email print share on Facebook share on Twitter share on LinkedIn share on reddit pin on Pinterest

GOEAST 2023

Il 23° goEast Film Festival al via oggi con Aurora’s Sunrise

di 

- Sedici lungometraggi di finzione e documentari dell'Europa centrale e orientale, tra cui drammi e commedie, ritratti cinematografici e film sulle donne realizzati da donne, concorreranno per il Giglio d'Oro

Il 23° goEast Film Festival al via oggi con Aurora’s Sunrise
Aurora’s Sunrise di Inna Sahakyan

Questo articolo è disponibile in inglese.

This year, goEast – Festival of Central and Eastern European Film, taking place in Wiesbaden and the Rhine-Main region from 26 April-2 May, kicks off with the widely acclaimed animated documentary Aurora’s Sunrise [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
intervista: Inna Sahakyan
scheda film
]
by Armenian director Inna Sahakyan, based on the true and miraculous story of a young female survivor of the Armenian genocide who achieved Hollywood stardom. It is one of the bold competition titles by a female director that deal with a female’s destiny. Another two examples of this are Hungarian director Fanni Szilágyi’s Not a Thing [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
scheda film
]
, focused on identical twin sisters in contrasting life situations, and Cristina Groșan's feminist sci-fi drama Ordinary Failures [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
intervista: Cristina Grosan
scheda film
]
, featuring three women who interact as the world is about to end.

(L'articolo continua qui sotto - Inf. pubblicitaria)
Hot docs EFP inside

After the disruption to the previous edition of the festival, when two Russian titles were voluntarily withdrawn from the competition by their filmmakers (see the news) for being shot with state funding, the festival welcomes one independent title from Russia this year. Manifesto, composed of amateur mobile-phone videos and directed by Angie Vinchito – a pseudonym, employed to protect the identity of the filmmaker – displays the violence unfolding in the school system and in everyday life in Russia. Ukraine is represented by Philip Sotnychenko’s coming-of-age drama La Palisiada [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
intervista: Philip Sotnychenko
scheda film
]
, set in the 1990s, and two co-productions: the documentary We Will Not Fade Away [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
scheda film
]
by Alisa Kovalenko, which follows a group of adolescents growing up in Donbas; and Motherland [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
scheda film
]
by Alexander Mihalkovich and Hanna Badziaka, which portrays Belarusian society through the story of a mother who does not believe that her son committed suicide while completing his military service.

Another intriguing societal portrait is Hanka Nobis’ documentary debut, Polish Prayers [+leggi anche:
recensione
intervista: Hana Nobis
scheda film
]
, which depicts a segment of Polish reality by following a young man from a conservative Catholic background. A historical overview of the Soviet attempt to suppress the movement for Baltic independence in 1991 can be seen in January [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
scheda film
]
by Latvian helmer Viesturs Kairišs, also through the lens of the youth. Lithuania is participating with two titles: Titas Laucius’ musical comedy Parade [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
intervista: Titas Laucius
scheda film
]
and the psychological drama Remember to Blink [+leggi anche:
recensione
intervista: Austėja Urbaitė
scheda film
]
by Austėja Urbaitė. Central Asia will also be locking horns with two competing features, both by renowned filmmakers: veteran Kyrgyzstani director Aktan Arym Kubat’s This Is What I Remember [+leggi anche:
intervista: Aktan Arym Kubat
scheda film
]
, which depicts contemporary Kyrgyzstan through a minimalistic family story; and independent Kazakh auteur Adilkhan Yerzhanov’s revenge-western Goliath, which references the biblical story of David and Goliath while touching upon modern-day corruption in his country.

Serbia sets a new record with four titles in competition: Siniša Cvetić’s eclectic and dramatic The Beheading of St John the Baptist [+leggi anche:
recensione
trailer
scheda film
]
, Nenad Pavlović’s conspiracy thriller Trail of the Beast, Alessandra Tatić and Zoë Aiano’s magical-realist documentary Flotacija, and Marko Šantić’s socially critical drama Wake Me [+leggi anche:
recensione
intervista: Marko Šantić
scheda film
]
(a co-production with Slovenian and Croatia).

The international jury consists of director, critic and festival curator Rada Šešić (chair), last year’s Golden Lily Award winner Kaltrina Krasniqi, and producer and founder of online platform Klassiki Justine Waddell, as well as filmmakers Mikhail Borodin and Andrei Kutsila. They will decide on the recipients of awards valued at a total of €21,500.

Key sidebar programmes are the retrospective dedicated to Bosnian filmmaker Jasmila Žbanić and the traditional Symposium, including lectures and the screening of archival films, this year curated around the topic of “Decolonising the (Post-)Soviet Screen”.

(L'articolo continua qui sotto - Inf. pubblicitaria)

(Tradotto dall'inglese)

Ti è piaciuto questo articolo? Iscriviti alla nostra newsletter per ricevere altri articoli direttamente nella tua casella di posta.

Privacy Policy