Screened as part of NZIFF 2022

Perlimps 2022

Directed by Alê Abreu Square Eyes

Two secret agents from enemy Kingdoms are sent to a world on the brink of a terrible war where they have one important mission: to find the Perlimps, mysterious creatures who can ultimately bring peace.

Aug 06

The Civic

Brazil In Portuguese with English subtitles
76 minutes DCP

Director, Screenplay, Editor

Producers

Laís Bodanzky
,
Luiz Bolognesi
,
Ernesto Soto
,
Alê Abreu

Animation

Alê Abreu
,
Sandro Cleuzo

Music

André Hosoi O Grivo

Voices

Lorenzo Tarantelli (Claé)
,
Giulia Benite (Bruô)
,
Stênio Garcia (John Ovenbird)
,
Rosa Rosah (mother)
,
Nill Marcondes (father)

Festivals

Annecy 2022

Elsewhere

Acclaimed Brazilian writer-director Alê Abreu, director of Oscar-nominated The Boy and the World (NZIFF 2013), has created a dazzling animated love letter for all-ages, encouraging an awareness of social and ecological issues, and a taste for art, while delivering a film of enormous artistic ambition and visual complexity.

Alê’s unique animated world presents a mythical prism of kaleidoscopic colour – a dense enchanted impressionist forest, created through painterly tropical tones. It’s breathtaking. Feisty and smart, Claé and Bruó, enemy agents from the Kingdoms of the Sun and the Moon, live in a world of these intricate backgrounds, all painted by hand. Initially combative and competitive, these plucky explorers reluctantly band together in a bid to save their precious woodland, and the Perlimps, from the Giants surrounding the forest.

Nine years in the making, Perlimps has landed here and now to offer a timely allegorical perspective on the state of our world, particularly the climate crisis and armed conflicts – providing an ideal way for kids to unpack these big issues. What at first appears to be a straightforward narrative adventure story, perfect for even the smallest of audience members, suddenly offers up layers of meaning and a profound philosophical statement about guardianship, the unsurmountable walls between warring ideologies, and growing up and finding your voice. — Nic Marshall

Recommended for ages 7+