Rotterdam Features – Page 6
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Features
IFFR 2015: Opening night, War Book
Pictures of the cast and crew of War Book at the opening night of the International Film Festival Rotterdam.
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Features
Rotterdam 2015: artful vision
Rutger Wolfson, festival director of International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR), tells Wendy Mitchell how the event stays true to its cinephile roots while also having an openness to changing forms and digital models
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Features
CineMart Rotterdam: all change
Only projects with 25% of their financing in place have been selected for Rotterdam’s CineMart.
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Features
We are UK Film reception at Toronto
The British Film Commission (BFC) and British Film Institute (BFI) together hosted a reception for UK filmmakers and international industry in partnership with the British Council, UKTI Toronto and Screen International.
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Features
Rotterdam and Screen's Toronto party
The International Film Festival Rotterdam and Screen International welcomed international friends to a Toronto celebration on Monday night at Crocodile Rock.
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Tiger directors: Samer Najari & Dominique Chila, Arwad
Husband-and-wife directing team make their feature debut with Arwad, the story of a man who returns to the Syrian island where he grew up and the decisions that impact the women in his life.
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Tiger directors: Lee Su-Jin, Han Gong-Ju
South Korean director Lee Su-Jin’s feature debut is the story of small town girl who is sent to a different school in a remote city after being involved in a horrific incident.
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Tiger directors: Ikeda Akira, Anatomy Of A Paper Clip
Japanese filmmaker Ikeda Akira’s second feature, shot in a small town outside Tokyo, is inspired by old folk tales.
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Tiger directors: Peter Brunner, My Blind Heart
Black-and-white debut feature blurs the lines between perpetrator and victim.
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Tiger directors: Mark Jackson, War Story
The American director continues his work with themes of grief, loss and guilt.
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Tiger directors: Lee Chatametikool, Concrete Clouds
Thai filmmaker explores two brothers impacted by the Asian financial crisis of 1997.
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Tiger directors: Natalia Meschaninova, The Hope Factory
Russian filmmaker Natalia Meschaninova makes her feature debut with The Hope Factory, a coming-of-age tale set against the backdrop of the Siberian city of Norilsk.
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Tiger directors: Tatjana Bozic, Happily Ever After
It was the spectre of yet another failed relationship on the horizon that prompted Croatian filmmaker Tatjana Bozic to make her candid documentary Happily Ever After exploring her chaotic love life of the last 20 years.
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Tiger directors: Maya Vitkova, Viktoria
The Bulgarian film-maker talks about her ‘semi-autobiographical’ directorial debut, nine years in the making.
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Tiger directors: Jan Schomburg, Lose My Self
Maria Schrader stars as a woman suffering from retrograde amnesia.
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Tiger directors: Luis Miñarro, Falling Star
Having worked with a string of acclaimed directors, Spanish arthouse producer Luis Minarro decided that the time was finally right to direct his own fiction feature.
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Features
Tiger directors: Fellipe Barbosa, Casa Grande
Brazilian director Fellipe Barbosa took inspiration from his own family’s financial problems for his debut feature Casa Grande.
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Tiger directors: Paulo Sacramento, Riocorrente
Long-time editor Paulo Sacramento makes his fictional feature debut with Riocorrente, a timely and tense contemporary tale set in Sao Paulo.
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Features
Rotterdam: Michael Tully talks Ping Pong Summer
The Austin-based director talks about his “deeply personal” 1980s-set feature, which has its European premiere in Rotterdam tonight as a Big Talk event (after premiering in Sundance last week).
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Features
Tiger directors: Dick Tuinder, Farewell To The Moon
The Dutch artist and filmmaker’s second feature is set in 1970s Amsterdam.