‘We Are Aliens,’ Cannes, Annecy Buzz Title, Sells Wide Across Asia (EXCLUSIVE)
Paris-based sales company Charades has closed a raft of Asian deals on Kohei Kadowaki’s animated feature ‘We Are Aliens’ ahead of its Annecy International Animation Film Festival premiere in Competiti
Paris-based sales company Charades has closed a raft of Asian deals on Kohei Kadowaki’s animated feature ‘We Are Aliens’ ahead of its Annecy Internati
Read Full Story at Variety →The buzz surrounding *We Are Aliens* ahead of its Annecy premiere isn’t just a triumph for its Paris-based sales agency, Charades—it signals a quiet but significant shift in how Asian markets are engaging with international animation. Historically, Asian territories have prioritized Western studio productions or local content, often treating foreign animated films as niche or secondary. Yet the rapid acquisition of this 3D-featured debut by Kohei Kadowaki—without the backing of a major studio—suggests a growing appetite for original, culturally hybrid storytelling that doesn’t conform to the usual anime or Disney-inspired formulas. Kadowaki’s film, while still in its first feature outing, taps into a broader trend: the global fragmentation of animation as a medium. No longer just a tool for children’s entertainment or genre pastiche, animation is increasingly used to explore complex themes—identity, belonging, even existential questions—through visuals that transcend language barriers. The title’s provocative phrasing, *We Are Aliens*, hints at this subtext, framing otherness not as a threat but as a shared human condition. This thematic resonance may explain why Asian buyers, from Japan to South Korea and beyond, are snapping up rights despite the film’s modest pedigree. What remains unclear is whether this deal flow translates into box-office success or merely reflects a speculative eagerness to secure fresh content for streaming platforms. Asia’s animation market is notoriously fragmented, with theatrical potential varying wildly by territory. Will Korean audiences embrace a Japanese director’s take on alienation, or will the film find stronger traction in markets where science fiction is already a mainstream genre? The next phase—distribution strategies and marketing localization—will be critical. Ultimately, *We Are Aliens*’ Asian sales surge underscores a larger evolution: the erosion of traditional genre boundaries in animation, and the rising influence of independent auteurs in shaping global tastes. If it performs well, it could embolden more mid-budget, concept-driven animated films to bypass conventional studio pipelines. But if it stumbles, it may reinforce the perception that Asia’s appetite for foreign animation remains conditional—capable of excitement, but cautious in commitment. The Annecy premiere will offer the first real test.
