The 2023 European Film Festival in South Africa celebrates its 10th edition from 12 to 22 October with an inspired lineup of 16 new award-winning films screening in Johannesburg and Cape Town, with a special programme in Durban. In addition, 11 of the films will be screened free online. Featured countries are Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, United Kingdom and Ukraine, while the festival also features an African-European co-production film, set in Sudan.
Filmmaker engagements, community centre and schools’ programmes will deepen the festival’s reach, while the countrywide online programme of free screenings will run concurrently during the festival. The festival will also present events at the Alliance Française in Eswatini (20 to 22 October) and Lesotho (20 to 29 October).
The festival theme this year is Transition, as the films offer a cinematic reflection of the transition people go through during our turbulent and fast-moving times.
Providing access in a variety of areas inside and outside the city precincts, thirteen screenings and post-screening discussions will take place at Community Centres in the Cape Town (Bertha Movie House Khayalitsha and Mowbray, various Ikamva Youth Programme venues in T3-T4, Mandela Park and Gugulethu) Johannesburg (Market Theatre – Windybrow and the Sibikwa Arts Centre),Durban (Ekhaya MultiArts Centre – KwaMashu) and Oudtshoorn – Oudtshoorn Community Centre. For full details go to: https://www.eurofilmfest.co.za/2023-home/special-programmes/
2023 European Film Festival line-up
The festival includes two films which were jointly awarded the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 2022:
From Italy
Set in the breath-taking Italian Alps, The Eight Mountains is a compelling character-driven drama directed by Charlotte Vandermeersch and Felix van Groeningen. Gorgeously shot, this film offers a deeply textured glimpse into the bonds of friendship, the journeys of self-discovery, and the relationship between humans and nature.
From Poland
The Oscar-nominated film EO, directed by the legendary Jerzy Skolimowski, is an innovatively-conceived road movie with a difference; it is seen almost entirely from a donkey’s perspective. This beguiling and often-harrowing tale of a donkey is both thrilling and empathetic, compelling us to see the world differently.
There are three films fresh from the most recent Cannes festival in May 2023:
From France
Anatomy of a Fall, astonishingly well-written and directed by Justine Triet, won the top prize at Cannes, the Palm d’Or. This part thorny family story, part whodunit, part courtroom drama puts marital power dynamics under the microscope.
From the United Kingdom
In The Old Oak, veteran filmmaker Ken Loach has made an incisive social drama about an English village where there is anger, resentment and a lack of hope since the closing of the local mine. What more could go wrong for the world-weary townsfolk? That’s when the Syrian refugees move in….this will be a time of transition for everybody!
African-European collaboration in Sudan
Goodbye Julia is a six-country coproduction film (Sudan, Egypt, Germany, France, Sweden and Saudi-Arabia) and winner of the Cannes Film Festival’s prestigious Freedom Award. Directed by Mohamed Kordofani, it tells of the friendship between two women who represent the complicated relationship and differences between northern and southern Sudanese communities at a time of intense upheaval and transition. South African cinematographer for the film, Pierre de Villiers, will present workshops at the festival.
Discovering and affirming one’s identity is not a straight-forward process for all., especially in relation to gender norms. As evidenced by the following two films, this is all the more challenging for the very young who face enormous pressures as they attempt to find their place in the world, and within themselves:
From Spain
20,000 Species of Bees by Estibaliz Urresola Solaguren focuses on an eight-year-old child who asks “How come everyone knows who they are and I don’t?” Beautifully delivered, this richly textured chronicle of an eight-year-old’s gradual transitioning, and the effect it has on a family, is ultimately about tolerance and acceptance.
From Belgium
The Oscar nominated Close by Lukas Dhont has been winning major awards for its sensitive portrayal of how the pressures of masculinity shatter the innocent friendship of two 13-year old boys. Close is an emotionally transformative portrait of the intersection of friendship and love, identity and independence, heartbreak and healing, and of necessary transition.
