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FIDMARSEILLE 2022

49 world premieres on the agenda at FIDMarseille

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- Between 5 – 11 July, the southern French city will host the 33rd edition of this festival, presenting 123 films and boasting an international competition jury led by Mati Diop

49 world premieres on the agenda at FIDMarseille
Aftersun by Lluís Galter

Tuesday 5 July will see local-born director Emmanuel Mouret opening the 33rd Marseille International Film Festival – FIDMarseille (now directed by Tsveta Dobreva) out of competition by way of Diary of a Fleeting Affair [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Emmanuel Mouret
film profile
]
(a movie well-received in Cannes). Staying true to its exacting artistic line and open to all genres and formats, the event will offer up 123 films (hailing from 37 countries) in the run up to 11 July, of which 49 will be world premieres and two international premieres across five competition sections. And stealing focus among the countless attractions on the agenda (over 200 professionals from the field of the 7th art will be making the journey to Marseille) is a retrospective dedicated to Spanish director Albert Serra (including the winning work Pacifiction [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Albert Serra
film profile
]
, unveiled in competition in Cannes), as well as a wild card section dedicated to Mathieu Amalric (including his latest films: Zorn III and Maîtres anciens), among other events.

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Standing tall among the 14 titles (including 13 in world premieres) which are taking part in the international competition (evaluated by a jury led by Mati Diop and notably including João Pedro Rodrigues, Ted Fendt and Bani Khoshnoudi) are eight feature films, in the form of Aftersun [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
by Spain’s Lluís Galter, Infamous Men’s Life [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
 by French directors Gilles Deroo and Marianne Pistone, The Unstable Object II by US filmmaker Daniel Eisenberg (a production involved France, Germany. Turkey and the USA), the new lengthy film (409 minutes) by Filippino director Lav Diaz entitled A Tale of Filipino Violence, The Last Two Days by Brazil’s Leonardo Mouramateus, About The Clouds by Argentina’s María Aparicio, Nomotopowel by US helmer Brent Chesanek, A Woman Escapes (Canada/Turkey) by the trio composed of Sofia Bohdanowicz, Burak Çevik and Blake Williams, Night Detour (Canada) by Ariane Falardeau St-Amour and Paul Chotel, and Garden Sandbo by Japan’s Yukinori Kurokawa.

In terms of the French competition (whose jury will be presided over by Dounia Sichov and which further includes Patric Chiha), 11 world premieres are on the cards, of which six are feature films: X14 by Delphine Kreuter, Smalltown Boys [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
by Gaël Lépingle, Pour être aimé par qui by their compatriot Émily Barbelin, About the Conquest by Franssou Prenant, Stars by Jacques Meilleurat and We Had The Day, Bonsoir by Narimane Mari.

Three additional competitive sections are also on the FIDMarseille agenda: the first films line-up will notably showcase Christina [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Nikola Spasic
film profile
]
by Serbia’s Nikola Spasic, Dying in Ibiza (A Film in Three Summers) [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
by the French trio Anton Balekdjian, Léo Couture and Mattéo Eustachon, and Passe-parole by Spain’s Mario Valero. It’s also worth mentioning that the Flash competition jury for short films is set to be led by Spanish director Elena López Riera, and that, among a number of other titles, the National Association of Experimental Film (GNCR) is set to present two works which have previously scooped awards in the Berlinale’s Encounters line-up: See You Friday Robinson [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile
]
by Iran’s Mitra Farahani and Unrest [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Cyril Schäublin
film profile
]
by Switzerland’s Cyril Schaüblin.

The 2022 FIDMarseille programme likewise consists of a Ukrainian Youth line-up (2014-2022), including Mariupolis 2 [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile
]
by the late Lithuanian director Mantas Kvedaravicius, as well as special screenings, including that of Audrey Ginestet’s Drop It [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
, and the Others Gems section, showcasing (among other feature films) Declan Clarke’s German production What Are The Wild Waves Saying? and French titles The Opponents by Pauline Bastard, By The Window by Jean-Christian Riff and Pierre Guyotat, le don de soi by Jacques Kebadian. All without forgetting the professional FIDLab sidebar, which Cineuropa will come back to in greater detail in due course.

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(Translated from French)

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