Lili is three. Lili is too small for many things. This however, will certainly not stop her from trying. Lili likes being the boss, and she wants to do so much more than she can. She wants to be big enough to decide EVERYTHING. Like when to go to bed, what to eat and what to wear. And when she does not get her way, she gets cross. But mostly Lili likes to have fun and play with her dog Bow-wow.
'Lili' is a selection of three animated films from the Lili series: 'Lili Loves Food'; 'Lili Brushes Her Teeth'; 'Lili Has a Guest'
Official Selection Berlinale 2016 - Generation KPlus
Lili is three. Lili is too small for many things. This however, will certainly not stop her from trying.
Lili masters brushing her teeth on her own by closing herself away in the bathroom together with her dog Bow-wow. She gets the toothpaste out and thoroughly brushes everybody and everything in sight…except for her own teeth.
Lili is three. Lili is too small for many things. This however, will certainly not stop her from trying.
Like all three year olds Lili sometimes gets cross. Very cross!
Lili is three. Lili is too small for many things. This however, will certainly not stop her from trying.
Lili is expecting a friend. And not just anyone. It’s her best friend, Molly! The joy of expectation, however, can be greater than the get-together itself. Two wills of iron and a limited selection of toys and biscuits can lead to conflict. But then there is always next time to look forward to.
Lili is three. Lili is too small for many things. This however, will certainly not stop her from trying.
Lili loves colours. Lili knows all the colours.
Lili is three. Lili is too small for many things. This however, will certainly not stop her from trying.
Lili loves food, but some food is better than others – and if you have to get through a whole lot of tomatoes, broccoli, potatoes and sausages before the dessert, well, then it is good that Lili's dog Bow-wow is hungry too. Because Lili loves dessert.
A young boy releases a cloud into a church and it builds to a storm. Elwood’s Ark is a poem that challenges notions of religion and redemption. It traces the journey of the water we drink, back 13.8 billion years through time and space to the beginning of the Universe.
Spoken in the words of a child, the film warns of a coming apocalypse. It is an apocalypse of our own making - an apocalypse in which divine intervention will not play a part, and only we ourselves may prevent.
Tales From The Clock Tower tells the history of Herne Bay's clock tower by story tellers granddad Sully and Nippy the Crab to a very young Sonny the Seagull who is learning to fly, and tells how Herne Bay cam to have its very own clock tower.