Bisou Sauvage and Szczerbowski Shine in This Thought-Provoking NFB Showcase

The National Film Board of Canada brings a striking range of animated storytelling to Victoria Film Festival. In part one, I take a closer look at Bisou Sauvage and Szczerbowski, two shorts that confront human duality, moral consequence, and the fragile space between love and harm.

National Film Board of Canada LOGOThe National Film Board of Canada

is presenting at the Victoria Film Festival, and what they’ve got is a wide range of adventures. From making statements about the society we’re in to a fun-filled twist on what a zombie pandemic can look like, even I have to be amazed. In part one, I’ll be taking a look at Bisou Sauvage and Szczerbowski.

This examination will be broken up into two parts to give the four pieces a decent look at why they must be viewed. And hey, Jay Baruchel is all-Canadian in this piece (you’ll have to read part two for that review), and I have to love the fact he’s broken away from his Hiccup past to show he has versatility with his vocal performances.

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You Better Promise Me, Arco, Take Me Back In Time

A gentle French animated time-travel tale, Arco blends soft sci-fi adventure with heartfelt friendship. Drawing subtle inspiration from Ghibli and Moebius, the film favours wonder, warmth, and quiet environmental themes over spectacle, delivering a thoughtful story about being lost in time and finding connection.

Arco Movie PosterElevation Pictures

As much as I sometimes use the idiom “tripping the light fantastic,” it applies doubly to a French animated film titled Arco. This is also the name of a young boy (Oscar Tresanini and Juliano Krue Valdi in the English version) who accidentally finds himself in the past after misusing a time-travel device in a post-modern future.

All he wanted was to go play with dinosaurs. Instead, things go sideways, and he lands in an unfamiliar era where he meets Iris (Margot Ringard Oldra; Romy Fay in the English version). She’s about his age, ten, and together they must avoid a group of conspiracy theorists convinced the boy is proof of alien visitation.

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Top Ten Animated Films You Must See in 2026

2026 is stacked with animated films from around the world, from high-concept sci-fi to nostalgic franchise returns. Here are ten releases to watch, sorted by date, and why each one might matter.

Animated Films 20262026 is shaping up to be a huge year for animated films. If it’s the ill-fated number three (Star Trek fans will get the reference), hopefully the Angry Birds and Minions can weather the storm. But as for other works, there’s plenty to choose from. For some studios, they are finally taking the risk, but we still don’t have a date for one particular film that I’ll address at the end.

And I’m not limiting myself to works coming out of the Los Angeles area. Also, maybe those movies I’ve been reporting on as still not getting a North American release may see movement. I’m not holding my breath for it, but you never know! This year, this list reflects not just what’s coming, but why it matters.

Meikyū no Shiori

Meikyū no Shiori Movie Poster Release: January 1, 2026 (Japan)

Directed by Shōji Kawamori from a screenplay by Taichi Hashimoto, this high-concept science fiction drama treats smartphones as literal gateways to alternate realities. After Shiori Maezawa breaks her phone, she finds herself trapped inside an alternate Yokohama, a world where another version of herself already exists, and is making a mess of things. It’s a quietly unsettling premise that bends identity, technology, and isolation into something intimate and strange.

Charlie the Wonderdog

Charlie the Wonderdog Movie Poster Release: January 16, 2026

When a boy’s best friend, who happens to be a cat, is abducted by aliens and returned profoundly altered, chaos follows. Charlie, the family dog, is suddenly forced into hero mode as the world tilts sideways around him. It’s goofy, loud, and oddly sincere, balancing superhero parody with the simple question of what loyalty actually looks like when everything changes. This is a movie that looks heavily inspired by Pixar, and yes, there are tacos.

Les Légendaires – Le Film

Les Légendaires – Le Film Movie Poster Release: January 28, 2026 (France)

Based on the popular French comic series, this fantasy adventure reunites the heroes of Alysia, once legendary warriors now trapped in the bodies of ten-year-olds after a magical catastrophe. When the sorcerer Darkhell threatens the world again through the mystical Gaméra tree, the group must come together, reputations in tatters, childhood awkwardness and all, to fix what they broke. As a beloved franchise that leans hard into classic European fantasy beats, what’s to lose?

Goat

Goat Movie Poster Release: February 13, 2026

Sony Pictures Animation delivers an all-animal sports comedy set in the brutal world of roarball, a full-contact league dominated by the biggest and fastest creatures around. Will, a small goat with oversized ambition, earns a spot on a pro team and promptly disrupts everything. It’s a familiar underdog story, but the setting and kinetic animation style suggest it could be sharper than expected.

