Skip to main content
Memoir of a Snail poster

Life can only be understood backwards, but we have to live it forwards.

Memoir of a Snail (2024)

October 17, 20241h 34mEN
8.0

760 votes

Official Site

Overview

Forcibly separated from her twin brother when they are orphaned, a melancholic misfit learns how to find confidence within herself amid the clutter of misfortunes and everyday life.

Where to Watch

Streaming availability for India

Stream

Amazon Prime VideoAmazon Prime Video with Ads
Powered by JustWatch Memoir of a Snail

Top Billed Cast

Status

Released

Original Language

French

Budget

$4.3M

Revenue

$7

Production Companies

ArenamediaMIFF Premiere Fund

Movies Like Memoir of a Snail

Recommended for You

User Reviews

good.film

good.film

It feels great to laugh straight after you’ve just welled up. The characters in Memoir of a Snail, the new animated tale from Academy Award winner Adam Elliot, feel authentically real to us - and even though Elliot includes jokes, he doesn’t joke ABOUT them. He lays them bare to us with respect, and imbues his odd menagerie with… well, with dignity. Which is a funny thing to say about something with plasticine eyeballs and glycerine tears. Read our deeper dive into Memoir of a Snail at good.film: https://good.film/guide/theres-nothing-like-memoir-of-a-snail-just-try-not-to-cry

Chris Sawin

9.0

Australian animator and filmmaker Adam Elliot’s last full-length feature film was Mary and Max (2009). Memoir of a Snail is narrated and told from the point of view of Grace Pudel (Sarah Snook). Grace details her life story that finds humor and sentimentality in the face of depression, shortcomings, and letdowns. There are two people in the world that Grace feels comfortable with: her twin brother Gilbert (Kodi Smit-McPhee) and her best friend Pinky (Jacki Weaver). Their mother died during childbirth and their father is a drunk paraplegic who is a former street performer and animator from F…

Read full review →
CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

7.0

When an elderly lady gives out her last breath, and yells something about potatoes, we realise that “Grace” is now on her own. She’s a middle aged woman wearing a knitted hat with two big eyes poking from stalks on the top. She’s what you might call a glass half empty sort of person, and as she releases her pet snail “Sylvia” from her jar into the vegetable garden she begins to regale us with the story of just how she, and her long-lost brother “Gilbert” grew up with their paraplegic dad; became orphaned, separated and then how she spent the rest of her life in increasing isolation making some…

Read full review →

Explore More