If you are looking for animation that tells stories about life in modern society, there is no better time than now to delve into movies that use the art of drawing not to show life as it could be, but as it is.

The French drama I Lost My Body (M18, 81 minutes, 2018, Netflix, 3.5 stars) opens with a macabre scene: A severed hand gains consciousness in a medical laboratory. Skittering like a crab, the sentient appendage finds itself in the middle of Paris.

The mystery of where it came from and what it seeks is explained in flashback, with the title of the film a clue. Moroccan boy Naoufel (voiced by Hakim Faris in French and Dev Patel in the English audio) is shown to be a happy child until an event brings him to the French capital, where he grows up to become a lonely young man too sensitive and bumbling to fit into the working-class social strata in which he has been forcibly placed.

Nominated for an Oscar in the Best Animated Feature section this year, this film treats its fantastical story in a realistic way.

Other than a self-aware hand, Naoufel's life unfolds in an ordinary fashion, though it is a journey that has its share of tragedy.

This is a coming-of-age story told with a melancholic slowness that never judges its main character for the poor choices he makes nor his circumstances for crushing his spirit. It puts Naoufel in full control of his decisions. Viewers are invited to sympathise with him, but not feel pity.

You might be mistaken for thinking that The Breadwinner (NC16, 93 minutes, 2017, Netflix, 3.5 stars) is an Afghan production, but this film, set entirely in a period of that country when it was ruled by Taliban religious extremists, is the result of a collaboration among animation specialists in Ireland, Canada and Luxembourg.

At first glance, this belongs in the camp of awareness-raising, educational works, with its "developing world" feminist perspective coming from its Western makers. Philanthropist and actress Angelina Jolie is a producer.

But get past that and one will find a lack of preachiness.

At the heart of the story, nominated for a Best Animated Feature Oscar in 2018, is the tragic absurdity created by societies seeking to return to a golden age when men dominated and women were chattel: What happens to families in which all the men are gone?

Adapted from the 2000 novel of the same name by Canadian writer Deborah Ellis, who based her book on interviews with refugees in Pakistan, the story is seen through the eyes of 11-year-old Parvana.

Have A Nice Day. PHOTO: ANTICIPATE PICTURES

I Lost My Body. PHOTO: NETFLIX

The Breadwinner. PHOTO: NETFLIX

After her street-vendor father is arrested for the crime of impiety, she has to find food for her mother and siblings without getting caught by members of the militia, all eager to play judge and executioner on those they deem to have broken religious law.

While there is more than a moment of bleak humour – in scenes showing that when one is Read More – Source

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