MS Film Fest Festivals

We Can’t Live Without Cosmos

Two cosmonauts — best friends since childhood — train together, dream together, and compete for a single spot on a space mission. When one of them is selected and the other must stay behind, their bond faces the ultimate test: the vast, indifferent distance of space itself.

Editorial Perspective

Konstantin Bronzit’s We Can’t Live Without Cosmos tells its story almost entirely without words, relying instead on physical comedy, expressive body language, and a devastating tonal shift in its final third. The friendship between the two cosmonauts is conveyed through small gestures — shared jokes during training, synchronized movements, a private handshake. When the film pivots from comedy to tragedy, it does so with a suddenness that mirrors the randomness of loss itself.

Director: Konstantin Bronzit

Country: Russia

Runtime: 16 min

Festival Year: 2015

Awards: Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Short Film (2016)

Where to Watch

Available on YouTube (official upload) and through various animation festival streaming platforms.

Historical data reconstructed from archive.org snapshots of the Manhattan Short Film Festival website.

Film Details

  • Festival Year: 2015
  • Country of Origin: Russia
  • Directed by: Konstantin Bronzit
  • Source: This page reconstructs historical data from Wayback Machine snapshots of msfilmfest.com (2015).

Festival Context

We Can’t Live Without Cosmos was selected as a finalist at the Manhattan Short Film Festival in 2015. The Manhattan Short Film Festival is an annual event that screens finalist films simultaneously across hundreds of venues worldwide, with audiences voting for the winner. Representing Russia, this film joined a diverse international lineup that year. View all 2015 finalists →

Where to Watch

Short-film discoverability remains limited compared to feature-length releases. For We Can’t Live Without Cosmos, check platforms that specialize in short-form cinema: Vimeo Staff Picks, MUBI Shorts, the Criterion Channel short film collection, and YouTube channels like Omeleto. Direct streaming URLs for individual short films change frequently, and no permanent viewing link is guaranteed. Searching for Konstantin Bronzit on these platforms may surface this and other works by the same filmmaker.

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