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WARSAW 2024 The 40th Warsaw Film Festival announces its programme
by Manuela Laziæ, Cineuropa September 26, 2024
The 40th Warsaw Film Festival announces its programme
The annual film event will take place in the Polish capital from 11-20 October
This year’s edition of the Warsaw Film Festival, unfolding between 11 and 20 October, will present 84 feature films, amongst which 26 world premieres, 18 international premieres, 6 European premieres, 5 Eastern European premieres and 20 Polish premieres, as well as 58 short films, all selected from over 5,000 submissions.
Gustaw Kolanowski, programme director, states that the festival’s 40th edition will focus on genre diversity and debuts: “We focused on looking for films by young filmmakers, often newcomers. We believe that we will hear about some of them again in the future.”
Traffic by Teodora Ana Mihai
The festival will open with the highly anticipated Kulej. Two Sides of the Medal, directed by Xawery ¯u³awski (Bird Talk, director of the 2022 series The Thaw). This Polish production tells the story of Jerzy Kulej, a legend of Polish boxing and the only Polish boxer to ever win two Olympic gold medals, and his turbulent marriage with Helena. Closing the festival and screening as a world premiere will be Traffic by Teodora Ana Mihai (La Civil, 2021), part of the International Competition, which tackles the subject of globalisation and the intercultural conflicts that accompany it.
The 15 films in the International Competition will be vying for the main award of 100,000 PLN (around €21,000), funded by the Mayor of Warsaw and awarded by a jury consisting of Croatian director Vinko Brešan, Polish filmmaker Anna Kazejak, Spanish director Alberto Triano, Romanian producer Oana Iancu, and Ukrainian filmmaker Maryna Er Gorbach.
The International competition includes 6 world premieres: the above-mentioned Traffic, Bitter Gold by Juan Francisco Olea (Chile/Mexico/Uruguay/Germany), Bucha by Stanislav Tiunov (Ukraine), Chaos and Silence by Anatol Schuster (Germany), Justice by Abolfazl Jalili (Iran) and Unspoken by Piotr J. Lewandowski (Germany). In addition, Danis Tanoviæ’s My Late Summer will have its European premiere in that competition after opening the Sarajevo Film Festival earlier this year; Bartosz M. Kowalski’s Night Silence (Poland) and Monika Majorek’s Where Do We Begin (Poland) will first screen at the Gdynia Polish Film Festival; McVeigh by American director Mike Ott will have its international premiere following its launch at Tribeca; and Liina Trishkina-Vanhatalo’s Lioness (Estonia/Germany/Lithuania), Dargye Tenzin’s Dog Tashi (China), Ron Ninio’s Farewell Column (Israel), Rudolf Biermann’s Once Upon a Time in the East (Czech Republic/Slovakia) and Robert Budina’s Waterdrop (Albania/Italy/Romania/Kosovo/North Macedonia) will all have their international premiere.
15 films will compete in the 1-2 Competition, which highlights first and second features. These include Eric Lamhène’s Breathing Under Water (Luxembourg/Belgium), Magdalena Ewa Piêta’s Clearing (Poland), Filip Peruzoviæ’s Good Children (Croatia/France), Dominika Montean-Pañków’s The Crossroads (Poland), Egor Olesov’s The Daughter (Ukraine/UK), John E. Robertson’s The Woman and a Brat (Chile/Colombia/Venezuela), Nikol Cibulya’s Tomorrow I Die (Hungary) and Naoto Kawashima’s Welcome Back (Japan), all having their world premieres. Juan Gautier’s Fraternity (Spain), Frauke Lodders’s In Good Faith (Germany), Kerry Ann Enright’s Nobody Wants to Shoot a Woman (USA), David Pérez Sañudo’s The Last Romantics (Spain), Veronika Lišková’s Year of the Widow (Czech Republic/Slovakia/Croatia) will have their international premieres in that competition. Elina Sahlin’s Bye Bye Boredom (Sweden) will have its Eastern European premiere, while Sarra Tsorakidis’s Ink Wash (Romania/Greece/Denmark) will have its European premiere.
Alongside with the International Competition and the 1-2 Competition, four other sections will be judged by their respective juries: the Crème de la Crème Competition, the Free Spirit Competition, the Documentary Film Competition and the Short Film Competition.
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