Andrei Gruzsniczki

A graduate of the National Film University in Bucharest in 1994, Andrei Gruzsniczki became assistant director to Romania’s most acclaimed filmmaker, Lucian Pintilie, for his Next Stop, Paradise and Niki and Flo. Andrei also wrote and directed short films and TV productions. His debut, The Other Irene, won the FIPRESCI Award at CinePecs Moveast IFF 2008 and was the Best Romanian Feature at Transylvania IFF in 2009. His second feature film, Quod Erat Demonstrandum, won the Special Jury Award at the Rome IFF in 2013. Andrei’s third feature, Zavera, was in competition at the Cairo IFF in 2019. No Rest for the Old Lady had its world premiere at the Moscow IFF earlier this year and was slated for the Tiantan Award Competition at the now-postponed Beijing IFF.

Alexandre Koberidze

After studying microeconomy and film production in Tbilisi (known in some languages as Tiflis), Alexandre Koberidze moved to Berlin and studied directing at the German Film- and Television Academy Berlin (DFFB). During his studies, he directed several successful short films, starting with his short Colophon (2015) that gained critical plaudits at the Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen. His first feature, Let the Summer Never Come Again (2017), won multiple awards at many festivals worldwide, including the Grand Prix at FID Marseille. What Do We See When We Look at the Sky? is his second feature.

Bettina Oberli

Bettina Oberli grew up in Samoa and Meiringen, Switzerland, and lives in Zurich. She graduated from the Zurich University of the Arts and followed that with various assistantships in New York and Berlin. Her shorts and feature films have been shown at festivals around the world. Her well-regarded debut film, Im Nordwind, premiered in 2004 at the San Sebastian IFF and was awarded several prizes. Her most successful film to date was Late Bloomers (2006), which still remains among the top three Swiss feature films of all time. In addition to The Murder Farm (2009) and Lovely Louise (2013), she directed the TV mini-series Private Banking in 2017. In 2018, she premiered her first French-language film, With the Wind, at the Locarno Film Festival. She also makes music videos and short films, and, in 2013, she directed Anna Karenina, her first stage production. She is also an opera director. My Wonderful Wanda is her sixth feature film.

Fabio & Damiano D’Innocenzo

Born in 1988 in Rome, the D’Innocenzo brothers are self-taught filmmakers. Their debut film, Boys Cry, was presented at the 2018 Berlinale in the Panorama section and received several awards, including, the Nastri D’Argento for Best New Director, Best First Film, and Best Screenplay, and four nominations for the David di Donatello Awards, including Best New Director and Best Original Screenplay. The success of Boys Cry gave the brothers the opportunity to participate in the prestigious workshop at the Sundance Film Festival, under the guidance of the multiple Oscar-nominee Paul Thomas Anderson. In 2019, they published their first poetry collection, Mia Madre È un’ Arma (My Mother Is a Weapon). In 2020, they published their first book of photography, Night Pharmacy. Bad Tales is their second feature film.

Reza Dormishian

Born in 1981 in Tehran, Reza Dormishian studied English and became involved in film journalism. He was an assistant to prestigious Iranian filmmakers Dariush Mehrjui and Alireza Davoudnejad, and he’s also been credited as a scriptwriter for some films and TV productions. He started making short films in 2002, and Hatred (2012) was his first feature film, produced independently in Istanbul and screened at many international festivals, including Montreal and Warsaw. His second feature, I’m Not Angry! (2014), was very controversial in Iran and had its world premiere in the Berlinale’s Panorama section. It was one of most successful Iranian films in 2014 and 2015, screening at more than 50 festivals and collecting 10 awards. Mr. Dormishian’s third movie Lantouri (2016) also premiered in the Berlinale’s Panorama section and screened at more than 50 festivals, collecting six international awards. White Chairs (2017) was his fourth feature film, made in Christchurch, New Zealand. No Choice is his fifth feature.

Ferit Karahan

Born in Muş, Turkey, Ferit Karahan lives in Istanbul. He started in the film business working as an assistant director on feature films. His short films Before the Flood (2010) and Yusiv’s Dream (2011) have been screened at numerous festivals and have won many awards. His feature debut, The Fall From Heaven (2013), premiered at the Antalya Film Festival and won Best Film. It also won the Best First Film Prize at the Ankara Film Festival and was later screened at more than 15 festivals, where it won more than 10 awards. He made a TV film for Fox, Eski Köye Yeni Adet, that was subsequently released in 340 cinemas in Turkey. His Brother’s Keeper had its world premiere in the Panorama section of the Berlinale earlier this year.

Madiano Marcheti

Madiano Marcheti was born and raised in the state of Mato Grosso, in Brazil’s Amazon region. He directed the short film The Coldest Place in Rio, which was selected by the Cinélatino Festival 27èmes Rencontres de Toulouse and several other festivals, and was awarded at the VII Festival Janela Internacional de Cinema de Recife. He also directed the short films The Weight of Loving You, In Transit, and Void, all of which screened in several Brazilian festivals. He is currently working on his new feature film Mother of Gold while he develops the scripts for the projects Images of the Dungeon (for director Carolina Aleixo) and Muff on Muff (for director Lia Kulakauskas). Madalena is his first feature film.

