A boy with an active imagination faces his fears on an unforgettable journey through the night with his new friend: a giant, smiling creature named Dark.A boy with an active imagination faces his fears on an unforgettable journey through the night with his new friend: a giant, smiling creature named Dark.A boy with an active imagination faces his fears on an unforgettable journey through the night with his new friend: a giant, smiling creature named Dark.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 16 nominations total
- Orion
- (voice)
- Dark
- (voice)
- Adult Orion
- (voice)
- Hypatia
- (voice)
- Light
- (voice)
- Sleep
- (voice)
- Quiet
- (voice)
- Orion's Mom
- (voice)
- Orion's Dad
- (voice)
- Tycho
- (voice)
- Sweet Dreams
- (voice)
- Lisa
- (voice)
- Mrs. Spinoza
- (voice)
Featured reviews
This is based on a children's book. Charlie Kaufman is one of the writers and seemed to have injected his brand of existential dread. I love some of the ideas, but this may not be for the littlest ones in the audience. It's interesting that the Dark is such a friendly character. I would have thought that it should be a scary character at the start and Orion learns to see its beauty later.
Jacob Tremblay is almost too good at portraying Orion's fear of everything early on but that actually makes his newfound love of adventure all the more enjoyable. Paul Walter Hauser makes Dark so loveable, turning a concept that's scary to so many into a gentle giant with his own fears and doubts.
Sean Charmatz's direction keeps things moving and manages to find an animation style that feels fairly original and more importantly, really nice to look at. In a perfectly fitting fashion, its greatest moments of visual beauty come from the scenes at night, which is essentially the majority of the film.
Every part where she appeared the story came to a grinding halt in my opinion and it started jumping everywhere.
The end tied it together quite nicely but it didn't make up for the jumping up until then. And the appearance of the new character spoiled the rest of the movie. If that character and setting had been introduced from the beginning I would have felt differently about it.
So all in all. It is a nice movie with a great story and great potential about facing your fears but it could have been soooo much better.
The sudden non-linear nature of it might seem jarring, but trust me - stick with it - it makes beautiful sense at the end. Voice acting was on point too... not celebrity ridden like Dreamworks films tend to be.
Loved it (and my kids did too).
Did you know
- TriviaThe film portrays Orion as being eleven or twelve years old. In the book, he was closer to six.
- Quotes
Orion: In real life, when you're dead, you're dead. The realization that there's no way around it terrifies me. I try to imagine what death is like. I've concluded it's like nothing. This is black and silent, not nothing. Blackness and silence is something. Nothing is perhaps the one unimaginable thing.
- Crazy creditsThe opening DreamWorks Animation logo appears as a drawing, and has a scared Orion appear on the Moon and draw a light switch to change the dark background to bright white.
- ConnectionsFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Best Netflix Releases of 2024 (2024)
- SoundtracksApocalypse Dreams
Written by Kevin Parker, Jay Watson
Performed by Tame Impala
Courtesy of Modular Recordings/Universal Music Australia Pty. Ltd.
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Orión y la oscuridad
- Filming locations
- Paris, France(Studio)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1