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PRODUCTION / FINANCEMENT Bulgarie

Nadejda Koseva commence le tournage de Beggar sur les rives du Danube

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- Dans son deuxième long-métrage, la réalisatrice bulgare va tenter d’explorer le côté animal des hommes et le côté humain des animaux

Nadejda Koseva commence le tournage de Beggar sur les rives du Danube
La réalisatrice Nadejda Koseva pendant le tournage

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

Two years after her debut, Irina [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Martina Apostolova
fiche film
]
, triumphed at various festivals worldwide and аppeared among the nominees for the European Discovery 2019 - Prix FIPRESCI award (read the article), on 10 June, Nadejda Koseva will start filming her next feature, provisionally titled Beggar, with a set positioned along the South bank of the Danube, near the town of Ruse. The river plays a key role in the plot according to Koseva – it is not just part of the background landscape, but has a narrative function. The production, handled by Bulgarian company Borough Film, is financially supported by the Bulgarian National Film Center and Bulgarian National TV while negotiating co-production possibilities with Hungarian Proton Cinema.

(L'article continue plus bas - Inf. publicitaire)
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The story, written by veteran Bulgarian screenwriter Boyan Papazov, known for his rebellious scripts in the 1970s, revolves around a 250 kg wild boar brought to a Danube village in order to be ritually shot for a trophy by a wealthy Canadian. Local man Glukhov (filmmaker Kamen Kalev, who directed February [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film
]
and Eastern Plays [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Kamen Kalev
fiche film
]
) organises the hunt, expecting the Canadian to help him close a deal for millions of euros. However, Yovo the Beggar (Alexandr Triffonov, who appears in Godless [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Ralitza Petrova
fiche film
]
) — a former miner, owner of an improvised zoo and perpetual joker — intervenes as he is the only one who has a perfect dog for hunting. Glukhov’s plan goes upside down and nothing will fall into place until he sets his old scores with Yovo.

“Instincts, fears and love between characters (humans and animals) are the real engine of the story”, says Koseva. “Lively, dense, paradoxical, ridiculous and multi-layered, they constitute the film’s flesh and reflect the surrounding world.” The action takes place during the Holy Week, so the protagonist Yovo the Beggar is charged with the symbolic mission to oppose the egocentrism and mercantilism of our time in order to bring hope, like every year at Easter. “Yovo proves that intelligence does not depend on education, but on the strength of one’s personality. He mocks the cynical "elite" that treats notions such as national identity, culture, history and solidarity as empty words”, adds Koseva.

Direction of photography will once again be in the hands of Kiril Prodanov, who proved his talent for creating meaningful portraits in close-ups in Irina. Static camera and smooth light will mark the visual style, while found footage material from local cable TV, drones or mobile phones will be also included.

Filming is planned to last approximately five weeks, confirms producer Vladimir Andreev (The Sinking of Sozopol [+lire aussi :
bande-annonce
fiche film
]
, Lady Zee [+lire aussi :
bande-annonce
fiche film
]
).

(L'article continue plus bas - Inf. publicitaire)

(Traduit de l'anglais)

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