heidi

Source: SFF

‘Heidi’

Sarajevo Film Festival (SFF, August 16-23) has unveiled the line-up for its 25th edition, with nine feature world premieres playing in the two main competitive sections.

Scroll down for the full list of titles

These include Romanian filmmaker Cătălin Mitulescu’s fourth film Heidi in the feature competition, about an ageing police officer tasked with finding two prostitutes who he needs to testify in an organised crime case.

Mitulescu debuted with The Way I Spent The End Of The World which won Dorotheea Petre the best actress prize in Un Certain Regard at Cannes 2006; his most recent title, 2016’s By The Rails, picked up a special mention at Karlovy Vary Film Festival that year.

Also debuting in the feature film competition is Bosnian filmmaker Ines Tanović’s sophomore film as director Son, about the life of an adopted teenager in modern Sarajevo.

Tanović, a native of the city, debuted her first film Our Everyday Life at the festival in 2015. It went on to tour the festival circuit and became Bosnia and Herzegovina’s submission for the foreign language award at the 2016 Oscars – the same award won by Tanović’s cousin, Danis Tanović, with No Man’s Land in 2002.

The festival will play 25 titles across its feature film and documentary film competitive sections – nine in the former and 16 in the latter. Of the 16 documentary titles, 10 are of feature length (more than 60 minutes). There are four world premieres in the feature film section, and five feature world premieres in the documentary section.

Films to play in the festival having launched elsewhere on the circuit include Bosnian director Ena Sendijarević’s Take Me Somewhere Nice, which won a special mention at Rotterdam Film Festival where it premiered in January; and Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov’s documentary Honeyland about Europe’s last female bee hunter, which won three prizes on debut in January at Sundance Film Festival – the cinematography, special jury and grand jury prizes in the world cinema documentary section.

In total, 53 films will compete for the Heart of Sarajevo awards at this year’s festival, across the feature, documentary, short and student film sections. The 53 titles were chosen from 950 submissions, of which 150 were features, 180 documentaries, 420 shorts and 200 student titles.

The full line-up is available on the SFF site.

As Screen revealed earlier this year, Swedish filmmaker Ruben Östlund will chair the jury at this year’s SFF, which also includes outgoing Rotterdam festival director Bero Beyer, Netflix executive Funa Maduka, Serbian actress Jovana Stojiljkovic and North Macedonian filmmaker Teona Strugar Mitevska.

2019 Competition programme (feature films)

Feature film

  • A Tale Of Three Sisters (Tur, Ger, Neth, Gre)
    Dir. Emin Alper
  • And Then We Danced (Geo, Swe, Fr)
    Dir. Levan Akin
  • Cat In The Wall (Bul, UK, Fr)
    Dirs. Mina Mileva, Vesela Kazakova
  • Heidi (Rom), world premiere
    Dir. Cătălin Mitulescu
  • Mo (Rom)
    Dir. Radu Dragomir
  • Open Door (Alb, It, Kos, Mac), world premiere
    Florenc Papas
  • Rounds (Bul, Ser), world premiere
    Dir. Stephan Komandarev
  • Son (Bos-Her, Cro, Rom, Slovenia, Mont), world premiere
    Dir. Ines Tanović
  • Take Me Somewhere Nice (Bos-Her, Neth)
    Dir. Ena Sendijarević

Documentary film (feature-length titles)

  • A Small Documentary About 3 Letters (Bos-Her, Ser, Fr), world premiere
    Dir. Goran Bregović
  • Daughter Of Camorra (Slov, Ita), world premiere
    Dir. Siniša Gačić
  • Honeyland (N. Mace)
    Dirs. Ljubomir Stefanov, Tamara Kotevska
  • How Far The Stars (Hun, US), world premiere
    Dir. Katalin Barsony
  • Palace For The People (Bul, Rom, Ger)
    Dirs. Boris Missirkov, Georgi Bogdanov
  • Queen Lear (Tur), world premiere
    Dir. Pelin Esmer
  • The Euphoria Of Being (Hun)
    Dir. Réka Szabó
  • The Golden Girl (Rom), world premiere
    Dirs. Denisa Morariu-Tamas, Adrian Robe
  • The Soviet Garden (Mold, Rom), world premiere
    Dir. Dragoș Turea
  • When The Persimmons Grew (Az, Austria)
    Dir. Hilal Baydarov
  • When Tomatoes Met Wagner (Gr)
    Dir. Marianna Economou