They include Austrian drama Chucks, Finnish muscial drama Urban Family, and Canadian thriller Anna.
The pan-Asian film channel Cinema World has bought a raft of international titles from Italian sales outfit Summerside International.
They include Gerhard Ertl’s Austrian drama Chucks, about a punk girl falling in love with an AIDS patient, Oskari Sipola’s Finnish muscial drama Urban Family, a portrait of a woman in her thirties who finally meets the baby daughter she gave for adoption, and Charles Olivier Michaud’s Canadian thriller Anna, a revenge thriller about a woman who is kidnapped by gangsters in Bangkok.
Two...
The pan-Asian film channel Cinema World has bought a raft of international titles from Italian sales outfit Summerside International.
They include Gerhard Ertl’s Austrian drama Chucks, about a punk girl falling in love with an AIDS patient, Oskari Sipola’s Finnish muscial drama Urban Family, a portrait of a woman in her thirties who finally meets the baby daughter she gave for adoption, and Charles Olivier Michaud’s Canadian thriller Anna, a revenge thriller about a woman who is kidnapped by gangsters in Bangkok.
Two...
- 5/11/2018
- by Gabriele Niola
- ScreenDaily
They include Austrian drama Chucks, Finnish muscial drama Urban Family, and Canadian thriller Anna.
The pan-Asian film channel Cinema World has bought a raft of international titles from Italian sales outfit Summerside International.
They include Gerhard Ertl’s Austrian drama Chucks, about a punk girl falling in love with an AIDS patient, Oskari Sipola’s Finnish muscial drama Urban Family, a portrait of a woman in her thirties who finally meets the baby daughter she gave for adoption, and Charles Olivier Michaud’s Canadian thriller Anna, a revenge thriller about a woman who is kidnapped by gangsters in Bangkok.
Two...
The pan-Asian film channel Cinema World has bought a raft of international titles from Italian sales outfit Summerside International.
They include Gerhard Ertl’s Austrian drama Chucks, about a punk girl falling in love with an AIDS patient, Oskari Sipola’s Finnish muscial drama Urban Family, a portrait of a woman in her thirties who finally meets the baby daughter she gave for adoption, and Charles Olivier Michaud’s Canadian thriller Anna, a revenge thriller about a woman who is kidnapped by gangsters in Bangkok.
Two...
- 5/11/2018
- by Gabriele Niola
- ScreenDaily
Thirst
Directed by Svetla Tsotsorkova
Written by Svetoslav Ovtcharov, Svetla Tsotsorkova, and Ventsislav Vasilev
Bulgaria, 2015
Thirst, Bulgarian actress Svetla Tsotsorkova’s feature debut just premiered in the New Directors section at the San Sebastian Film Festival and is currently screening at the Haifa International Film Festival. It stars teenage newcomers Monika Naydenova and Alexander Benev alongside Bulgarian screen and theatre veterans Vasil Mihailov, Ivaylo Hristov, Svetla Yancheva and Stefan Mavrodiev.
Thirst is a minimalist countryside drama set in rural southwest Bulgaria, in a region affected by chronic summer drought where a nameless family of three urban transplants, a teenage son (Alxander Benev), a father living with the aftereffects of two heart attacks (Ivaylo Hristov) and a mother who supports the family as a laundry contractor for the region’s hotels, live in a hilltop house overlooking a mountain valley. The drought affecting the area renders the laundry business unreliable and...
Directed by Svetla Tsotsorkova
Written by Svetoslav Ovtcharov, Svetla Tsotsorkova, and Ventsislav Vasilev
Bulgaria, 2015
Thirst, Bulgarian actress Svetla Tsotsorkova’s feature debut just premiered in the New Directors section at the San Sebastian Film Festival and is currently screening at the Haifa International Film Festival. It stars teenage newcomers Monika Naydenova and Alexander Benev alongside Bulgarian screen and theatre veterans Vasil Mihailov, Ivaylo Hristov, Svetla Yancheva and Stefan Mavrodiev.
Thirst is a minimalist countryside drama set in rural southwest Bulgaria, in a region affected by chronic summer drought where a nameless family of three urban transplants, a teenage son (Alxander Benev), a father living with the aftereffects of two heart attacks (Ivaylo Hristov) and a mother who supports the family as a laundry contractor for the region’s hotels, live in a hilltop house overlooking a mountain valley. The drought affecting the area renders the laundry business unreliable and...
- 10/3/2015
- by Zornitsa Staneva
- SoundOnSight
Demon, from late director Marcin Wrona, among those in competition.Scroll down for full competition list
The 31st Warsaw Film Festival (Oct 8-19) has revealed the 16 films selected for its international competition, which will vye for the main award - Warsaw Grand Prix, Best Director Award and Special Jury Award.
The titles include Demon, from Marcin Wrona, the 42-year-old Polish who died in Gdynia on Saturday (Sept 19). The death was likely a suicide, according to reports.
Other films in competition include Hany Abu-Assad’s The Idol, Gabriel Mascaro’s Neon Bull and Alex van Warmerdam’s Schneider vs. Bax.
This year’s festival will include 111 full-length films from 57 countries, comprising 90 features, 18 documentaries and three animations as well as 66 short films.
The winners of Short Film Competition will be put forward to compete for the Oscar.
The festival will open with Men and Chicken by Anders Thomas Jensen, whose film Adam’s Apples won theAudience Award at Wff...
The 31st Warsaw Film Festival (Oct 8-19) has revealed the 16 films selected for its international competition, which will vye for the main award - Warsaw Grand Prix, Best Director Award and Special Jury Award.
The titles include Demon, from Marcin Wrona, the 42-year-old Polish who died in Gdynia on Saturday (Sept 19). The death was likely a suicide, according to reports.
Other films in competition include Hany Abu-Assad’s The Idol, Gabriel Mascaro’s Neon Bull and Alex van Warmerdam’s Schneider vs. Bax.
This year’s festival will include 111 full-length films from 57 countries, comprising 90 features, 18 documentaries and three animations as well as 66 short films.
The winners of Short Film Competition will be put forward to compete for the Oscar.
The festival will open with Men and Chicken by Anders Thomas Jensen, whose film Adam’s Apples won theAudience Award at Wff...
- 9/23/2015
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
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