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How The Silent Masterpiece Flow Made Oscar History in Animated Storytelling

Some animated features are more than crafting a story; they are more about aesthetically resonating with the audience so

How The Silent Masterpiece Flow Made Oscar History in Animated Storytelling

Some animated features are more than crafting a story; they are more about aesthetically resonating with the audience so that they stay in their memories even if they are 60 years old. Flow did something unique in this regard. 

Flow made Oscar history and changed animation forever without saying a word. It has opened new horizons and broken new grounds for other animators from the same country and even others who think wordless animation can create magic.

The article will explore how the silent masterpiece Flow made Oscar history in the animated genre and how it stood different from other nominations in the same category of Oscars 2025. 

A wordless world, universally understood

Who could have thought that a pure visual narrative with zilch dialogues could become a brilliant recipe for an Oscar-winning animated film? The film’s approach to storytelling speaks volumes without dialogue. 

If we look at other nominations in the same category, they are different.

  • Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl, directed by Merlin Crossingham, Nick Park (Aardman Animations)
  • Inside Out 2, directed by Kelsey Mann (Disney/Pixar)
  • Memoir of a Snail, directed by Adam Elliot (IFC Films)
  • The Wild Robot, directed by Chris Sanders (Universal/Dreamworks)
 
 
 
 
 
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Flow is different from all of these as it thrives on the idea that silence is more powerful than words. It enhanced its storytelling with eloquently expressed emotions that left no need for any conversation. It is like making use of animal and nature sounds only, which is casting the animals for the film apparently [ha!]. 

One of the powerful scenes that demonstrates such emotional depth is the encounter between the cat and the whale. While talking to Gints Zilbalodis, the film’s director, The Film Stage revealed that the cat’s initial fear of the whale was masterfully portrayed, which later transformed into an unforgettable friendship. 

Zilbalodis explained, 

“The whale kind of represents the fears the cat has, but it kind of accepts them and accepts this intimacy with the whale, which is why I wanted to put it there.” [Source]

How Flow made Oscar history and took a giant step for animation? A first for Latvia

Flow is directed by Gints Zilbalodis under Janus Films/Sideshow. It is Latvia’s first Oscar nomination and win that makes it a stunning rise for the Latvian animation industry. 

Being the first Oscar is significant enough for Latvia as the country’s growing emergence in the global film scene is loudly evident. It even shatters all the boundaries created by the limitations of the industry since it did not use highly paid animation software, did not require a high budget, and did not feel the need for dialogues to make it a success. 

It is a proof that creativity and artistry are not chained by these barriers, showing a strong potential for independent animation with free open-source tools like Blender. It wasn’t anything new for Zilbalodis as he did something almost impossible before with his debut animated feature, Away (2019).

Zilbalodis is a Latvian director who began filmmaking at a young age. He used to create his own shorts, and that is how the 100 percent Rotten Tomatoes scorer, Away, was created entirely by himself. The film even won the Best Feature Film Contrechamp Award at the Annecy Film Festival

The Latvian film industry is smaller as compared to the rest around the world, despite that, Flow earned an Oscar, a Golden Globe, and an Annie Award for its vibrant animation, an emotional journey that gained international recognition by defying boundaries. 

Just like the Latvian animation industry, the Chinese animation industry took flights to great heights with Ne Zha 2. Read here how it became a Disney smashing blockbuster with worldwide records!

Crafted with passion, not dollars

The quiet revolution that swept all the previously held notions about big budgets, big box office hits is named as Flow. It started with a small budget of $3.4 million and sold for more than $36 million worldwide, till March 17 reports, as per Variety

It came purely out of Blender, an open-source 3D software that rendered gobsmacking stuff from the animated film industry. 

It is not about making fantasy films like The Lion King, either animated or live-action; it is about utilizing a considerable degree of creative freedom that made Zilbalodis and his film Flow limitless. 

The DIY ethics and artistic dedication behind Flow’s creation is nothing short of animation prowess. Giving them a humanly touch with animation style was not in the director’s plan. He wanted to leave certain things to the audience’s interpretations, which made the meager budget film even more fascinating. 

