That Gruesome Animated Movie Ending That Stays With Fans

Out of every mature animated films I have personally viewed, nothing has stuck with me quite like the dread-soaked conclusion of the viscerally violent as well as overwhelingly transgressive 2022 movie The Unicorn Wars.

Back in the year 2015, the Spanish writer-director crafted a dark, melancholy and frequently brutal world with some tiny , desolate hints of optimism.

Although Unicorn Wars appears as it came from a drive to push animation even more, the filmmaker stated that it was more an attempt to convey a widespread, multicultural theme concerning “the mutual source of every conflict.”

This theme is expressed by means of a band of colorful pastel bears , openly based on a well-known line of cuddly figures.

Being raised in a community focused on militarism and the war machine, many of these creatures are obsessed with exterminating unicorns, due to a sacred text that claims the bears they were once rulers of the woods, before the horned beings forced them out.

Some did not entirely accepted the indoctrination, , choose to sample drugs or engage sexually outdoors.

In contrast to their gentle counterparts, these vivid animals show genitals and obvious libidos.

For one particularly cruel, skeptical animal, Bluey, the conflict with unicorns becomes a path toward dominance — and especially to authority over his more tender, nicer brother the character Tubby.

The character behaves aggressively , a seeming sociopath , and when horror overcomes his unit and claims his teammates one by one, he seizes increasingly influence personally, via progressively bloody, damaging approaches.

Meanwhile, these mythical beings are experiencing their own horror, through a spreading, destructive monster in their forest.

“Initially, it seems like a comedy,” the filmmaker commented. “Yet it becomes a more serious and sad movie. And in the finale, it’s a scary feature.”

The Unicorn Wars starts out resembling one of the most playful movies by a renowned filmmaker, that discover a mischievous joy in allowing animated figures curse, shoot each other, or engage sexually.

Then it evolves into more akin to a darker film from the same creator, featuring progressively graphic violence and a palpable link to the actual suffering of conflict.

In the finale, it’s an outright theatrical horror massacre.

The fear that turns this a Halloween-friendly viewing begins much sooner than that description suggests.

The Unicorn Wars is ideal for the most dedicated lovers of violence, for lovers of graphic films who wish to see a film they have not watched previously, and can endure a plot that pulls unflinching brutality.

Watch it in a dimly lit space without any distractions, and that ending will burrow under your skin and stay with you.

Where to watch: Offered for digital rental or sale on multiple streaming sites.

Tracy Foster
Tracy Foster

A tech strategist with over a decade of experience in digital innovation and AI-driven solutions, passionate about shaping the future of technology.