Away in 2K: a silent journey between authorial vision and creative boundaries
A unique experiment combining solitary animation, symbolic storytelling, and total freedom

Not all works come from large studios or structured productions. Some take shape in a more direct, almost stubborn way, as in the case of Away: a project carried out solo by Gints Zilbalodis, who transformed limited resources into a complete feature film, free from external interference.
Devoid of dialogue, the story is reduced to its essence. A boy crosses unknown territories after an accident, accompanied by a small bird and pursued by a gigantic, indecipherable presence. More than a plot, it's a trajectory: a continuous movement through spaces that seem to reflect states of mind.
A cinema born from exploring, not writing
The peculiarity of Away lies in its method. No rigid script: images come first, the story later. Built within a digital environment, the film develops like a progressive discovery, almost like an exploratory video game. The camera floats freely, observes, lingers. It's a rare freedom in contemporary animation, often too tied to traditional schemes.
This choice, however, comes at a price. The absence of a strong structure makes the journey irregular, with moments that seem like detours rather than necessary stages. Even the visual component, deliberately essential, betrays the production limits: few details, simple animations, sparse environments.

Yet it is precisely in this subtraction that the meaning of the work emerges. The characters are not complex individuals, but symbols: the need to return, the desire for freedom, the fear of failure. Even the figure pursuing them remains open to interpretation. Away is not a perfect film, but it is one of those that demonstrate just how far an idea can go when it doesn't have to ask for permission.
Probably from a native 2K master, original image format 2.39:1 (1920 x 1080/24p), AVC/MPEG-4 encoding on a single-layer BD-25. With a slight background grain, an integral part of the work, the video quality ranges between excellent and very good, with minimal banding and few limitations in color nuances.
Away - 2K Blu-ray Edition CG Entertainment
A spectacle that would deserve large screens for superior immersion. In this regard, there is an excellent DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 track (16 bit) with remarkable dynamics and soundstage presence, alternatively the Dolby Digital 2.0 (224 kbps) but with less appeal. The trailer is included as an extra.