Have a look at behind-the-scenes DIY for the film:

Themes that transcend language

Flow is about a solitary animal who is deprived of its home after a great flood and finds refuge on a boat with other animals. The cat has to overcome its own differences with different animal species and work together as a team. It is a story of survival in a post-apocalyptic world that gives the director a chance to keep the animals as they are.

The film uses a variety of animals without a single word uttered that gave Zilbalodis an edge to capitalize on their emotions as he wanted. Why, out of all the animals, did the cat take the center stage?

In a world where destruction took over, animals were distressed, and cats are often perceived by people in different terms. A superstition about black cats exists and otherwise, they have kept black cats as pets in their homes. 

Zilbalodis loved that people saw it in distinct ways and “that’s part of what makes cinema special”. Hence, the world-building in the film needed to be kept realistic as it showed what the cat saw.

No skyscrapers or modern buildings were shown, as the environment spoke for itself. Besides, the feelings of animals were the highlight, not the surroundings. The cat and other animals needed to feel and build their own world around that.

That is how the themes of survival companionship, nature vs. disaster were explored. The strategy clicked perfectly well with the current environmental and social climate concerns. Key themes of the film are:

  • Post-apocalyptic survival
  • Inter-species collaboration
  • Fear of the unknown
  • Environmental catastrophe
  • Emotional communication without words
  • Nature as both a threat and sanctuary 

The director disclosed that his own studio was flooded that year, and Spain was dealing with severe flooding when he traveled after the film was completed. Clearly, an environmental message was conveyed on the nail. 

Critical and cultural impact

Let’s have a look at the acclaim it received from some of the critics:

  • A cat, a dog, and a capybara embark on an epic adventure in this earnest and refreshingly unconventional animated film- The New York Times
  • Flow has an exciting spontaneity as if truly anything could happen. And what it ultimately does is epic and emotional- Mashable
  • Its narrative clarity makes its fable seem timeless while innovating and expanding the visual immersion of its medium- Roger Ebert

The cultural impact that it has created by being not only a climate change movie and animal features or emotions, but Flow also highlights that success can be achieved with small steps.

It has created an influence on independent as well as future filmmakers that anything is possible with a singular vision, passion, and persistence. An impact can be made easily without massive studio resources.

It is a new cultural learning for them that storytelling can transcend language barriers and vivid visual storytelling with evocative sounds is a thing! A trend that is here to stay!

In an Oscar acceptance speech, Zilbalodis said, 

“I’m really moved by the warm reception our film has had…and I hope that it will open doors to independent animation filmmakers around the world.” [Source]

Conclusion: A Flow that won’t stop

Silence wins gold. Flow became an Oscar triumph, leaving behind the animation powerhouses like Disney and DreamWorks waiting in the mere nominations category. The journey of survival and trust made it to the finish line gloriously. 

Every emotion is expressed through movement, color, and atmosphere. With fluid animation and sharp visuals, an award-winning cinematic experience isn’t inconceivable. 

It’s a cultural and creative milestone that Flow will continue to retain as a legacy. It’s majorly compared to Noah’s Ark story, but here, there are only animals, who appear more real than humans. Their adventure gives authenticity, mingling with some moments of delight and danger, together making something powerful that needs no boundaries for understanding true emotions.

Genre: Animation, animal adventure, survival, family, fantasy 

IMDb rating: 7.9

Rotten Tomatoes: 97 percent on Tomatometer (critics’ score) and 98 percent on Popcornmeter

Director: Giants Zilbalodis

Writer: Giants Zilbalodis

Producers: Matiss Kaza, Gregory Zalcman, Ron Dyens

Release date: November 22, 2024

Movie runtime: 1 hour 24 minutes 

Have you watched Flow? How did you like it? Share your thoughts in the comments below.  

About Author

Madiha Ali

Madiha Ali loves writing about entertainment and has an experience of more than five years in the said niche. She has previously written for Show Snob, Tea and Banter which were FanSided’s well-known websites, The Irish Insider, etc. Having a keen eye for a specific niche, she likes to write critically and sometimes infuse her personal reflection on how she felt about a show or movie. Apart from this, you can find her watching movies, seasons, reading other entertainment-related articles, and of course, loads and loads of books.

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