While Mune crashes the Moon, Glim is the one who calculates the orbital mechanics to fix it. While Mune provides heart, Glim provides the brain. Their partnership is a rare example of a non-romantic (though deeply affectionate) male-female dynamic in animation. Glim never needs saving; she saves Mune multiple times. In fact, she sacrifices her own wax body to repair the Moon’s core, proving that heroism belongs to everyone, not just the title character.
And every night, the Moon seemed to hum a little louder, just for him. Mune The Guardian of the Moon
When the sun and moon switch places in the sky, a young guardian named Mune must team up with a rebellious celestial being to save the world from eternal darkness. While Mune crashes the Moon, Glim is the
“Don’t worry,” he tells the trembling bird. “The Moon is patient. It will wait.” Glim never needs saving; she saves Mune multiple times
In a world where the sun and moon are alive, Mune is a young, awkward, and endearing moon guardian who lives on the moon. Mune's job is to ensure that the moon rises and sets properly every day, maintaining the delicate balance of the universe.
In the vast landscape of modern animation, few films capture the ethereal beauty of folklore quite like Mune: The Guardian of the Moon (French: Mune, le gardien de la lune ). Released in 2014, this French 3D computer-animated adventure directed by Benoît Philippon and Alexandre Heboyan offers a breathtaking departure from the standard "talking animal" tropes of mainstream cinema, delivering instead a poetic, visually arresting myth about balance, responsibility, and the magic of the night. A World Divided: The Mythos of Sun and Moon