The "-Final-" installment was announced over two years ago, delayed three times due to Studio Sirocco’s insistence on hand-drawn cel animation for the final 18 minutes. The wait, as it turns out, was worth the existential dread. Warning: Spoilers for "A Nursery Tale Story -Final-" ahead.
The narrative picks up immediately after the cliffhanger of Chapter 4: "The Inkwell Drought." The Storyteller (a hooded, faceless entity voiced with chilling monotony by Yu Shimamura) has died. Without the Storyteller, the world is not disappearing with a bang, but with a tear. A Nursery Tale Story -Final- -Studio Sirocco-
Midway through the film, the group finds the frozen figures of Cinderella and Prince Charming. They are not dead; they are paused . Mid-dance. Their glass slipper is suspended in the air. But their faces... their faces are screaming. The "-Final-" installment was announced over two years
Studio Sirocco pulls off its masterstroke here: The characters who were villains and heroes in previous chapters must now cooperate to survive entropy. The Wolf, once a predator, becomes the group's strategist, using his remaining senses to navigate the collapsing syntax of the world. The Witch from Hansel & Gretel , now a crumbling crone, sacrifices her gingerbread foundation to build a raft to cross a lake of spilled ink. The narrative picks up immediately after the cliffhanger
With the release of , the acclaimed indie studio has done something audacious: they have taken the fragile, porcelain doll of childhood fantasy and shattered it against the concrete of adult consequence.
began as a seemingly straightforward project: a silent protagonist wandering through a storybook world where classic tales (Little Red Riding Hood, Hansel & Gretel, The Pied Piper) had collapsed into one another. However, by the third episode, fans realized this was not a whimsical crossover. It was a hospice. The characters were aware they were fading.
For those who have followed the episodic journey of A Nursery Tale Story , this final chapter is not merely an ending—it is a thesis statement. It asks a brutal question: What happens to the forgotten characters of a fairy tale once the reader closes the book? To understand the weight of -Final- , one must first understand the legacy of Studio Sirocco. Known for their ethereal watercolor art style and haunting sound design (often utilizing the erhu and glass harmonica), the studio rose to fame on the back of bittersweet shorts like The Clockwork Bird and Lullaby for Rust .