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ROSE D'OR 2023

Près de 60 films au programme du 41e Festival de la Rose d'or

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- Du 20 au 28 septembre, 12 longs-métrages vont se disputer le premier prix de l'événement, où sont également en lice 25 courts-métrages

Près de 60 films au programme du 41e Festival de la Rose d'or
The Last Seagull de Tonislav Hristov

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

Every autumn, virtually the entire Bulgarian film industry flocks to the seaside city of Varna for the Golden Rose Film Festival. At its 41st edition (20-28 September), the gathering is showcasing the newest Bulgarian features and minority co-productions, some of them meeting the audience for the very first time. The event opens tonight with Tonislav Hristov’s documentary The Last Seagull [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Tonislav Hristov
fiche film
]
(Finland/Norway/Bulgaria).

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The director of the Bulgarian National Film Center, Peter D Todorov, tells Cineuropa that the festival’s main attraction is the “strong competition between young talent and prominent Bulgarian auteurs, and may the best one win the Golden Rose”. One particular highlight of the festival is its short-film competition (the jury of which sees the involvement of Cineuropa’s very own Mariana Hristova), and this year, as many as 25 shorts will have the rather rare opportunity to be shown on the big screen.

The 12 features competing for the Golden Rose are Sissy Denkova’s Scent of Linden (USA/Bulgaria); Avelina Prat’s Vasil [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Avelina Prat
fiche film
]
(Spain/Bulgaria); Theodore Ushev’s Phi 1.618 [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
fiche film
]
(Bulgaria/Canada); Georgi Kostov’s The Pulse of the Dance (Bulgaria); Ivan Vladimirov’s Plague (Bulgaria); Stephan Komandarev’s Blaga’s Lessons [+lire aussi :
critique
interview : Stephan Komandarev
fiche film
]
(Bulgaria/Germany), which is also the Bulgarian candidate for next year’s Academy Awards (see the news); Peter Rusev’s Apostol: A Gentle Knight in Brutalia (Bulgaria); Georgi Dyulgerov’s Memoir of a Betrayal (Bulgaria); Yana Titova’s Dyad [+lire aussi :
critique
interview : Yana Titova
fiche film
]
(Bulgaria); Tonislav Hristov’s The Good Driver [+lire aussi :
critique
fiche film
]
(Finland/Bulgaria/Sweden); Boby Zahariev’s Game of Trust (Bulgaria); and Marian Valev’s Chalga (Bulgaria).

Several TV-show pilots will be screened at the festival: War of the Letters, which tells a story set in 10th-century Bulgaria; the family drama The Grapes of Guilt; and the thrillers The Hunt for Salamander and Autumn of the Demon. Several Bulgarian classics will also be featured – for example, Atanas Traykov's Thorn Apple, which stars actress Meglena Karalambova, gracing this edition’s poster.

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(Traduit de l'anglais)

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