Two films about responding to the unforeseen circumstances that sometimes surprise and challenge us:
From the Netherlands
In Martijn de Jong’s Narcosis, an adventurous, eccentric and fun father fails to resurface during a cave-dive, and we see how his family responds in unique but very relatable ways as they transition to new lives. This deeply touching story about love, loss and acceptance won four Golden Calf awards at the Netherlands Film Festival and was the Dutch submission to the Academy Awards.
From Germany
The smallest of decisions has seismic repercussions in The Teacher’s Lounge. When a young teacher decides to investigate theft at her school things escalate dramatically, not how she intends. İlker Çatak’s film is about a lot of things — conformity, rebellion, racism, optics, and intergenerational mistrust. The film swept up the top prizes at this year’s German Film Awards, and has just been selected as Germany’s submission for next year’s Oscars.
Coming-of-age processes are integral to making transitions in life:
From Denmark
Will a dream dictate life or death? As In Heaven, by director Tea Lindeburg, takes place in turn-of-the-century rural Denmark, where a mother goes into a complicated labour, thereby accelerating the growing-up process for 14-year-old Lise, a process that can be bewildering as well as joyful. As in Heaven highlights woman-centred experiences that remain just as relevant today.
From Switzerland
Barbara Kulcsar’s feel-good comedy Golden Years shows that coming-of-age can come at any time. As a newly retired husband and wife discover, it’s never too late to find the courage to make a change in life. And growing old is certainly not for sissies! Golden Years was a breakout hit at the Swiss box office, ranking as the most successful Swiss feature film since the beginning of the pandemic.
New participants Bulgaria and Romania have films in the festival for the first time this year:
From Romania
Mikado, directed by Emanuel Pârvu, is a fast-paced drama about power dynamics in a Romanian family. Teenager Magda offers her expensive necklace to a sick child, thereby creating conflict with her controlling father. A complicated situation develops where every action has consequences…
From Bulgaria
Inspired by a true and transformative story, Zornitsa Sophia’s Mother starts out with a theatre director in Bulgaria struggling to come to terms with her inability to have a child, and progresses to her discovering a new and culturally challenging kind of motherhood in Kenya. The director Zornitsa Sophia will attend the festival accompanied by the remarkable artist and cultural activist Elena Panayotova, on whom the story is based.
Adding an exciting new dimension to the festival are two extraordinary animations:
From Ukraine
Carving a path to peace and a future beyond war, Mavka – The Forest Song, by directors Oleh Malamuzh and Oleksandra Ruban, is the highest-grossing Ukrainian film ever. Poignant and uplifting, this animated story touches on themes of love, trust, and the coexistence of two worlds: people and forest creatures, and the transformative power of music!
From Portugal
José Miguel Ribeiro’s film Nayola brings us much closer to home. A painful secret, a reckless search, a combat rap-song, a suspended love, an initiatory journey – Nayola is about three generations of women plagued by the long civil war in Angola. Based on a play by José Eduardo Agualusa and Mia Couto, NAYOLA is bold and thrilling storytelling alive with eye-candy animation!
Finally, from the Czech Republic
Petr Václav’s Il Boemo (The Bohemian) is a special treat for music lovers. Prolific 18th century composer Josef Mysliveček was admired by Mozart, but forgotten by history. This biopic includes Mysliveček’s romantic dalliances, revealing backstage intrigue, and the colourful lifestyles of the era. Centrally of course, there is glorious music featuring some of the world’s leading operatic soloists performing with the renowned Baroque Orchestra Collegium 1704.
What: 2023 European Film Festival in South Africa
Where and when: Screenings will take place at Ster-Kinekor’s The Zone in Johannesburg, and The Labia in Cape Town between 12 to 22 October. Each film will screen once. Ster-Kinekor Gateway in Durban will present a limited programme of films not available in the online streaming. 11 of the films will be available free to stream – vist www.eurofilmfest.co.za for more information
WS