“Let the Corpses Tan” review – a bizarre ode to Spaghetti Westerns

Let the Corpses Tan (2017), the third feature by Belgian duo Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani, is the perfect example of a midnight movie – it’s bloody, stylish and eccentric.…
23-10-2017

Aurora Borealis – Northern Light: Review

Hungary, 2017Director: Márta Mészáros104 min. Acclaimed, pioneering Hungarian director Márta Mészáros returns with the drama Aurora Borealis – Northern Light after eight years of silence. With the new film, Mészáros…
23-10-2017

Turning Time into Steam: Roderick Warich on 2557

Roderick Warich’s debut feature 2557 is a Thailand-set genre hybrid, combining dreamlike sequences with a thriller ambience. At the 33rd Warsaw Film Festival, where the film screened in the International…
23-10-2017

Catalina Review

Poland, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, 2017Director: Denijal Hasanovic98 min. Denijal Hasanović’s debut feature Catalina, screening in the 1-2 Competition at the 33rd Warsaw Film Festival, tells the story of an…
23-10-2017

Manhood Review

Before directing his debut feature, Hungarian filmmaker Peter Politzer gained considerable experience as a film editor. That is why it is not surprising that, in Manhood, the director's main storytelling…
23-10-2017

The Miner

Slovenian feature film The Miner, directed by Hanna Slak, had its international premiere at the 2017 Warsaw Film Festival in the International Competition, following its September release in Slovenian cinemas.…
23-10-2017

Catalina interview Bosnian-Polish director Denijal Hasanovic

Bosnian-Polish director Denijal Hasanovic discusses the themes and process of making his debut feature Catalina, an intimate story of three people from different countries, cultural backgrounds and with different war…
23-10-2017

Daybreak interview with director Gentian Koci

Social realist drama Daybreak by Albanian director Gentian Koci, which won the best actress award for Ornela Kapetani when it premiered at Sarajevo Film Festival, competed in the 1-2 section…
23-10-2017

The Confession Review

Zaza Urushadze’s The Confession was the first overcrowded screening at the 33rd Warsaw Film Festival, most probably due to the director’s previous success with the Oscar-nominated Tangerines, which won the…
18-10-2017

Chateau Review

Using an area’s name as a title for a movie might be an indication of directorial confidence, but it may also suggest a filmmaker trying to bite off more than…
18-10-2017

Be Prepared Review

Polish director Robert Gliński has spent 35 years making films about socio-political themes in Poland and Germany (Nazi occupation, the collapse of communism, and working-class problems under capitalism), many of…
18-10-2017