Ana Y Bruno - !!exclusive!!
The color palette is deliberately muted. The real world is painted in washed-out earth tones and institutional grays, while the internal worlds of the characters explode into deep crimsons, indigos, and golds. There is a clear homage to Francisco de Goya’s "Black Paintings" in the depiction of the monsters, as well as a touch of Tim Burton’s gothic whimsy. The animation is not always fluid (a common constraint of the Mexican industry budget), but what it lacks in technical polish, it compensates for in art direction . Every frame looks like an illustration from a dark, forgotten children’s book.
