossibly detailed. April and the Extraordinary World -2015- FRENCH...
This isn't your typical steampunk fantasy of gleaming brass goggles. This is dieselpunk noir —grimy, desperate, and filled with the melancholic realization that progress has died. Our hero, Avril (voiced by Marion Cotillard in the French dub), is the granddaughter of the missing scientist. Orphaned and on the run from the secret police, she lives a feral existence in the catacombs of Paris with her cat (Darwin, who can talk thanks to a family serum) and her grandfather’s last secret: a powerful fuel source. Have you seen this hidden gem
Imagine a world where Thomas Edison never beat Nikola Tesla. Where electricity is a fringe concept, and the world runs on coal and steam. Now, push that world forward to the 1940s, and you’ll find a Paris shrouded in perpetual smog, ruled by a Prussian-like Empire, and populated by talking lizards. That is the strange, sad, and stunning universe of this French-Belgian-Canadian co-production. The film opens with a brilliant sequence set in 1870. Napoleon III is losing the Franco-Prussian War. Desperate, he calls upon two famous scientists—Gustave Franklin and his daughter—to create a "Ultimate Weapon." But just as they are about to reveal a formula for invincible soldiers, a bolt of lightning strikes the lab. The secret dies. The Franklins disappear. And history takes a sharp left turn. What makes Avril so compelling is her quiet resilience