Jacqueline Lentzou

Jacqueline Lentzou is an artist whose cinematic language involves discovering poetry in seemingly mundane premises. A London Film School graduate (2013), she has written and directed five short films—Thirteen Blue (2013), Fox (2016), Hiwa (2017), Hector Malot: The Last Day of the Year (2018), and The End of Suffering (2020)—and all of them had successful festival careers, having premiered at Locarno, Toronto, Berlin, and Cannes. She is the recipient of numerous prestigious awards, including the Cine Leica Discovery Award by the Semaine de la Critique jury at Cannes for Hector Malot. Having developed the script at the Sundance Film Festival’s Screenwriting Workshop, Moon, 66 Questions is her debut feature.

My Wonderful Wanda

Don’t be misled by its title: Bettina Oberli’s satire is many things—intelligent, funny, caustic, beautifully directed and very cleverly structured, to name a few—but sugary sweet isn’t one of them. Wanda (Agnieszka Grochowska, perfect), a Polish single mother of two boys back in Poland, works as the live-in caretaker of rich Swiss businessman Josef (veteran character actor André Jung, stellar), 70. Josef is recovering from a stroke at his sumptuous lakeside family villa, and Wanda, being a no-nonsense pragmatist, makes extra cash by servicing him sexually. When she becomes pregnant, the haut-bourgeois family—Josef’s wife Elsa (an amazing Marthe Keller), brittle daughter Sofie (Birgit Minichmayr, also great), and bird-loving son Gregi (Jacob Matschenz)—comes apart at the seams… For an often-biting critique of the haves (the Swiss) vis-à-vis the have-nots (the Poles), Oberli’s comedic drama is, perhaps surprisingly, winningly humane. It is also an absolute pleasure!

 

Laat je niet misleiden door de titel, want aan de satire van Bettina Oberli kunnen vele kwaliteiten worden toegeschreven: intelligent, grappig, scherp, prachtig geregisseerd en heel slim gestructureerd, om er maar een paar te noemen. Wat is het niet? Mierzoet. Wanda, perfect gespeeld door Agnieszka Grochowska, is een Poolse alleenstaande moeder van twee jongens. Terwijl haar zonen nog in Polen wonen, werkt Wanda als verzorgster van de rijke, 70-jarige Zwitserse zakenman Josef (André Jung), bij wie ze ook inwoont. Josef herstelt van een beroerte in zijn luxueuze villa aan het meer, en Wanda, een no-nonsense-pragmaticus, verdient extra geld door hem ook op seksueel vlak op zijn wenken te bedienen. Josefs vrouw Elsa (een geweldige Marthe Keller), breekbare dochter Sofie (Birgit Minichmayr, ook geweldig), en vogelliefhebbende zoon Gregi (Jacob Matschenz) vormen een familie uit de hoge bourgeoisie die uit elkaar valt wanneer Wanda zwanger raakt. Orberli’s komische drama is, misschien verrassend gezien de zeer aanwezige scherpe kritiek op de rijken (de Zwitsers) tegenover de armen (de Polen), vooral heel menselijk. Een waar genot!

The Siamese Bond

Mothers and daughters and the often-fraught ties that bind serve as the subject of Paula Hernández’s expressive drama. Forty-something Stella (Valeria Lois), single and searching, lives with her ailing mother, Clota (Rita Cortese, Wild Tales), whom she dutifully cares for while longing for some kind of escape. When Stella’s long-estranged father—and Clota’s long-ago-divorced husband—dies and leaves Stella two apartments in a drab coastal town, the two embark on a bus trip that will change things forever.

This is very much an actors’ film; the chemistry between Cortese and Lois is evident from frame one, and their difficult shared history is made palpable through their passive-aggressive interactions. But this is also a director’s film: the mise-en-scène is carefully controlled—on the claustrophobic bus trip, especially—to subtly add depth to both characters and to evoke the growing tension between two people with very different hopes and desires. Something has to give…

 

Moeders en dochters en de vaak gespannen banden die hen binden; dat is waar het om draait in het expressieve drama van Paula Hernández. Stella (Valeria Lois) is ergens in de veertig, alleenstaand en op zoek, en woont bij haar zieke moeder, Clota (Rita Cortese, Wild Tales). Hoewel ze plichtsgetrouw voor haar zorgt, droomt ze ook van een soort van ontsnapping. Bij het overlijdenvan haar vader, van wie ze al lange tijd vervreemd is en van wie Clota jaren geleden gescheiden is, erft Stella twee appartementen aan de kust. De twee beginnen aan een busreis die alles voorgoed zal veranderen.

Het is een echte acteursfilm; de chemie tussen Cortese en Lois is onmiskenbaar van bij het begin en hun moeilijke gedeelde geschiedenis wordt tastbaar gemaakt door passief-agressieve interacties. Toch is het ook een regisseursfilm; er is duidelijk zorg besteed aan de mise-en-scène – vooral tijdens de claustrofobische busreis – om de personages subtiel meer diepgang te geven en om de groeiende spanning op te wekken tussen twee mensen met zeer verschillende dromen en verlangens. Benieuwd hoe dat zal aflopen…