Doraemon: New Nobita and the Castle of the Undersea Devil

Doraemon: New Nobita and the Castle of the Undersea Devil Movie Poster Release: February 27, 2026 (Japan)

The 22nd-century robot cat returns for the franchise’s 45th feature, reimagining one of Doraemon’s most beloved underwater adventures. When Nobita and friends set up camp on the ocean floor, they stumble into a hidden civilization and awaken the ominous Devil’s Rock Castle. Nostalgia meets modern animation tech in a story that leans heavily on friendship, curiosity, and the terror of things stirring beneath the waves.

Hoppers

Hoppers film poster Release: March 6, 2026

Pixar finally swings for something truly offbeat. Scientists develop technology that allows humans to “hop” their minds into robotic animals, and a nature-loving teenager uses it to protect a threatened habitat by becoming a mechanical beaver. It’s strange, playful, and philosophical in that very Pixar way, even if comparisons to horror games will inevitably sneak into the discourse.

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie poster Release: April 3, 2026

Inspired by the Galaxy games, Mario, Luigi, and company head into space to face Bowser Jr. among the stars. Bright, energetic, and unapologetically colourful, this sequel expands the Mushroom Kingdom in every direction at once. Whether or not it dodges franchise fatigue, it’s hard not to be curious about how far Nintendo is willing to let this universe stretch.

Coyote vs. Acme

Coyote vs. Acme poster Release: August 28, 2026

Rescued from limbo by Ketchup Entertainment, this long-delayed Looney Tunes project finally sees the light of day. Wile E. Coyote sues Acme Corporation over decades of catastrophic product failures, resulting in a legal comedy built on slapstick logic and deep self-awareness. It’s an oddball entry in a crowded year, and one of the few mainstream animated films willing to get genuinely satirical.

Forgotten Island

Forgotten Island temporary poster Release: September 25, 2026

DreamWorks explores Filipino folklore in a story about memory, friendship, and identity. When two youths are stranded on the mysterious island of Nakali, they discover that returning home may require sacrificing the very memories that bind them together. Early materials suggest something quieter and more emotionally driven than the studio’s usual output, with real potential to surprise.

The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender

The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender poster Release: October 9, 2026

Set between The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra, this long-gestating animated feature finally gives Aang his own post-series story. With a new global threat looming, the now more experienced Team Avatar must step back into action. After multiple delays and shifting release plans, there’s hope this one finally lands, and lands well.

The throughline here isn’t nostalgia or spectacle alone, it’s ambition. As for where Studio Laika’s Wildwood is, that’s because there’s no official distributor yet. Analysts are saying it will have to release soon. And when studios are clearly willing to experiment again, for this fan, all I can say is that it’s about bloody time!

LEGO Avengers Strange Tails Offers A Whisker of Truth

LEGO Avengers Strange Tails uses cheeky satire and cat-fuelled chaos to explore social media obsession, influence, and attention economics, all while giving Hawkeye a rare moment in the spotlight.

LEGO Avengers Strange TailsOn Disney Plus

When LEGO Avengers Strange Tails is being cheeky in its satire of social media culture, nudging viewers to not be so engrossed, I’m all in. Even I’ll admit I’ve been far too hooked on being on a soapbox far too much. But once people strip away the medium, the core idea works just as well in any age when these platforms evolved. This latest animated LEGO adventure walks a careful line between teaching and entertaining, showing both the appeal and the dangers of attention-driven obsession. 

Eugene Son is a veteran of this ongoing subset of adventures, and he’s in good company when teamed with Henry Gilroy (best known for his work on Star Wars: Rebels) to write the story, and adapt it to screenplay. And they know the subject well. The spotlight falls on Meryet Karim (Alia Shawkat), an overzealous social media influencer who believes the world should revolve around her. She loves cats, craves control, and has her sights set on making Hawkeye become yesterday’s news.

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Five 2025 Animated Films That North America Is Missing

International animation in 2025 has produced some of the most ambitious and heartfelt films of the year, yet many remain unseen in North America. What these animated films offer in how they they can be different from traditional narratives.

Animated Films Round the WorldThe global animation scene in 2025 has delivered a spectrum of visually striking and narratively bold films, yet many of these treasures remain unseen in North America. Whether sidelined by limited festival runs, language barriers, or distribution hurdles, some of the year’s animated films from afar are not being screened in North America.

