Ana Y Bruno !full!
Together with Bruno and other eccentric entities (including a neurotic pink elephant and an obsessive-compulsive robot), Ana escapes the asylum to find her father and save her mother from a dangerous medical procedure. The film is noted for its "dark tone," often compared to films like Coraline or the works of Tim Burton, as it uses its fantastical characters to illustrate the complexities of adult struggles like depression and alcoholism. Production History
News spread in the town like a pleasant rumor. People began finding things they had misplaced for years: a photograph glued to a rain-streaked bench, an apology written on a bakery receipt, a poem tucked into a hollowed-out loaf. Life inched toward small reconciliations — a silence softened, a hand reached across a formica table. Ana y Bruno
stands as a daring piece of cinema that respects its young audience enough to show them the shadows. It suggests that while the "monsters" born of trauma are scary, they can also be allies in the quest for truth and healing. In a landscape often dominated by sanitized family features, Carlos Carrera’s work is a haunting reminder of the complexity of the child’s mind. Together with Bruno and other eccentric entities (including