Meet a black cat and his friends. ‍⬛ Sideshow + Janus have revealed the official US trailer for the animated film called Flow made by Latvian filmmaker Gints Zilbalodis. This is his second feature ...
Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Cannes Film Festival. “Flow” opens in U.S. theaters on Friday, November 22. There’s a moment near the end of Latvian animation ...
It’s rare to see a movie and think, “I need every kid to see this.” That’s the case with Flow, which just screened at the SCAD Savannah Film Festival. I don’t mean that as homework, the way that, at ...
The critically acclaimed animated feature “Flow,” which made its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and was selected as Latvia’s official submission for the Best International Feature Oscar, ...
Like the wide-eyed feline in his dialogue-free film "Flow," Latvian filmmaker Gints Zilbalodis often works alone — he directed, wrote, animated and even scored his debut feature, "Away," in 2019. But ...
It’s always a pleasure to see a film taht IndieWire has been championing from the very beginning triumph at the Oscars, and now the little cat that could has done just that. “Flow” has won the Oscar ...
This film shows its creativity early on when the cat finds itself trying to stay afloat in water while atop a black statue of -what else?- a cat. There are also some dogs around too who seek refuge on ...
The story of a cat and his friends. Flow is an animated film made by the Latvian filmmaker named Gints Zilbalodis, his second feature after making Away (in 2019) which was a fable about loneliness. He ...
The film follows a cat who struggles to survive as its home gets flooded. The cat is rescued by a very chill capybara in a sailboat and they are soon joined by a greedy lemur, an excitable dog, and a ...
This was a notable specialty weekend with Latvian animated Flow powering on and Luca Quadagnino’s Queer starring Daniel Craig rocking its expansion. A notable trio of concert films popped. Telugu ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. There’s a moment near the end of Latvian animation director Gints Zilbalodis’ “Flow” that powerfully tugs at the heartstrings.