Best Armenian animation movies
A curated collection of popular animation movies from Armenia.

Lesson (1987)
Lesson (1987)
A Soviet Armenian animation from the glasnost era about cosmonauts invading a serene planet where they pay a price for their cruel actions.

Aurora's Sunrise (2023)
Aurora's Sunrise (2023)
The story of how Aurora Mardiganian (1901-94), a survivor of the Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire (1915-17), became a Hollywood silent film star.

Puy-Puy Mouse (1971)
Puy-Puy Mouse (1971)
A mouse, more interested in singing than survival, gets into various scrapes in the jungle.

Dream of Kafka (2021)
Dream of Kafka (2021)
"Miserable me. Two plates are screwed to my temples", Franz thought, closing his eyes. A dark abyss, the mad court, the sentence to be served in the form of everlasting insomnia.

The Axe (1994)
The Axe (1994)
Someone gives a hatchet to people of freezing country, but their lack of skill and misunderstanding how to use it lead to endless deaths and disasters

Olympicos (2020)
Olympicos (2020)
One of the days the King of Armenia Varazdat receives an invitation from Greece, asking him to send the best boxer of the country to compete in the Olympic Games in Greece. Inspired by his athlete's past, the King decides to personally travel to Greece to participate in the Olympics. The royal family joins in.

Victoria (1997)
Victoria (1997)
Wordless animated fim from Robert Sahakyants

I Am Armenian Too (2000)
I Am Armenian Too (2000)

Signs of Intelligent Life (2002)
Signs of Intelligent Life (2002)
A scientist examines the globe under a microscope. A rocket taking off from the Earth, breaking through the lens of a microscope, penetrates the scientist’s skull.

L'arche (1997)
L'arche (1997)
Various animals sing Beethoven’s "Ode To Joy" from his Symphony No. 9, in a paean to the Earth’s biodiversity.

Elections (1994)
Elections (1994)
Animated short about presidential elections of 1991 and its consequences in the Armenian people’s life under the rule of Pan-Armenian National Movement. Based on a song by Armenian poet and songwriter Ruben Hakhverdyan.