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Tag: Zurich Film Festival

  • Slovak Oscar Contender ‘Father’ Wins Zurich Film Festival

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    The Zurich Film Festival handed out its top prizes Saturday, with Slovak director Tereza Nvotová’s Father winning the Golden Eye for best feature film and Zurich-based filmmaker Moris Freiburghaus taking the documentary competition with I Love You, I Leave You.

    Father, which is the Slovak entry for the 2026 Oscar race, premiered in Venice. Based on a true story, it stars Milan Ondrík as the titular father in the tale, a decent man who, as a result of a temporary memory lapse and resultant tragedy, leads to his life spiraling out of control. Intramovies is selling the film internationally.

    Special mentions in the section went to Alice Douard’s Des preuves d’amour (Love Letters) and Shih-Ching Tsou’s Left-Handed Girl. The latter, co-written and produced by Anora director Sean Baker, is Taiwan’s official Oscar contender. Netflix has the film for most of the world.

    I Love You, I Leave You is the first Swiss film to win the festival’s top documentary award. Freiburghaus’ film follows his best friend through a year-long struggle with manic episodes. Special mentions were awarded to Yrsa Roca Fannberg’s The Ground Beneath Our Feet and Namir Abdel Messeeh’s Life After Siham.

    The ZFF Critics’ Jury, made up of film writers from Switzerland, Germany and the U.K., honored Damien Hauser’s Memory of Princess Mumbi as the best Swiss film in the program, with a special mention going again to Freiburghaus’ I Love You, I Leave You.

    Benjamin Heisenberg’s Der Prank won both the ZFF for Kids Jury Award and the ZFF for Kids Audience Award. Freiburghaus’ documentary also picked up the overall Audience Award, while Abdel Messeeh’s Life After Siham received the Film Prize of the Churches of Zurich.

    Additional honors included the Best International Film Music Award for Mikal Grigorowitsch.

    The winners of the 21st Zurich festival were announced at the closing gala on Saturday night.

    Full list of 2025 Zurich Film Festival Winners

    Golden Eye for Best Feature Film

    Tereza Nvotová – Father
    Special Mention (Feature Film Competition)

    Alice Douard – Des preuves d’amour (Love Letters)
    Special Mention (Feature Film Competition)

    Shih-Ching Tsou – Left-Handed Girl

    Golden Eye for Best Documentary

    Moris Freiburghaus – I Love You, I Leave You
    Special Mention (Documentary Competition)

    Yrsa Roca Fannberg – The Ground Beneath Our Feet
    Special Mention (Documentary Competition)

    Namir Abdel Messeeh – Life After Siham

    ZFF Critics’ Jury Award

    Damien Hauser – Memory of Princess Mumbi
    Special Mention (ZFF Critics’ Jury)

    Moris Freiburghaus – I Love You, I Leave You

    ZFF for Kids Jury Award

    Benjamin Heisenberg – Der Prank
    ZFF for Kids Audience Award

    Benjamin Heisenberg – Der Prank

    Audience Award

    Moris Freiburghaus – I Love You, I Leave You
    Film Prize of the Churches of Zurich

    Namir Abdel Messeeh – Life After Siham
    Best International Film Music Award

    Mikal Grigorowitsch

    Golden Eye Award

    Dakota Johnson
    Golden Eye Award

    Benedict Cumberbatch
    Golden Eye Award

    Claire Foy
    Golden Eye Award

    Wagner Moura
    Golden Icon Award

    Colin Farrell
    Lifetime Achievement Award

    Russell Crowe
    A Tribute To … Award

    Noah Baumbach
    Career Achievement Award

    Anne Walser
    Career Achievement Award

    Hildur Guðnadóttir
    Game Changer Award

    Tom Quinn

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Ulrich Köhler’s ‘Gavagai’ Debuts Trailer as Film Plays at Zurich Film Festival (EXCLUSIVE)

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    Ulrich Köhler’s “Gavagai” has debuted its trailer with Variety ahead of the film’s screening on Sunday at the Zurich Film Festival.

    International sales for the film, which had its world premiere at New York Film Festival on Saturday, are being handled by LuxBox.

    The film unspools during the turbulent shoot of a “Medea” adaptation in Senegal. On set, Maja seeks solace in a love affair with her co-star Nourou. Months later, they meet again at the film’s premiere in Berlin. Old feelings resurface, but a racist incident unsettles their reunion. Tensions rise as everyone tries to do the right thing. While the ancient tragedy plays out on screen, a contemporary drama unfolds.

