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BERLINALE 2025 EFM

Heretic puts its weight behind Little Trouble Girls at Berlin

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- The Athens-based outfit is selling the eagerly awaited Perspectives title alongside a slate of Balkan titles, including the IFFR competitor Wind, Talk to Me

Heretic puts its weight behind Little Trouble Girls at Berlin
Little Trouble Girls by Urška Djukić

In less than a week, Athens-based sales agent and production company Heretic will stroll into the 75th Berlinale’s European Film Market (EFM, 13-19 February) with Little Trouble Girls [+see also:
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(Slovenia/Italy/Croatia/Serbia), world-premiering in the Berlinale’s brand-new Perspectives competition. Little Trouble Girls is the debut feature by Ljubljana-born filmmaker Urška Djukić. The 90-minute drama centres on shy 16-year-old Lucia, who befriends a charismatic older female student while also taking an interest in a restoration worker during a trip to the countryside with her Catholic school all-girls choir. The Slovene-language film is one among a weighty line-up, with many titles from the Balkans or by filmmakers with a connection to the region.

The sales agency also brings a feature directly from Rotterdam's Tiger Competition: Wind, Talk to Me [+see also:
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(Serbia/Slovenia/Croatia) by Stefan Djordjević. The Serbian-language film, which was inspired by Djordjević’s personal experiences, follows the character of Stefan on a homecoming journey as he tries to finish a film about his recently deceased mother.

Heretic wields two Berlinale Encounters strand winners from last year: Aliyar Rasti’s The Great Yawn of History (Iran), which snagged a Special Jury Award from the section, and Asli Özge’s Faruk [+see also:
film review
interview: Asli Özge
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(Germany/Turkey/France), which was presented with the FIPRESCI Award. In the former, a Farsi-language drama and Rasti’s feature-length debut, a man recruits a non-religious assistant to accompany him on his search for a box of gold he dreams about. The latter follows a nonagenarian who starts to get involved in activism to stop the demolition of his flat in Istanbul.

The sales company is also bringing two titles in post-production for which they also served as producer: the Willem Dafoe-led The Birthday Party and the Zlatko Burić-led Novak. The Birthday Party (Greece/Netherlands/Spain/UK), which also stars Victoria Carmen Sonne (The Girl with the Needle [+see also:
film review
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interview: Besir Zeciri
interview: Directors Talks @ European …
interview: Magnus von Horn
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), is directed by Miguel Ángel Jiménez and set in 1970s Greece. Dafoe plays a Greek tycoon celebrating his daughter’s 25th birthday on his private island, only to encounter a series of events that shake up his world. Harry LagoussisNovak (Greece/Switzerland/India) follows the titular Croatian neuroscientist who is brought into a collective of idealistic young scientists after years hiding from his past.

Two Radu Jude titles will also be showcased: the widely honoured Do Not Expect Much from the End of the World [+see also:
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interview: Radu Jude
film profile
]
(Romania/Luxembourg/France/Croatia) and found-footage documentary Eight Postcards from Utopia [+see also:
film review
interview: Radu Jude, Christian Ferenc…
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(Romania), which he co-directed with Christian Ferencz-Flatz. Heretic’s dramedy side will be represented through Peter Hoogendoorn’s father-son-centric Three Days of Fish [+see also:
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interview: Peter Hoogendoorn
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and Most People Die on Sundays [+see also:
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by Iair Said (Argentina/Italy/Spain), which premiered in Cannes’ ACID programme in 2024 and also enjoyed a lap at San Sebastián’s Horizontes Latinos sidebar.

Heretic’s slate is rounded out by a diverse set of dramas, including Kostis Charamountanis’s Greek-North Macedonian family drama Kyuka: Before Summer’s End [+see also:
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interview: Kostis Charamountanis
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, which opened last year’s Cannes ACID sidebar and is also produced by Heretic. In the film, coming-of-age journeys clash with family secrets on the Greek island of Poros, where a single father brings his twins to meet their birth mother. Others include the Locarno-selected supernatural thriller New Dawn Fades [+see also:
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interview: Gürcan Keltek
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(Turkey/Germany/Italy/Norway/Netherlands) by Gürcan Keltek, Karlovy Vary 2023 Crystal Globe-winner Blaga’s Lessons [+see also:
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interview: Stephan Komandarev
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by Stephan Komandarev (Bulgaria/Germany) and Sweet Dreams [+see also:
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interview: Ena Sendijarević
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by Bosnian-Dutch filmmaker Ena Sendijarević (Netherlands/Sweden/Indonesia/France (Réunion)), set in colonial-era Indonesia.

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