72Signal
Score
C
Creative BoomMay 1, 2026

What Is Dyslexia Why Artgrafts Hybrid Animation Style Is This Short Films Most Powerful Argument

The animated short 'What is dyslexia?' by Made By Dyslexia employs a hybrid animation style to reshape perceptions of dyslexia, emphasizing the strengths of dyslexic minds rather than their challenges. This approach not only enhances the film's narrative but also serves as a strategic tool to influence search engine results, ensuring that a more positive representation of dyslexia surfaces prominently online.

◎ Emergingcampaigndigitalstrategymotion-designMade By DyslexiaClemengerbbdoArt And Graft

Creative Boom: News Motion What is dyslexia?: Art&Graft's hybrid animation style is this short film's most compelling argument A new animated short from Made By Dyslexia uses painterly, mixed-media visuals to reframe what it means to have a dyslexic mind. Written By: Tom May 30 April 2026 Every year, millions of children and their parents turn to search engines at the moment they first encounter a dyslexia diagnosis. What they find there, in the cold clinical language of top-ranked results, often does more harm than good. Terms like "lifelong learning disorder" and "word-blindness" define dyslexia entirely by what people can't do.

A new animated short is designed to flip that narrative... at the very top of the search page. The film is called What is dyslexia?, named deliberately after the search term it's intended to hijack. It tells the story of Lola, a young girl who's just learned she's dyslexic and turns to the internet for answers, only to be confronted by descriptions that leave her feeling hopeless. From there, she's taken on a journey by a wise dyslexic inventor, voiced by Jeremy Irons, who introduces her to a lineage of extraordinary dyslexic minds: Henry Ford, Muhammad Ali, and visionaries from art, film and science.

The cast also includes Liv Tyler and Jaleen Best, who plays Ali in the upcoming Amazon series The Greatest. The eight-minute film, created by global charity Made By Dyslexia in partnership with ClemengerBBDO, was directed by Kyra Bartley through Finch, with design and animation by Art&Graft. It premiered at the BFI IMAX in London this week, and you can watch it in full below. Smart engineering The strategy behind its release is as sharp as the craft. Giles Watson, executive creative director at ClemengerBBDO, outlines the thinking.

"The 'Knowledge Panel' can't be bought or gamed, it's shaped by cultural signals, not advertising," he explains. "So we engineered this film to influence those signals. Every element, from casting and animation style to reviews and distribution, was designed to help it surface at the top of search and transform it into something far more powerful." It's an unusually elegant piece of media thinking: using the formal requirements of cultural credibility—a real film with real reviews and real distribution—to earn the organic placement that no media budget could simply buy. It's the animation style, though, that deserves particular attention.

Because Art&Graft haven't simply made a beautiful film: they've made one where the style is inseparable from the argument. The studio developed a hybrid approach that draws heavily on traditional 2D techniques, expressive brushwork, varied frame rates, and hand-drawn elements, but reinterprets and evolves all of them within a 3D pipeline. Hand-drawn brushstroke animations weave seamlessly into 3D renders, unifying the visual language while adding an extra layer of texture and warmth. The result is a mixed-media aesthetic that carries the hand-crafted quality of traditional animation alongside the depth and flexibility that 3D affords.

Importantly, these effects only gradually unfurl, starting with what feels like a more 'classic' 2D animated look, before slowly introducing other animation techniques as the story progresses. Look at the stills, and you can see immediately what this achieves. Characters are rendered with a painterly looseness that suggests feeling over precision: broad strokes of colour that bloom and bleed at the edges, skin tones built from warm ochres and deep purples, hair that crackles with energy. The world Lola falls through, literally at points, isn't a clean digital space; it's something textured, alive and emotionally charged.

Article truncated for readability. Read the full piece →

Intelligence PanelSignal score: 72 / 100
Primary Signal
Emerging
Building momentum — trajectory being tracked
Brand Impact
Medium
Impact score: 70/100 — moderate relevance to positioning decisions
Novelty
Moderate
Novelty: 65/100 — iterative development of an existing theme
Action Priority
Soon
Flag for the next strategic review cycle
Scoring Rationale

The article discusses a unique animation style used to address a significant social issue, making it impactful and relevant for brand strategy professionals interested in innovative storytelling and digital campaigns.

70
Impact
weight 35%
65
Novelty
weight 30%
80
Relevance
weight 35%
Brands Mentioned
MMade By DyslexiaCClemengerbbdoAArt And GraftAAmazonJJeremy IronsLLiv TylerLLorne Balfe
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