From intimate European adventures to imaginative Asian reinterpretations of classic tales, these international works offer worlds that deserve a broader audience. Here are five animated films from 2025 that North America is missing — and why they’re worth seeking out.

Jumbo

Jumbo (France) Movie Poster🇫🇷 France / 🇧🇪 Belgium
🇱🇺 Luxembourg / 🇮🇩 Indonesia

Directed by Ryan Adriandhy, this tender adventure follows Don, a young boy whose size makes him the object of schoolyard teasing. To prove himself, he creates a play filled with fairies and spirits, blending slice-of-life drama with whimsical fantasy.

Although Jumbo has screened in Indonesia and appeared at select European festivals, it still hasn’t reached North America. Its cross-cultural charm, heartfelt characters, and festival pedigree make it a standout example of a smaller international co-production that deserves far more visibility.

A Magnificent Life

A Magnificent Life Movie Poster🇩🇪 Germany / 🇬🇧 United Kingdom

This imaginative biography reflects on the life of playwright and filmmaker Marcel Pagnol. He’s considered to be one of France’s greatest talents whose works are considered a national treasure. At 60, he finds himself confronted by a vision of his younger self, prompting a meditation on memory, destiny, and the wonder threaded through his work.

Premiering at Cannes, the film represents the kind of sophisticated, festival-leaning European storytelling that too often goes undistributed in North America. Its blend of nostalgia, fantasy, and emotional depth makes it a gem that deserves recognition beyond the festival circuit.

A Chinese Ghost Story 2025

🇨🇳 China

This new animated adaptation revisits the iconic series that have seen countless sequel and remakes. From the first film directed by Tsui Hark to a live-action series, just what it offers is romance, horror, and supernatural intrigue. Just who loves whom more is the trope that gets explored in different ways.

With no marketing, inclujding a poster release, and it looking like vapourware, maybe it never saw release at all. The sources consulted for this entry are suspicously minimal, even when checking Chinese reports. Despite maybe being offered at the wrong time due to a competing work, this work did not get the love it deserves, and for long time fans, it still needs to be seen!

Strange Tales: Lan Ruo Temple

Curious Tales of a Temple Official Movie Poster🇨🇳 China

Inspired by Strange Tales of a Chinese Studio, this adaptation may not cover the full breadth of the anthology, but it captures some of its best-known stories. Paired with larger-scale works like A Chinese Ghost Story 2025, it highlights the range and ambition of contemporary Chinese animation.

Its absence from the American and Canadian markets reveals a recurring distribution gap: even studios with proven North American success — such as those behind Chang’an — still struggle to secure releases for follow-up projects.

Balentes

Balentes Movie Poster🇮🇹 Italy / 🇩🇪 Germany

Set in Sardinia in 1940, this painterly, somber film follows Ventura and Michele, two young boys who discover that a herd of local horses is being sold to the army. Driven by idealism and a fierce sense of honour — balentes means “bravery” in Sardinian — they plot to free the horses before they reach the battlefield.

Despite a strong presence at European festivals throughout the year, there is no confirmed North American release. It’s a familiar fate for smaller European animated features, particularly those that favour personal themes or painterly experimentation over commercial formulas.

New Animated Winter Holiday Specials for 2025

A fresh wave of animated holiday specials arrives for 2025, ranging from Disney’s return to Prep & Landing to Japan’s winter anime events and the BBC’s storybook charm. This year splits cleanly between North America’s glossy franchises and the more eclectic creations from the rest of the world. Here’s a look at the biggest new releases bringing warmth to the season.

Winter Animated Holiday SpecialsWhen the end of the year approaches, just what’s offered on television (or being streamed) is always a curious mix of comfort-food to get some folks in the mood for Deceember, and seasonal spectacle. Just whether these holiday specials are marketed for a specific reason or not (think Batman: TAS venture into the medium from decades ago), this year is no different.

Whether it’s about Yule, Winter Solstice or Christmas, this year’s offerings has enough to sate any taste. Here’s a roundup of this year’s brand-new animated or animated-adjacent winter specials. Please check your local listings for showtimes.

North America

Prep & Landing: The Snowball

Prep & Landing- The SnowballDisney brings back the elf-operative duo Wayne and Lanny for a new crisis at the North Pole. The unstable “Snowball Protocol” threatens the entire Christmas mission, forcing the pair into action. It’s classic Prep & Landing—spy comedy, festive warmth, and a lot of holiday mischief. This new 22-minute special is the first fresh Prep & Landing story since 2011, reuniting the original cast while adding a few new North Pole recruits to the team.

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