    Dennis Lim, artistic director of the New York Film Festival, commented: “Köhler specializes in cunning, tonally surprising films about cross-cultural disconnection, and ‘Gavagai’ is his most ambitious and expansive film yet—a pinpoint-accurate account of moral crises and social biases, modern and ancient, internal and external.”

    The cast includes Jean-Christophe Folly (Nourou), Maren Eggert (Maja), Nathalie Richard (Caroline), Anna Diakhere Thiandoum (Aïta) and Mateusz Malecki (Kolakowski).

    The producers are Ingmar Trost and Clement Duboin. The co-producer is Maren Ade. The lead production company is Sutor Kolonko, and the co-production partner is Good Fortune Films.

    Köhler’s “Bungalow” (2002) and “Montag kommen die Fenster” (2006) were shown at numerous festivals and received several prizes. “Schlafkrankheit (2011) was awarded the Silver Bear for best director at the Berlinale. “In My Room” (2018) premiered in Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section. “A Voluntary Year” (2019), made in collaboration with Henner Winckler, screened in competition at Locarno.

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    Leo Barraclough

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  • Zurich: Panel Sounds Alarm on Political Pressures in Cinema

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    At this year’s Zurich Summit, filmmakers and industry executives warned that political polarization and attacks on free expression are reshaping the landscape for cinema, with artists facing new forms of pressure from governments, media, and online campaigns.

    Nathanaël Karmitz, chairman of French distributor and exhibitor mk2, whose slate includes Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Brazil-set political drama The Secret Agent and Jafar Panahi’s Palme d’Or winner A Simple Accident, argued that the link between politics and cinema is long-standing but has entered a new phase. “Culture is under attack and cinema is under attack everywhere,” he said. “We have less and less press talking about movies, but now we have far-right Twitter accounts that attack systematically everything about movies and French movies. In terms of audience, it’s the major voice we hear on Twitter. Is this a problem? Yes, it is.”

    Karmitz said mk2 had recently decided to confront such criticism directly rather than ignore it. “Audiences are fragmented, so you have to take a position, and you have to position yourself, your company, without fearing the consequence, because otherwise you’re nowhere,” he noted, pointing to recent attempts by right-wing politicians in France to dismantle France’s CNC film funding body and privatize public television. “This is a very fragile ecosystem. It’s under attack everywhere because these are the first steps to illiberal systems. But I’m an optimist. I believe in people, in companies, in artists to get themselves up and fight back.”

    Kathleen Fournier, head of production at Charlotte Street Films and producer of Eugene Jarecki’s Julian Assange documentary The 6 Billion Dollar Man, described a narrowing space for political filmmaking in the streaming era. “As documentaries move to streaming platforms, many of the political and more nuanced and difficult or subjective documentaries did not make that leap,” she said. “What you now find on streaming platforms tends to be historical, [or] it’s true crime, or it’s very personal stories.”

    That shift has left politically charged projects struggling to secure U.S. deals. Both The 6 Billion Dollar Man, which premiered at Cannes in May, and Kaouther Ben Hania’s Gaza-set The Voice of Hind Rajab, which bowed in Venice, still lack U.S. distribution. Fournier acknowledged the challenge but argued that new opportunities are emerging outside the studio system. “There are some really agile, wonderful, smaller boutique theatrical distribution companies who really are just running with this,” she said. “The conglomerates can buy up the media landscape all they want, but humans crave stories, and there will always be those people who look to create alternative streaming platforms, boutique distribution. We like stories. We’ll find our way.”

    The production of The 6 Billion Dollar Man, which examines the U.S. government’s prosecution of WikiLeaks founder Assange, was itself shaped by political pressure. Initially unafraid to include controversial material, such as former president Donald Trump’s past comments attacking Assange, the filmmakers debated whether to self-censor as political winds shifted toward a possible second Trump administration. “In the end, we decided we just have to tell the story as we intended, with as many facts and as much nuance and complexity around it that we felt an audience could handle,” Fournier said.

    The risks extended beyond financing and distribution. Fournier said her team relocated the production to Berlin to avoid legal exposure in the U.K. and U.S. “We didn’t feel comfortable editing in the UK or in the US, because there are laws there and ways to seize footage, and journalists aren’t protected in the way they are in Germany,” she said. “We moved the entire production team and edit to Berlin, and that was really inspiring and very interesting, until the Gaza war happened and we started to see that even Germany, with all of its civic-mindedness, is fallible to ideology and to erosion.”

    That fragility, Fournier suggested, underscores the wider uncertainty facing political filmmaking today: whether such projects can still find protection, distribution, and audiences in an increasingly polarized world. While some see new opportunities in alternative platforms and boutique distributors, others point to audiences themselves as the ultimate safeguard.

