PRODUCTION / FINANCEMENT Finlande
Douze films reçoivent des aides à la production de la part de la Fondation finlandaise du film
par Marta Bałaga
- L’institution a accordé un total de 3 352 500 euros à six longs-métrages de fiction et six documentaires ; trois de ces films sont des coproductions internationales où la Finlande est minoritaire

Cet article est disponible en anglais.
The board of the Finnish Film Foundation has announced that it has granted a total of €3,352,500 to six fiction features and six documentaries. Three of the films are international minority co-productions, including Making Movies’ Varado by Nicos Argillet and Stèphane Correa (€35,000), Children of the Lowest Heaven by Birgitte Stærmose, with Bufo attached (€35,000), and The Swedish Torpedo [+lire aussi :
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interview : Frida Kempff
fiche film] by Frida Kempff, which received €187,500. Klaus Heydemann, of Inland Film Company, is on board the latter. As a reminder, Kempff previously showed her successful psychological horror Knocking [+lire aussi :
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interview : Frida Kempff
fiche film] at Sundance.
Other well-known filmmakers also received some love. Pirjo Honkasalo – also behind The 3 Rooms of Melancholia – will now direct Orenda [+lire aussi :
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fiche film], described as a feature film “about guilt and mercy”, scoring another point for Bufo. While her project was granted €850,000, Tiina Lymi’s highly anticipated period film Stormskerry Maja [+lire aussi :
critique
fiche film], based on a series of beloved novels and produced by Solar Films, was given €920,000. The filming of the Swedish-language drama has already started in Åland.
Teemu Nikki, awarded at Venice for his touching drama The Blind Man Who Did Not Want to See Titanic [+lire aussi :
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interview : Teemu Nikki et Jani Pösö
interview : Teemu Nikki, Jani Pösö et …
fiche film], is already hard at work on Death is a Problem for the Living. Produced by It’s Alive Films, this pitch-black comedy about “addiction, friendship and dead bodies” received €175,000. Incidentally, The Blind Man Who Did Not Want to See Titanic is also vying for the Nordic Council Film Prize (see the news).
Children’s films were noticed as well, with Finders 2 – Pharaohs Ring by Taavi Vartia (also on production duties) and the ingeniously titled Itty Bitty Princess – Adults can go to Hilldiggle! by Lauri Maijala (Helsinki-filmi) getting €150,000 and €775,000, respectively.
Finally, on the documentary front, Arto Halonen’s In the Ballpark of Finland, recently presented at the Helsinki-based industry event Finnish Film Affair (see the news), Ville Suhonen’s Children of War and Peace [+lire aussi :
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fiche film], Iiti Yli-Harja’s animation Oh No, a Mouse! (both Illume productions) and Leena Jääskeläinen’s Making Art in My Dreams (Osuuskunta Animaatiokopla) got €50,000, €80,000, €45,000 and €50,000, respectively. The first of these, produced by Art Films Production, will explore how, in the 1970s, African American basketball players introduced multiculturalism to Finland and how, later, their sons launched a battle for equality.
(Traduit de l'anglais)
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