Ana Y Bruno | LEGIT |

But this is where the film diverges from the standard rescue narrative.

When the first trailer for Ana y Bruno dropped in 2017, social media went into a frenzy. To the untrained eye, the vibrant, swirling colors and bizarre creatures looked like a Studio Ghibli film on an unexpected psychedelic trip. But for Mexican audiences and animation connoisseurs, the film represented something much deeper: the revival of adult-oriented, culturally specific animation in Latin America. Ana y Bruno

In a cinematic landscape saturated with sequels and safe bets, Ana y Bruno stands as a flawed, beautiful, and terrifying monument to what happens when artists are given absolute freedom to turn their pain into art. But this is where the film diverges from

Directed by Carlos Carrera (famous for the Oscar-nominated live-action short El Crimen del Padre Amaro ), Ana y Bruno is not your typical Saturday morning cartoon. It is a complex, visually stunning, and emotionally dense psychological drama disguised as a fantasy adventure. But for Mexican audiences and animation connoisseurs, the

Find it. Stream it. Turn up the volume. Break the silence.