Zero
- 2010
- 13m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Born into a world of numbers, an oppressed zero discovers that through determination, courage, and love, nothing can be truly something.Born into a world of numbers, an oppressed zero discovers that through determination, courage, and love, nothing can be truly something.Born into a world of numbers, an oppressed zero discovers that through determination, courage, and love, nothing can be truly something.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 2 nominations total
Photos
Nick McKay
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (as Nicholas McKay)
Lisa Hill
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This animated short film takes the issues minorities face every day, excluded by things that have nothing to do with their very soul. The principle character is abused by his peers every day. The characters are made of yarn. The dominating class is pink while zero is shades of gray and black. While the story is quite simple, it sadly represents the misfortunes of birth.
only special. just special. impressive for idea, touching for story, great for final. and difficult for define. because all is well known and the film could be another manifesto for a noble cause. but it becomes, scene by scene, little more. the poetry, the voice , the references to situations from every day does it a good point of reflection. about small , poor people and realities. about love. about different and subtle form of revenge. nothing complicated. or new. an idea. work. puppets. and one of stories becoming great on the screen against the insignificant fact to be close near you in real life. so, few numbers. and Zero.
Zero is born into a world of strict social class and order, with him being born of the lowest denomination and thus destined for nothing. Oppressed, mocked and mistreated his whole life, Zero holds to the belief that somehow even he amount to something, even if mathematically it is impossible.
Although it ultimately has a message that is a bit clichéd and obvious, this short film is nicely paced to deliver it and has an engaging spin on the message thanks to the animation and the use of math throughout. The story sees yarn puppets with numbers on their chests going through life and we focus on a 0, who we see suffer and struggle with the system – not fighting it so much as being beaten by it. In telling the story it is never really funny but it does still manage to engage because the pacing of the telling is well done, with a steady tone delivered by the narration. Indeed McKay's steady and warm voice helps it a great deal, by gentling telling the tale with enough empathy that we feel for Zero, but not overdoing it to the extent of forcing the point.
The animation matches this as it is oddly satisfying to see the simple yarn figures move around within the world. The ability to play with the faces of the figures is really limited by the approach but the animators compensate this by taking their time and also working the body language and physical actions effectively, so we understand feelings even though they are harder to show. It is a slight film without a huge reveal or impact, but it seems to know this and the pacing and construct helps it in this regard, playing to its strengths and limiting its weaknesses so that it plays quite smart and satisfying.
Although it ultimately has a message that is a bit clichéd and obvious, this short film is nicely paced to deliver it and has an engaging spin on the message thanks to the animation and the use of math throughout. The story sees yarn puppets with numbers on their chests going through life and we focus on a 0, who we see suffer and struggle with the system – not fighting it so much as being beaten by it. In telling the story it is never really funny but it does still manage to engage because the pacing of the telling is well done, with a steady tone delivered by the narration. Indeed McKay's steady and warm voice helps it a great deal, by gentling telling the tale with enough empathy that we feel for Zero, but not overdoing it to the extent of forcing the point.
The animation matches this as it is oddly satisfying to see the simple yarn figures move around within the world. The ability to play with the faces of the figures is really limited by the approach but the animators compensate this by taking their time and also working the body language and physical actions effectively, so we understand feelings even though they are harder to show. It is a slight film without a huge reveal or impact, but it seems to know this and the pacing and construct helps it in this regard, playing to its strengths and limiting its weaknesses so that it plays quite smart and satisfying.
Zealous Creative is a LA based production company that makes ads, corporate videos and short films. The creative talent like the director of Zero hail from Australia.
Zero is a stop motion animation with yarn puppets with a message of rigid social structures particularly that of caste and the Untouchables.
The zero of our story is an untouchable. A nothing who will never rise from the bottom. He will always amount to zilch.
At school his life is tormented because he has a zero stamped on his chest. Others have numbers from 1 to 10. A number 1 may just be a lowly cleaner but even that amounts to some kind of ranking denoting a status.
Zero struggles through life and into adulthood but is determined to survive the system knowing that he will never beat the system. He meets a female Zero and suddenly feels his life has meaning.
Even though their love is forbidden in such a society they persevere to make it through together.
The film has nice simple but smooth animation with clear cut narration. I would like to have known more of this society like where do Zeros come from? I guess there is only so much you can show in a 10 minute short but it is a thoughtful film on social status discrimination.
Zero is a stop motion animation with yarn puppets with a message of rigid social structures particularly that of caste and the Untouchables.
The zero of our story is an untouchable. A nothing who will never rise from the bottom. He will always amount to zilch.
At school his life is tormented because he has a zero stamped on his chest. Others have numbers from 1 to 10. A number 1 may just be a lowly cleaner but even that amounts to some kind of ranking denoting a status.
Zero struggles through life and into adulthood but is determined to survive the system knowing that he will never beat the system. He meets a female Zero and suddenly feels his life has meaning.
Even though their love is forbidden in such a society they persevere to make it through together.
The film has nice simple but smooth animation with clear cut narration. I would like to have known more of this society like where do Zeros come from? I guess there is only so much you can show in a 10 minute short but it is a thoughtful film on social status discrimination.
8 out of 10? Not for this primitive simplicity. 6 out of 10? Not for this sentimental absurdity. 4 out of 10? For furry balls and more-than-one-hundreth-times-already-seen cliché? At least the animation is nice and movie points out that modern society still has problems.
Anyway, it's just mediocre SJW story reducing complex reality into simple good-bad concept, with ill-concieved resolution. I do agree with the main idea (i.e. don't discriminate others), but here the baby was thrown out with the bathwater.
Anyway, it's just mediocre SJW story reducing complex reality into simple good-bad concept, with ill-concieved resolution. I do agree with the main idea (i.e. don't discriminate others), but here the baby was thrown out with the bathwater.
Did you know
- TriviaZero has been translated into over 40 languages.
- GoofsAll entries contain spoilers
- Crazy creditsAt the end, "The Beginning" is written across the screen.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- A$40,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 13m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1 / (high definition)
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content