The Secret Adventures of Tom Thumb uses stop-motion animation in ways that I have never seen before to create scenes of epic discomfort and fear. Live actors are combined in scenes with clay-mation figures, which causes an uncomfortable, almost anxiety driven performance by the actors, who move with a lurching stagger and speak with a mumbling coo. It took dozens of hours to animate the live actors for seconds of film—an amazing feat! But it's not just the way the live actors are animated that makes this a visual triumph. Every scene is covered in tiny animated insects, the walls seem to breathe, and the earth to shake. The sets are awe-inspiring, to say the least.
With a score by Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones and clear inspiration from Jan Svankmajer's stop-motion classic's and Jeunet & Caro's film Delicatessen, writer and director Dave Borthwick has created a unique and fantastical world all his own. This touching yet tragic tale is one I will watch over and over.




