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SOLEURA 2025

Las Jornadas de Soleura anuncian la programación de su edición n.° 60

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- Die Hinterlassenschaft des Bruno Stefanini de Thomas Haemmerli inaugurará una edición que pone el foco sobre las nuevas generaciones y el tema de la herencia

Las Jornadas de Soleura anuncian la programación de su edición n.° 60
Die Hinterlassenschaft des Bruno Stefanini, de Thomas Haemmerli

Este artículo está disponible en inglés.

The Solothurn Film Festival will celebrate its 60th edition in 2025 (running 22 - 29 January), paying tribute to current film creation in all its genres and formats. The younger generation of filmmakers will also be placed centre stage, by way of works both powerful and personal. The festival has selected 91 feature films and 71 shorts for this year’s edition, 21 of which are taking part in the Solothurn’s three competitions.

As mentioned in the press release, "it’s interesting to see a high number of works exploring subjects around legacy and succession" this year. It’s a theme which is fast becoming the leitmotiv of the Panorama section, notably thanks to Thomas Haemmerli’s opening movie Die Hinterlassenschaft des Bruno Stefanini, which looks back on the life of a property entrepreneur and die-hard collector. Other films also lean into this subject-matter: Highly Explosive by Kerstin Polte reflects on what the Second World War has left in its wake, and We, the Inheritors by Simon Baumann, which was previously presented in Locarno’s Critics’ Week, takes an unflinching approach to tackling succession within a family.

For its part, the Prix de Soleure section will offer up four documentaries, one of which also takes an interest in matters of legacy, though this time vis-a-vis the war: Il ragazzo della Drina by Zijad Ibrahimovic examines how new generations live with the trauma caused by armed conflict. There’s also Dom by Svetlana Rodina and Laurent Stoop, which follows Russian rebels who resist using digital media, Under Mango Trees by Damaris Lüthi, homing in on women experiencing the upheaval of civil war in Sri Lanka, and Immortals [+lee también:
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by Maja Tschumi, which follows two young people at the height of the October Revolution in Bagdad. The fiction films jostling in the showcase are Bagger Drama [+lee también:
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entrevista: Piet Baumgartner
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by Piet Baumgartner, which was awarded the New Directors Prize in San Sebastián and which focuses on construction machinery and a family who struggle to talk about their feelings when faced with a tragedy, and Hôtel Silence [+lee también:
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by Canadian-Swiss director Léa Pool, which sees a man finding joie de vivre in a country ravaged by war.

In the Audience Award line-up, meanwhile, seven feature films have been selected alongside the afore-mentioned Die Hinterlassenschaft des Bruno Stefanini. These include Behind The Glass by Olga Dinnikova, which follows a rebellious girl who finds refuge in Switzerland; Iceman [+lee también:
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by Corina Gamma, focusing on Swiss explorer Konrad Steffen who disappeared without a trace in Greenland; Naima by Anna Thommen, painting the portrait of a Venezuelan woman who begins her nursing training in Switzerland; Road’s End in Taiwan [+lee también:
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entrevista: Maria Nicollier
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 by Maria Nicollier, focusing on a young man who decides to travel to Taiwan on inheritance matters but who discovers his family in the process, and Quir [+lee también:
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entrevista: Nicola Bellucci
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 by Nicola Bellucci, which tells a courageous love story about a couple who are part of the LGBTQI+ scene in Palermo.

Last but not least, in the Visioni section, dedicated to first and second works, seven films will take centre stage, including Milk Teeth [+lee también:
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entrevista: Mona Cathleen Otterbach
entrevista: Sophia Bösch
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by Sophia Bösch, which is a feminist ode exploring different marginalised realities which society is afraid of confronting; Pictures in Mind [+lee también:
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entrevista: Eleonora Camizzi
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by Eleonora Camizzi, which questions the boundaries between mental illness and what society defines as "normality"; Tamina – Will There Ever Be What Used to Be? by Beat Oswald, Lena Hatebur and Samuel Weniger, which uses the wolf metaphor to reflect upon mankind’s place in an ecosystem which they believe they dominate; Freight by Max Carlo Kohal, telling the story of a young man who dreams of becoming the captain of a container ship; Osteria all'undici by Filippo Demarchi, which also tackles taboos relating to mental illness by way of his own personal experience; and, finally, the surrealist work Norma Dorma [+lee también:
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by Lorenz Suter, which is a cinematographic anomaly hovering between dream and real-life.

(Traducción del francés)

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