IMDb 0 2018 HD

You Used to Bring Me Flowers

You Used to Bring Me Flowers

2018
Animation
5 min NR Israel
0 IMDB

An animation short film about male-female relations through the gesture of giving flowers. A man steals flowers. His appetite grows as he steals more. We follow him as…

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Nofar Schweitzer

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

intriguing unsettling symbolic allegorical thought-provoking abstract minimalist nuanced ambiguous metaphorical peculiar stark

Reviews

P
Penelope Croft
Apr 11, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

This animated short, 'You Used to Bring Me Flowers', attempts to dissect male-female relations through a rather unconventional lens. The central character's escalating flower theft serves as a metaphor for growing entitlement and intrusion. The animation effectively illustrates…

A
Alistair Finch
Apr 11, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

'You Used to Bring Me Flowers' is a triumph of minimalist storytelling and symbolic animation. This short film brilliantly distills the essence of male-female relationships into the act of giving flowers, or rather, taking them. The central character’s…

G
Genevieve Dubois
Apr 11, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

As an animated short, 'You Used to Bring Me Flowers' presents a rather stark allegory for male-female dynamics. The premise is simple: a man steals flowers, his actions growing bolder as his 'appetite' increases. The film's strength lies…

M
Marcus Bellweather
Apr 11, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

There's a disquieting elegance to 'You Used to Bring Me Flowers'. This animation short crafts a potent visual metaphor for the often-fraught landscape of male-female interactions. We witness a man’s journey, his initial furtive thefts of flowers morphing…

E
Eleanor Vance
Apr 11, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

This animated short, 'You Used to Bring Me Flowers', offers a peculiar yet compelling exploration of relationships through the singular act of floral acquisition. The narrative unfolds with a man whose initial timid flower pilfering escalates into a…

FAQs

The film's unique strength lies in its allegorical approach to exploring male-female relations. By using the act of flower-stealing as a visual metaphor, it bypasses explicit dialogue to delve into power dynamics, desire, and evolving perceptions of intimacy. The animation medium allows for a heightened, almost dreamlike quality, transforming a simple act into a commentary on possessiveness and the often-unspoken complexities within romantic pursuits.