Animation is often treated as a medium for children’s stories in the Western world, but there are actually a ton of great animated movies that are only for adult audiences. Thanks to studios like Disney, American animation has been reserved for youngsters, and serious stories are typically kept in live-action.
Many other countries around the globe have no such biases against animation, and have used the medium to tell any number of stories that aren’t exclusively aimed at kids. Freed from the usual strictures of live-action filmmaking, animated movies can do almost anything as long as the animator is up for the challenge.
In the U.S. there was a short-lived movement of outsider artists in the ’70s and ’80s who aimed to shatter the stereotypes about Western animation, and they produced intentionally raunchy films to subvert expectations. Meanwhile, films from other countries have used animation to tell any number of stories, and it is merely a medium and not a genre itself.
From eerie horror tales to over-the-top Sєx comedies, animation has a flexibility that makes it perfect for the most imaginative filmmakers. While the stereotypes about cartoons are starting to fade in the West, animated films aimed at adults are still exceptionally rare. Therefore, they are often required viewing for curious cinephiles.
10
Grave Of The Fireflies (1988)
Studio Ghibli’s Adult Animated Classic
Though Studio Ghibli’s films are known as family-friendly classics, the studio did produce one of the most harrowing adult animated movies too. In the aftermath of WWII, the film follows a teenager and his younger sister as they try to make their way through the decimated countryside. Unflinching in its depiction of real-life, the movie is also hauntingly beautiful.
Using Ghibli’s charming art style, Grave of the Fireflies contrasts its more nightmarish imagery with pleasant visuals. This helps the movie to make commentary about the persistence of the human spirit, even in the face of unbelievable tragedy. It might look like Studio Ghibli’s other movies, but it goes without saying that it’s not for kids.
9
Predator: Killer Of Killers (2025)
One Of The Truly Great Predator Movies Isn’t In Live-Action
The modern trend is to take franchises and develop new installments using animation, and Predator: Killer of Killers was a welcome change for the sci-fi horror series. Told through three vignettes, the film catches up with the тιтular extraterrestrial hunters at various periods in world history. Because the film is animated, Killer of Killers was able to increase the violence.
While it might not be the most visually-stunning film ever, the Predator movie is simply a solid action horror movie.
The Predator franchise has had its fair share of bad entries, and Killer of Killers joins Prey as a very clear direction for the movies. The artwork has a hand-drawn look, though at times it also resembles a video game. While it might not be the most visually-stunning film ever, the Predator movie is simply a solid action horror movie.
8
Perfect Blue (1997)
Perfect Blue Is The Perfect Animated Horror Movie
Japan has always produced top-notch animation in every genre, and Perfect Blue is one of the best Japanese horror films, animated or otherwise. With its overwhelmingly creepy narrative about a singer-turned-actor who is being stalked by a killer fan, Perfect Blue has all the makings of a classic horror film. However, it’s the animated touches that really elevate the story.
The movie could have been live-action, but director Satoshi Kon utilized the boundlessness of animation to dive deeper into the psyche of Junko. Perfect Blue is violent and shocking, but there’s also a tastefulness to its thrills that never dips into salacious territory. At its heart, Perfect Blue is an elevated horror movie, it just happens to be animated.
7
Fantastic Planet (1973)
One Of The Weirdest Animated Movies Ever
On its surface, there’s nothing particularly adult about Fantastic Planet, but the exceptionally weird film was not made for kids. The allegorical story uses surrealist imagery to make a larger political point, and the visuals are a far cry from the slick look of American animated films. Many of the character designs are chilling and odd, and everything feels unsettling.
Animation lends itself especially well to surrealism, but Fantastic Planet stands head and shoulders above the rest because of its clever story. Instead of just being a series of psychedelic pictures for an hour-and-a-half, Fantastic Planet actually means something, even if the meaning isn’t always crystal clear.
6
Mad God (2021)
Phil Tippett’s Pᴀssion Project 30 Years In The Making
Visual effects maestro Phil Tippett spent three decades trying to make Mad God, and the final product was unlike anything seen before. The stop-motion film follows an agent of Heaven who is sent down into the underworld on some unknown mission. Each new layer of the underworld reveals nightmarish visuals and some truly mind-boggling moments.
