IMDb 0 2025 HD

The Elephant

The Elephant

2025
Comedy Drama
15 min NR USA
0 IMDB

A heartfelt drama following Casie, an international student who buries herself in parties to avoid confronting her grief and disconnect from her culture. With a high-stakes presentation on…

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Chelcy S. Meneses / Angus Roohan / Alizeh Naeem / Niki Almira
Starring
Kirato Hope / Allyssa Perez / Jordan McCabe / Pacey MacAulay / Rayyan Khan / Jaden Zabat / Jacob Lane

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

emotionally resonant culturally poignant clever metaphor tonally uneven strong lead performance surreal humour heartfelt narratively mechanical insightful cathartic visually imaginative thematically rich

Reviews

C
Claire Winslow
Mar 2, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

With a refreshing lack of sentimentality, ‘The Elephant’ navigates the rocky terrain of young grief and identity. This is not a saccharine tale of healing, but a messy, sometimes frustrating portrait of a woman actively making her situation…

D
David Chen
Mar 2, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

There’s an admirable ambition at the heart of ‘The Elephant’ that doesn’t always fully cohere. The metaphor is potent, and the performances, particularly from lead Kirato Hope, are committed. Yet, the narrative can feel mechanically structured, with the…

P
Priya Sharma
Mar 2, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

A triumph of empathetic storytelling, ‘The Elephant’ captures the specific loneliness of the diaspora experience with profound clarity. Casie’s journey is not just about grief, but about the fracture that occurs when one feels untethered from their cultural…

M
Marcus Thorne
Mar 2, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

This drama’s conceptual boldness is both its strength and its occasional weakness. The premise of an invisible elephant sabotaging a grieving student’s life is a wonderfully high-concept hook, executed with enough charm to mostly land. Hope is compelling,…

E
Eleanor Rigby
Mar 2, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

‘The Elephant’ is a deft and moving allegory for the weight we carry. Kirato Hope delivers a beautifully restrained performance as Casie, whose frantic partying feels achingly authentic as a grief-avoidance tactic. The film’s genius lies in its…

FAQs

This film will resonate strongly with viewers who enjoy character-driven dramas with a touch of magical realism, similar in vein to works like 'The Last Black Man in San Francisco' or 'The Farewell'. It appeals to those interested in stories about diaspora experiences, mental health allegories, and the complexities of young adulthood. Australian audiences, particularly in multicultural cities, may find the themes of navigating identity between two worlds deeply relatable. It's for viewers who prefer emotional depth and symbolic storytelling over conventional plot.