

Three kids, one wolf, zero patience for bad disguises.
In this Chinese version of the classic fairy tale, a mother leaves her three children home alone while she goes to visit their grandmother. When the children are visited by a wolf, pretending to be their Po Po, or granny, they let him in the house, but ultimately are not fooled by his deep voice and hairy face. Combining ancient Chinese panel art techniques with a contemporary palette of watercolors and pastels, this powerful story brings lessons about strangers, trust and courage to a new generation.
Direction
Ancient panel art meets dreamy watercolor.
Sound
BD Wong's narration is pure velvet menace.
Production
Every frame looks museum-wall worthy.
Director
Ed Mironiuk
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
This adapts a 1,000-year-old Chinese tale that predates Perrault's French version by centuries—Red Riding Hood is a global remix, not a European original.
BD Wong recorded his narration in one session and improvised some of the wolf's wheedling tone, making the predator weirdly charismatic.
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