Phil Tippett is best known for his work on the Star Wars franchise and Jurᴀssic Park.
Eschewing a traditional plot, Mad God stops and starts, and essentially resets itself at several points as well. The hellscape that Tippett created is one of the most unique visions of the underworld ever dreamed up, and there is a disgusting blend of biological and mechanical in everything. As far as pᴀssion projects go, Mad God was worth the wait.
5
Belladonna Of Sadness (1973)
It Does Everything Western Animation Doesn’t
The last film in a trilogy of Japanese animated movies that were essentially erotic dramas, Belladonna of Sadness is the only film from that cycle that is worth remembering. Set in medieval France, the story follows a peasant woman who makes a deal with the devil to get revenge against a nobleman who attacked her.
What starts as a clear attempt at sleazy erotica, quickly evolves into something deeper. The movie’s beautiful watercolor visuals were wholly original for the time, and the intense character study leaves room for a lot of social commentary. The movie is violent and harrowing, and its complex morals invite additional viewings to completely grasp its concept.
4
American Pop (1981)
Ralph Bakshi Pushed The Boundaries Of American Animation
In the ’70s and early ’80s, Ralph Bakshi was one of the only animators who pushed the boundaries in the United States. American Pop is his sprawling, multi-generational epic that parallels the immigrant experience with the rise of popular music in the United States. The jukebox musical was an adults-only experience, something very rare at the time.
American Pop is big and bold, and certainly wouldn’t get made today.
While American Pop may suffer from being totally unrestrained, there is almost no limit to the creativity that went into telling its story. Bakshi’s signature use of rotoscoping makes the film move in a rhythmic way, but he also utilizes other animation styles that add visual variety. American Pop is big and bold, and certainly wouldn’t get made today.
3
Fritz The Cat (1972)
R. Crumb’s Hedonistic Cat Hits The Big Screen
Jumping from the pages of R. Crumb’s comix, Fritz the Cat caused a big stir when it debuted in the early ’70s. Ralph Bakshi directed and animated the raunchy story of a college-aged cat who goes on a cross-country trip. Poking fun at just about everything, the Sєxuality in the film was enough to earn an X (later NC-17) rating.
Using an anthropomorphic cat character was an obvious send-up to family-friendly cartoons, but Fritz is the exact opposite. Though the movie doesn’t hold up under modern scrutiny, the goal of Fritz the Cat was to shock and appall, and carve out a new niche in the animation sphere in the Western world. It succeeded, and even spawned a sequel.
2
Heavy Metal (1981)
Music & Animation Collide In This Anthology Film
Though mainstream adult animation has always been rare in the West, movies like Heavy Metal popped up on occasion and attempted to change that. Blending hard rock with cutting-edge adult animation, the movie adapted stories from the тιтular magazine in an anthology style. Though a lot of the animation was somewhat weak, it’s the principle that counts.
Sєx, violence, and music are the real centerpieces of the film, and Heavy Metal delivers on its тιтle. Heavy Metal is unrestrained by its medium, but it also doesn’t feel like it’s taking sH๏τs at family-friendly films either. So many adult animated films from the period felt intentionally confrontational, but Heavy Metal just used animation to tell its story.
1
Anomalisa (2015)
Charlie Kaufman’s Stop-Motion Gem
After writing and directing a slew of mind-bending live-action films, Charlie Kaufman turned to a new medium for 2015’s Anomalisa. Using stop-motion animation, Kaufman delivers a haunting and heartfelt portrait of a motivational speaker who has lost the spark in his life. The quaint concept clashes with its animated medium, but that’s what Kaufman was going for.
Despite being animated, the characters all feel exceptionally human, and the imaginative touches are used sparingly. Kaufman’s films are so weird and original, but at their heart, they are about simple emotions and how the characters react to them. Animation was the perfect medium for Anomalisa, and it wouldn’t have been the same in any other format.