Short stop motion for the German TV youth magazine Dr. Mag. Studio Film Bilder produced 18 different shorts, each time with a different director who interpreted a given subject in his personal style. This time Jürgen Haas dealt with spring, puberty and first love.

A woman’s face disappearing behind, and emerging from, a pair of hands. Flashing lights. An empty bu...

In a fantasy world, a griffin embraces his fate and goes on an epic journey to find a legendary crea...

Outside a village in deep snow, there lived a boy named Kanta and his grandpa. One day, the grandpa ...

The boy has longed to visit the northern country and experience the beautiful mysteries of nature th...

In a thick forest full of giant trees, a boy lives modestly with his family. One day, a guardian of ...

The Fantastic Mr. Fox, bored with his current life, plans a heist against the three local farmers. T...

Follow a day of the life of Big Buck Bunny when he meets three bullying rodents: Frank, Rinky, and G...

Arthur Fol attempts to get Peg's second hair back from the planet Ashlar by using his new invention,...
One of three short animated films based on the comic strip.
One of three short animated films based on the comic strip.

In the midst of societal conflict in the futuristic city of Metropolis, Kenichi and his uncle Shunsa...

An authorized stop-motion sequel to Jörg Buttgereit's 1993 movie "Schramm", called scenes from the A...

Abandon by her family for being different, Sirena lives alone and hopeless for a future. Until, when...

Inspector Stephan Derrick has made it: the crime rate in Munich has fallen to the 0% mark. His prest...

The opener (and only episode, later restored as a short) for an unfinished third series finds a grou...
Catching fish on the North Pole can be challenging. Some have more luck than others. The unfortunate...

In an alternative Victorian Age Gotham City, Batman begins his war on crime while he investigates a ...

Animated with crayon drawings, Refrigerator Art is a series of shorts based on the adventures of a l...

David Lipson hints disturbingly at the potential for childhood cruelty in this technically ingenious...