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SOFIA 2025

The 29th Sofia Film Festival celebrates Bulgarian cinema and auteurs

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- The festival will showcase over 60 Bulgarian films across genres, formats and co-productions alongside its usual regional and European focus

The 29th Sofia Film Festival celebrates Bulgarian cinema and auteurs
The Best by Svetoslav Ovcharov

The Sofia International Film Festival, Bulgaria’s biggest film gathering, will sweep Sofia for its 29th edition this year, beginning on 13 March. After the opening ceremony, audiences will have a chance to see Svetoslav Ovcharov’s period drama The Bet led by local stars Assen Blatechki and Zahari Baharov, as well as Romanian actress Ofelia Popii (the film is a Bulgarian-Romanian co-production). This year’s festival places a special emphasis on Bulgarian cinema, as the programme will showcase a record number of Bulgarian fiction, documentary, and short films, as well as international co-productions involving Bulgaria – over 60 in total. The festival runs between 13-31 March, with the award ceremony being held on the 26th.

For the 23rd time, an international jury will determine the Grand Prize in the competition for a debut or second narrative film, "Sofia - City of Film", sponsored by the Sofia Municipality. The jury is chaired by French director Patricia Mazuy, accompanied by actress Jaana Saarinen (Finland) and directors Pia Marais (South Africa), Veit Helmer (Germany), and Andrey M. Paunov (Bulgaria). 12 films, all first or second features, will be competing for the festival's top award. Bulgarian titles include Pavel G. Vesnakov's Windless [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Pavel G Vesnakov
film profile
]
(Bulgaria/Italy), Magdelena Ilieva’s Eternity Package (Bulgaria/Italy), and Dimitar Stoyanovich’s Flesh (Bulgaria). They are joined by Koya Kamura's Winter in Sokcho [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Koya Kamura
film profile
]
(France/South Korea), Sanja Zivkovic's Cat’s Cry [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
(Serbia/Canada/Croatia), Zhanna Ozirna’s Honeymoon [+see also:
film review
interview: Zhanna Ozirna
film profile
]
(Ukraine), Sophie Muselle and Guérin van de Vorst’s On The Edge [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
(Belgium), Zvonimir Munivrana’s Hallway to Nowhere [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
(Croatia), Kerry Ann Enright’s Nobody Wants to Shoot a Woman (USA), Mara Tamkovich’s Under the Grey Sky [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Mara Tamkovich
film profile
]
(Poland), Eric Nazarian’s Die Like a Man (USA), and Maria Trenor’s Rock Bottom [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile
]
(Spain/Poland).

For the first time, the festival partners with the British Council to present a special selection of films and discussions focused on countering disinformation and promoting social cohesion in Central and Eastern Europe. In addition to films, the “The Engine of Truth” programme includes a masterclass with Mohammad Rasoulof and discussions with the producer of the 2024 whistleblower documentary Antidote, Vivien Jones, and The Editorial Office director Roman Bondarchuk

The Sofia International Film Festival will give out its usual awards for outstanding contribution to the art of cinema. In 2025, there will be multiple recipients of the Sofia Award from the Sofia Municipality (Bulgarian actor Iossif Surchadjiev and Croatian director Rajko Grlić), the special award of the Sofia International Film Festival (directors Kosta Bikov, Bohdan Sláma, and Szabolcs Hajdu). The festival’s special FIPRESCI Platinum Award will also have two recipients: Maestro Prof. Georgi Dyulgerov—one of the most emblematic creators of Bulgarian cinema—and Oscar-nominated Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof.

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