The Elephant, Adult Swim’s latest animated special, asks what happens when the Avengers of Cartoon Network—creatives who shaped a generation’s sense of humor and childhoods—unite. Not to churn out a legacy sequel or serve as filler in a streamer’s neglected catalog, but to speak directly to that generation and lapsed viewers alike.
The result is an anomaly: a collective effort by Pendleton Ward (Adventure Time), Rebecca Sugar (Steven Universe), Patrick McHale (Over the Garden Wall), and Ian Jones-Quartey (OK K.O! Let’s Be Heroes), proving they can still awe and deliver life lessons that cut into adulthood as sharply as they once did for childhood.
The special, clocking in at just over 20 minutes, sees viewers join the creators in not knowing how their project will coalesce. After all, just because you have favorite foods doesn’t mean they’ll pair well as a meal without having your guts bubbling from your own hubris. Likewise, The Elephant is, in essence, Western animation legends playing Telestrations on a grand stage.
On paper, the risk of failure feels precarious—sure, the weight of its creatives is no small factor. Still, if their visions didn’t amalgamate successfully, the result could clash rather than gel into a visual peanut butter and jelly sandwich that viewers (and, more glaringly, corporate overseers) would bite into. Hence, why experiments of this nature usually surface in tentpole franchise anthology projects, where artists don’t have to hot-potato “yes-anding” each other’s work.
The special not only brings the above creators together but also sees three animation studios in Rudo, Dinamita, and Titmouse Vancouver flex their artistic muscles in a jam-packed experimental narrative. On a literal level, The Elephant follows a nameless protagonist who tumbles out of a mysterious factory by freak accident and embarks on a journey of self-discovery and agency. Meanwhile, the setting of said journey shifts kaleidoscopically from sci-fi video‑gamey backdrops to soft, painterly Little Golden Book‑style illustrations and beyond—each trippy locale transformation materializing on a dime as part of its plucky hero’s internal and existential odyssey.
Aside from being a clever play on the “Blind Men and the Elephant” parable, wherein three blind men who’ve never come across the gentle beast try to ascertain what it is through touch, The Elephant carries all the charm emblematic of its creators’ past works, sprinkled with a few disarmingly funny bits of swearing that never feel out of place—after all, the generation who grew up with these voices are adults now. At the same time, the special finds a way to guide its nameless protagonist—the elephant—through lessons that speak directly to creativity and agency.
Here, new-age adages feel genuine: picking up a pencil and letting one’s imagination run wild, rather than outsourcing creativity to AI to mechanically hallucinate playing for you; discovering value in oneself beyond the pigeonholes imposed by others; and daring to ask more of life. It’s all quite heady, yet its skillful creators’ collaged message is a clever, decadently illustrated approach to moral storytelling—brief, unreservedly playful, yet never preachy, while being organically didactic.
What makes The Elephant remarkable, though, is that it works. It’s also remarkable that it exists at all. In an era where animation is treated less like a museum tapestry of a streamer’s catalogue and more like appendages bisected and shuffled around by companies in a rights-holder shell game, a project this unreservedly playful feels virtually unheard of. The Elephant‘s mere existence as uninhibited art is especially prescient given the recent developments around Adult Swim’s parent company and its historic string of masterful gambits, with formative shows under its own banner being cut from the lineup.
The Elephant stands out as a rare act of creative trust and freedom to play that’s as metatextually inspiring as its throughline moral about agency is potent, even when presented in three acts, with no idea how they’d all mesh into a single, complete work. A beautiful anomaly that insists animation is at its most beautiful when it’s an experimental collaboration built on trust, whose existence is thrust into being by the tried-and-true venture for a soul-stirring narrative, not corporate inventory.
The Elephant premieres ad-free on Adult Swim on December 19 and streams the next day on HBO Max.
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