Tag Archives: Southeast Asia Animation

‘The Violinist’: Singapore’s First Real Oscar Hope?

Singapore just made animation history. The Violinist, a hand-drawn feature more than a decade in the making, has won the Cristal for Best Feature Film — the top honour — at the 2026 Annecy International Animation Film Festival, the most prestigious event on the animation calendar. It is the first Singaporean feature ever to compete at Annecy, and it walked away as the biggest winner of them all.

The Violinist teaser — via CartoonBrew on YouTube

What is The Violinist?

The Violinist is a sweeping, hand-drawn period drama that traces the intertwined history of Singapore and Malaya from 1929 to the present day. At its heart are two childhood friends and gifted violinists, Fei and Kai, whose lives are torn apart by World War II and the Japanese Occupation — one drawn into the Resistance in Malaya, the other left to survive in occupied Singapore. Across the decades that follow, the story follows a musician’s search for a lost friend, and a shared dream of one day performing a two-violin sonata together.

It is a proudly local story told at a scale Singapore animation has never attempted before. The film is produced by home-grown studio Robot Playground Media, in co-production with Spain’s TV ON Producciones and Italy’s Altri Occhi, with France tv distribution handling worldwide sales.

Fei and Kai playing violin together on a lantern-lit street in The Violinist

Image courtesy of Robot Playground Media

A decade in the making — from an SG50 short

The Violinist didn’t appear out of nowhere. It grew out of “The Violin” (小提琴), an award-winning animated short Robot Playground Media made in 2015 for the Singapore Memory Project, marking the nation’s 50th birthday. That small, personal film about music and wartime resilience struck a chord, and over the following decade it was reworked and expanded into a full feature — Singapore’s first animated feature in close to 15 years.

Directing duties are shared between two very different talents. Ervin Han, co-founder of Robot Playground Media, is a veteran of Singapore’s animation scene making his feature directorial debut. His co-director is Raúl García, a Spanish animation veteran who spent years in Disney’s animation department on classics including Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King and Hercules — a lecturing stint at Singapore’s LaSalle College of the Arts first brought him to the city and to this project.

A young violinist practises indoors in a scene from The Violinist

Image courtesy of Robot Playground Media

Two trophies at Annecy, including the music prize

The Violinist didn’t just take the Cristal. It also picked up the SACEM Award for Best Original Soundtrack — a fitting double for a film built around music. The score is the work of Golden Horse Award-winning Singaporean composer Ricky Ho, in collaboration with Spanish composer Isabel Latorre, while the lead violin performances heard on the soundtrack were played by acclaimed Singaporean violinist Joy Yong.

Winning two awards on debut, in competition, at Annecy is a genuine landmark for the region. Speaking after the win, director Ervin Han said the recognition was “beyond anything we imagined” when the journey began. In an interview with Variety, Han framed the achievement as bigger than one country, noting the film “isn’t simply representing Singapore, it’s representing Southeast Asia” — a part of the world that, in his words, has “historically had fewer opportunities to tell its own stories” at this scale.

The Violinist team accepting the Cristal award on stage at Annecy 2026

Photo courtesy of Robot Playground Media

Could this be Singapore’s first true Oscar contender?

Here’s the part that has film watchers excited: Singapore has never received an Academy Award nomination in any category, ever. An Annecy Cristal is exactly the kind of pedigree that turns a small national film into an awards-season talking point, and The Violinist is now being openly discussed as the country’s best shot at Best Animated Feature in years.

There’s a catch, though. To qualify for the Oscars, a film generally needs a qualifying theatrical run — and as of its Annecy win, The Violinist did not yet have a US distributor or a US release date locked in. A high-profile Cristal win helps enormously on that front, but the road to the 2027 ceremony runs straight through the crowded field of big-studio animation. Nothing is guaranteed. Still, for a hand-drawn Southeast Asian story with no franchise behind it, simply being in the conversation is remarkable.

When can you watch it in Singapore?

The Violinist had its world premiere at Annecy, which ran from 21 to 27 June 2026, ahead of a planned international theatrical rollout. A Singapore cinema release is reported to be slated for September 2026 — so local audiences shouldn’t have long to wait to see it on the big screen. No confirmed streaming details have been announced yet, so for now this is one to catch in theatres.

Executive producer Justin Deimen called the film “a proud global co-production” — and that’s exactly what makes this such a milestone. A story rooted in Singapore’s own wartime memory, made by a Singapore studio, has just been crowned the best animated feature in the world. Whatever happens at the Oscars, that’s already history.

For more animation and anime coverage, check out our Manga & Anime section, and keep an eye on Annecy’s official page for the film as its release rolls out.