The Box Office is open from 15:45 till 19:00 (will open in 02:03).

Dandelion's Odyssey Planètes

Momoko Seto / France, Belgium / 2025 / 76 min / No dialogue / 8+

Somewhere between computer animation, macro photography, and time-lapse footage, a gentle narrative unfolds about a world after the end of the world.

directed by Momoko Seto, written by Momoko Seto, Alain Layrac, Mariette Désert, music composers Quentin Sirjacq, Nicolas Becker, editing Michel Klochendler, sound design Nicolas Becker, production design Momoko Seto, Nils Dupré, animation supervisor Guionne Leroy, producers Emmanuel-Alain Raynal, Pierre Baussaron, Emmanuel Chaumet, production Miyu Productions, Ecce Films, Umedia, distribution in Slovenia Cenex / Fivia

festivals, awards Annecy 2025, Cannes FF 2025, Festival Européen du Film Fantastique de Strasbourg 2025, Pingyao IFF 2025, Toronto IFF 2025, Festival de Noveau Cinéma Montreal 2025

IMDb

Photos

Four dandelion seeds, catapulted from planet Earth after a nuclear apocalypse, search for a new home in the stratosphere. When the migrant seeds are sucked into a black hole, they find themselves on a planet both ominous and unusually beautiful. The seeds travel on slugs, flee from voracious floating tadpoles, and search for land where they can take root.

Director's Statement
To create each image in Planets, I use a variety of techniques ranging from time-lapse and hyper slow motion, to ultra-macro, stackshot, and robotics. Time-lapse is, precisely, the art of compressing time. It involves filming a very slow natural phenomenon, often imperceptible to the naked eye, over a given period. Speeding up the footage, we can “finally” see the invisible. Hyper slow motion, on the other hand, is the art of unfolding time. Like time lapse, the (phantom) camera captures very rapid movements and breaks them down. The subject filmed thus becomes “something else”. Here, technique is not just a tool to enhance what we see, it reveals what lies on the other side of the visible world.

[On making dandelion achenes endearing] 
Emotion is truly the key. It was essential that the 4 achenes convey their emotions in every situation. To achieve this, the first stage was meticulous screenwriting to allow them to express fear, joy, and sadness. The second phase was the animation work, with the Belgian team, orchestrated by the head animator Guionne Leroy. We worked on every minute detail that will help convey these emotions: hair-like dandelion clocks wilting, variations in leaps, the more or less lively movements of the body, etc.

I hope the audience leaves Dandelion's Odyssey with more than just the knowledge of what an achene is. That they understand that nature is not a backdrop to be trampled on, not something separate from the self. That all the little things surrounding us are the true actors in an action film. That a growing plant can be so beautiful it might make you cry. We are all a force of nature, bound to one another – together, we make up our planet.

info
Seto’s team employed an intricate blend of time-lapse and ultra–slow motion macro footage shot across Japan, France, and Iceland, StackShot imaging, and robotic motion rigs with 17 cameras running simultaneously to capture miniature plant sets in studios. The result is a visually transcendent hybrid of live-action and computer-generated compositing that expands the boundaries of genre and animated storytelling.

Kinodvor. Newsletter.

Join our mailing list and receive details of upcoming films and events!

What's On

Toy story 5 Toy story 5

McKenna Harris, Andrew Stanton

Sunday, 05. 07. 2026 / 16:45 / Main Hall

Buzz, Woody, Jessie and the rest of the gang’s jobs are challenged when they’re introduced to what kids are obsessed with today….electronics! 

Third World Treći svijet

Arsen Oremović

Sunday, 05. 07. 2026 / 18:00 / Small Hall

Third World is more than just a documentary about Haustor, the legendary Zagreb band that left its mark on the former Yugoslavia’s music scene. It is the story of two creative opposites: Darko Rundek and Srđan Sacher. Through candid conversations, a studio reunion, and a wealth of archival material, the film reveals how the two artists’ sensitivity to the magic of everyday life once united their creative worlds – creating a third.

Grand Tour Grand Tour

Miguel Gomes

Sunday, 05. 07. 2026 / 19:00 / Main Hall

Portuguese film-maker Miguel Gomes (Taboo, Arabian Nights) takes us on a dreamlike journey through the past and present with a turbulent love story set in colonial Asia in the early 20th century. The film, which combines melancholic drama and screwball comedy, won the Best Director award at Cannes.