In the years since the indie animated web series The Amazing Digital Circus debuted on YouTube in late 2023, it’s become a gigantic viral phenomenon. The pilot has been viewed more than 425 million times, and the immensity of the show’s online fandom (complete with lively merchandising scene) prompted Netflix to license the episodes for streaming. (The entire series — currently eight episodes — is still available free on YouTube, similar to the way Amazon Video picked up Vivienne Medrano’s animated YouTube series Helluva Boss, which is also still free on YouTube.) Now, the series is taking its next big step toward the mainstream: Episode 9, the series finale, will debut exclusively in theaters this June.
The series, animated by Australian indie studio Glitch Productions, and written, directed, and scored by a creator who goes by “Gooseworx,” follows a group of cartoony characters trapped in a circus-like virtual-reality setting presided over by Caine, a ringmaster-like AI. In the pilot, an accountant who remembers putting on a virtual-reality headset in the real world shows up at the circus in a jester/clown character avatar. Unable to remember her real name, she accepts the name “Pomni” and immediately starts looking for escape routes. Throughout the series’ run, she learns more about the circus and Caine, as he sends her and her fellow captives on game-like missions with darker purposes.
The Amazing Digital Circus was inspired by Harlan Ellison’s classic 1966 short story “I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream,” a maximalist story about an insane, hate-driven, all-powerful AI endlessly torturing the last surviving humans on Earth. But the show puts a whimsical, candy-colored spin on that idea, with Caine as a similarly powerful but often hapless and goofy overlord of his digital domain. Episode 8 of the show debuted on March 20, and has since been viewed more than 81 million times. In a theatrical event running June 4-7, Fathom Entertainment will screen episode 8 and the premiere of episode 9, the hour-long series finale. That episode will also be available on YouTube and Netflix on June 19.
Here’s Fathom’s summary of the series finale:
With Caine gone and the circus dark, the cast are left with only the mistakes and traumas of their pasts to keep them company. As the prospect of eternity closes in around them, they discover the truth about the Digital Circus and its history. Will they come to terms with what they uncover, or will they make… the other choice? Also, presumably at some point someone says something funny, because this ending can’t be THAT depressing, can it?
The Amazing Digital Circus seems like an odd choice for a theatrical debut, given its comparatively simple web animation. But turning the finale into a real-life fandom get-together is in keeping with recent fan-oriented theatrical events like the KPop Demon Hunters sing-along screenings, the similar Hazbin Hotel sing-alongs, the “yell all you want” Minecraft Movie showings, and Fathom’s long-running series of milestone anniversary showings of popular movies. Expect a certain amount of cosplay and people reciting along with episode 8 highlights at the Amazing Digital Circus screenings. Tickets are available at the Fathom website.


