La Casa Lobo tells a story of Maria, a German speaking girl who lives in a German colony. She is sweet and innocent. But she was sentenced to 100 days of solitary confinement because she didn't take care of her pigs properly. In a fit of rebellious spirit, she runs away from the colony with her two pigs to a small cabin in the woods.
La Casa Lobo takes a lot from fairytale elements - from Red Ridinghood to Three Little Pigs. But its representation is nothing but fairytale. The stop motion animation, combining painting and sculpture using clay, paper and other materials, is constantly morphing into something else ingeniously within the confined space. And the images are not pretty but almost nightmarish.
As the pigs grow up to be pair of brown children, we see that Maria is not the benevolent protector she portrays herself as. Use of German and Spanish are also interesting, highlighting the dynamics of master/servant, colonizer/locals. Endlessly inventive, La Casa Lobo is one of those animations for adults- dark and gloomy, pointy in its politics and mesmerizing in its craft. One of the year's best.