Animals on the Train: An Animated Adventure About Pets

Published on January 05, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
Illustration of a moving train with animals peeking out the windows, led by a raccoon on the roof of the carriage while a badger watches them from a distance.

A Rail Adventure with Unexpected Protagonists

When a railway convoy comes to life on its own, it leaves the station carrying only its peculiar crew of domestic animals. This incident triggers a series of events where cunning will be the main resource for survival. Among the involuntary passengers stands out Falcon, a raccoon whose craftiness contrasts with the bitterness of Hans, the badger who orchestrates this anomalous situation.

Portrait of the Protagonists

The cast presents a gallery of well-differentiated characters:

This combination generates interactions that explore everything from conflict to solidarity, avoiding one-dimensional characterizations.

Challenges in a Moving Setting

The moving train transforms into a dynamic narrative space, where each carriage presents new obstacles. The production leverages this environment to develop:

"The production design turns the train into another character, with its own rules and personality"
Illustration of a moving train with animals peeking out the windows, led by a raccoon on the roof of the carriage while a badger watches them from a distance.

The Creative Team Behind the Film

The direction is handled by the French duo Daffis-Tassy, known for their focus on animation with thematic depth. TAT Productions stamps its characteristic signature through:

Narrative Universality

The proposal transcends children's entertainment through resources such as:

Thematic layers that operate at different levels of understanding, humor arising from situations rather than forced jokes, and a structure that balances fast-paced rhythm with reflective pauses.

The Journey's Significance

Beyond the seemingly simple premise, the story addresses issues such as:

Overcoming differences, the value of cooperation in extreme situations, and the capacity for redemption. The railway medium serves as a visual metaphor for these concepts, with its constant motion and spaces that force coexistence.