Silent stories becoming a bridge with their voice: Is pantomime animation becoming a norm for stories being adapted into animation?
When Animation Stops Talking For much of its modern history, animation has increasingly leaned toward dialogue-driven storytelling. Voice acting has become central to performance, scripts have grown denser with exposition, and characters often articulate their emotions rather than embody them. In many ways, contemporary animation mirrors live-action conventions, where conversations drive plot, and dialogue carries meaning, but what happens when that voice is taken away? Works like Adult Swim’s Primal present a striking alternative. Nearly devoid of dialogue, the series relies on movement, expression, and sound to convey its story. However, it loses none of its emotional intensity, if anything, it gains a raw immediacy that dialogue often softens. This raises an important contradiction. Pantomime, which is, the act of storytelling through gesture and movement, has long been associated with children’s animation and slapstick comedy. Yet here it is, anchoring a violent, emotio...