    Artist International Group CEO David Unger pointed to audiences’ growing openness to global storytelling, citing the worldwide success of Korean series on Netflix. “That shows you that the audience will find good stories, and appreciate interesting characters and embrace artists that tell those stories, no matter where they’re from,” he said.

    Film data researcher and consultant Stephen Follows urged the industry to remain vigilant. “The 1970s had much more diverse, interesting storytelling than the 1980s, and in the 1990s, things got dumber and simpler,” he said. “The film industry is fundamentally, as a business and as an ecosystem, risk-averse and scared and cowardly. [It] needs agitators, because if we don’t actively do things, the industry acts in horrible ways.”

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Saudi Arabia’s Long Delayed First Hollywood-Style Blockbuster ‘Desert Warrior,’ Starring Anthony Mackie, Set for Zurich World Premiere

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    Saudi Arabia’s first Hollywood-style tentpole movie “Desert Warrior” is finally set to bow, following a long gestation, with a Zurich Film Festival world premiere on Sept. 28.

    The period action epic with a hefty $150 million budget is helmed by British director director Rupert Wyatt (“Rise of the Planet of the Apes”) and features a top notch international cast led by “Captain America” star Anthony Mackie, Ben Kingsley, and Aiysha Hart (“Mogul Mowgli,” “Colette”).

    The Zurich gala will be attended by the film’s talents, according to a statement. 

    Shot in 2021 in a scenic desert area around the site of the futuristic city of NEOM “Desert Warrior,” which is set in at a pre-Islamic 7th century Arabia when Saudi was made up of rival, feuding tribes forever at each other’s throats, has since been caught in a seemingly endless tempest of reshoots, recuts, and infighting.

    In the epic Emperor Kisra (Kingsley) has a reputation for being utterly ruthless. So when the Arabian princess Hind (Hart) refuses to become Kisra’s concubine, the stage is set for an epic confrontation after she escapes into the desert and puts her trust in mysterious Bandit (Mackie) with whom she rallies the previously warring tribes to take on Kisra’s enormous army.

    “Desert Warrior,” which is produced by Saudi-owned powerhouse MBC Studios with U.S. producer Jeremy Bolt (“Resident Evil”) and Stuart Ford’s AGC Studios, has been touted as a testament to Saudi’s ambition to produce high-end content for global audiences.

    Amid turbulence following the shoot Rupert Wyatt had been taken off the project by MBC but was subsequently reinstated on the project.

    The blockbuster is supported by the Saudi Film Commission through the country’s cash rebate which supports both Saudi and international film productions, and by the so-called Quality of Life program that contributes to fostering the future of Saudi’s film industry.

    AGC International, the international sales and distribution arm of AGC Studios, is handling world sales.

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    Nvivarelli

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  • Colin Farrell Risks It All in Wild Trailer for Edward Berger’s Netflix Movie ‘Ballad of a Small Player’

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    Colin Farrell finds himself in a high-stakes state of mind in the teaser trailer for Netflix‘s Ballad of a Small Player.

    Netflix releases Edward Berger‘s feature in select U.S. theaters Oct. 15 and in select U.K. and Ireland theaters two days later before it begins streaming Oct. 29. Fala Chen, Deanie Ip, Alex Jennings and Tilda Swinton round out the cast.

    Ballad of a Small Player centers on Lord Doyle (Farrell), a high-stakes gambler who is dealing with debts and his questionable past. While trying to keep a low profile in Macau, he receives a tempting offer from mysterious casino employee Dao Ming (Chen) while also avoiding private investigator Cynthia Blithe (Swinton).

    The eye-catching trailer features a collection of quick scenes as Farrell is shown sitting on the floor of the shower, cracking open a lobster in a hotel room, screaming during a card game and watching a raging fire.

    “I may be out of puff, but I still have my balls,” Farrell declares in the footage.

    Berger helmed the film from a script by Rowan Joffe that is based on author Lawrence Osborne’s 2014 novel. Berger, Mike Goodridge and Matthew James Wilkinson serve as producers.

    Colin Farrell (left) and Fala Chen in Ballad of a Small Player.

    Courtesy of Netflix

    Ballad of a Small Player is set to premiere next month at the Toronto International Film Festival before screening at other fall festivals. Farrell is set to receive the Golden Icon Award when the movie plays at the Zurich Film Festival on Sept. 27.

    Berger directed Netflix’s 2022 film All Quiet on the Western Front, which was nominated for nine Oscars. His most recent film was last year’s thriller Conclave, with the Focus Features release landing the Academy Award for best adapted screenplay.

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    Ryan Gajewski

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