Archie – A Tender Stop Motion Journey Through Grief and Renewal
The short film Archie, directed by Ainslie Henderson and created by Domenica More Gordon, is a beautifully hand-crafted stop motion work that weaves together themes of loss, love, and the quiet resilience that follows grief. Produced by Christopher Young in partnership with the BBC and Young Films, this five-minute short uses delicate puppetry and a deeply human story to deliver an emotional experience that lingers long after the credits roll.
The story follows Archie, a man shaken by the death of his beloved aunt. With his faithful dog at his side, he travels to the Outer Hebrides of Scotland to the home she has left him. What begins as a somber journey of mourning transforms into a meditation on continuity and renewal. In the stillness of the island landscape, Archie rediscovers hope and connection—reminded that endings can also carry the seeds of new beginnings.
Director Ainslie Henderson, known for his poetic approach to stop motion, infuses the film with a tactile intimacy that feels unmistakably personal. A Scottish filmmaker and animator who first gained recognition as a musician before turning to animation, Henderson has built a reputation for heartfelt storytelling and handcrafted artistry. His previous works—such as Stems and I Am Tom Moody—likewise explore the intersection between creativity, emotion, and human fragility.
The visual texture of Archie comes alive through the artistry of Mackinnon & Saunders, the renowned puppet studio behind iconic productions like Fantastic Mr. Fox and Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio. The characters in Archie were created using needle-felting techniques over metal armatures, resulting in a soft, wool-like surface that mirrors the gentleness of the story itself. Every movement feels grounded in touch, emphasizing the film’s central idea—that love and memory live in the tangible world as much as the spiritual one.
Set against the rugged beauty of the Outer Hebrides, the film’s environment adds a profound layer of atmosphere. The windswept landscapes and muted color palette capture both isolation and serenity, embodying the emotional terrain of grief while hinting at the healing power of nature and time. Henderson’s restrained direction allows silence and gesture to speak louder than words, a hallmark of great stop motion storytelling.
Since its debut, Archie has been warmly received on the festival circuit, earning the Best of the Fest Award at the 2019 Chicago International Children’s Film Festival and playing to audiences worldwide. Its quiet tone and understated beauty have made it a standout example of how stop motion can express complex emotion through simple, universal imagery.
Ultimately, Archie is more than a story of loss—it’s a meditation on the persistence of love, rendered through the delicate language of felt, motion, and light. Henderson and More Gordon remind viewers that even in solitude, the act of remembering can build a bridge back to life.
Sources:
Young Films / BBC Production Info
Mackinnon & Saunders Portfolio
IMDb – Archie (2019)
Letterboxd – Archie (2019)









