The Violinist Singapore animated period drama wins Annecy festival


The Violinist, a hand-drawn feature from Singapore, has won the Cristal Award for best film at the 2026 Annecy International Animation Film Festival.

The period drama from directors Ervin Han and Raúl García traces the history of Singapore and Malaya, from 1929 to the present, as it follows two childhood friends, both gifted violinists, who lives are torn apart by war and the Japanese occupation.

The film is the first Singaporean feature to play in competition at Annecy. The Violinist was produced by Singapore’s Robot Playground Media, with TV ON Producciones in Spain, and Italy’s Altri Occhi. France tv distribution is handling worldwide sales.

Annecy’s Jury Award, as well as the Audience prize, went to Iron Boy, the debut feature from French animator Louis Clichy, who previously worked on Pixar hits Wall-E and Up.

The film follows Christophe, an 11-year-old boy growing up on a struggling farm in rural France in the 1980s. Making matters worse, Christophe has a spinal condition that requires him to wear a massive metal back brace 24/7, turning him into a pre-teen metal monster. Iron Boy premiered in Cannes’ Un Certain Regard sidebar, where it was picked up by Sony Pictures Classics.

The top honor, the Grande Prix, for best film in Annecy’s Contrechamp sidebar section, went to Blaise, an off-beat dramedy from French directors Dimitri Planchon and Jean-Paul Guigue, a feature length extension of their Arte TV series. The quirky feature, about a shy 16-year-old and his dysfunctional family, unveiled in Cannes’ ACID line-up this year. Produced by KG Productions, Blaise is being sold worldwide by Best Friend Forever.

The Contrechamp Jury Award went to A New Dawn, a visually striking anime from director Yoshitoshi Shinomiya, which premiered in Berlin earlier this year.

The Cristal for best television production went to pre-school show The Great Dreamscape from French director Rémi Durin. Takopi’s Original Sin from Japan’s Shinya Iino won the Jury Award for best series and the audience award went to hand drawn French series The Broos from director David Mirailles.

The awards were handed out at a ceremony in Annecy Saturday night. The festivities took a sombre turn when festival artistic director Marcel Jean paid tribute to Luis de la Rosa, a Mexican illustrator and animator who worked on such features as Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse and Space Jam: A New Legacy, who was killed in a train accident in Annecy Wednesday evening.

Full list of 2026 Annecy Winners below.

Cristal Award for Best Feature Film

The Violinist (La Violonista), directors: Ervin Han, Raúl García, Singapore, Spain, Italy

Jury Award

Iron Boy, directors: Louis Clichy, Eddy, France, Belgium

Paul Grimault Award

Decorado, director: Alberto Vázquez, Spain

Contrechamp Grand Prix

Blaise, directors: Dimitri Planchon, Jean-Paul Guigue, France

Contrechamp Jury Award

A New Dawn, director: Yoshitoshi Shinomiya, Japan, France

Gan Foundation Award for Distribution

Iron Boy, directors: Louis Clichy, Eddy, France, Belgium

Short Film Cristal

Paper Trail, director: Don Hertzfeldt, United States

Short Film Jury Award

God Is Shy, director: Jocelyn Charles, France

Jean-Luc Xiberras Award for a First Film

Please, director: Anna Mantzaris, Sweden, France, Czech Republic, Norway, Finland

Off-Limits Award

Core Dump, director: Alona Rodeh, Germany

Audience Award for a Feature Film

Iron Boy, directors: Louis Clichy, Eddy, France, Belgium

Audience Award for a Short Film

God Is Shy, director: Jocelyn Charles, France

Cristal Award, TV Production

The Great Dreamscape, director: Rémi Durin, Belgium, France

Jury Award, TV Series

Takopi’s Original Sin, director: Shinya Iino, Japan

TV Jury Award, TV Special

Song of the Storms, director: Caroline Attia, France, Belgium

Audience Award, TV Production

The Broos, director: David Mirailles, France

Cristal Award, Commissioned Film

Unloved, directors: Victor Caire, Lucas Navarro, Théophile Dufresne, France

Jury Award, Commissioned Film

Eco Beat, directors: Eva Bienert, Max Mörtl, Austria, Germany

Lotte Reiniger Award

Gently, director: Jamaica Kindlová, Czech Republic

Jury Award, Graduation Film

Dying Embers, director: Léa Pulini, France

Cristal Award, Graduation Film

Ball Face, director: Laurence Thérien, United Kingdom

Cristal Award, Best Immersive Work

A Long Goodbye, directors: Kate Voet, Victor Maes, Belgium, Luxembourg, Netherlands


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