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FESTIVALS Belgium

Fantasy out in force

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The 25th Brussels International Festival of Fantastic Film (BIFFF) – an annual event held in the Belgian capital that aims to make cinema a true celebration, a carnival even – opens its doors this evening at a new 9,000 square metre venue. Screenings will also be held in several Wallonian towns.

UK director Danny Boyle’s Sunshine [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: AndrewMacdonald
interview: Danny Boyle
film profile
]
(see news) will kick off festivities, which will last until April 12. The 13-day festival programme includes 76 features from 27 different countries, as well as national and international premieres of films from the science-fiction, fantastic, fantasy and horror genres.

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Asia dominates in international competition with the latest films by the Pang brothers (The Messengers) and Tsukamoto (Nightmare Detective), while only two European films will screen at this year’s BIFFF: Austrian helmer Andreas Prochaska’s acclaimed, Dead in 3 Days [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
(see news) and the French/Russian co-production The Ugly Swan by Konstantin Lopushansky.

The two titles will compete for the Méliès awards in European competition, along with six other films: French title Nos amis les terriens [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
(Our Earthman Friends), a mockumentary directed by Bernard Werber (author of the best-seller Les Fourmis) and produced by Claude Lelouch’s Les Films 13; Broken by UK directing duo Simon Boyes and Adam Mason; kung-fu title Jade Warrior [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
, co-produced with China, by Finland’s Antti-Jussi Annila (see news); a second Russian production, The Sword Bearer by Philipp Yankovsky; and two Spanish films, Daniel Monzon’s third feature El laberinto de Kovak and Elio Quiroga’s The Dark Hour [+see also:
trailer
film profile
]
.

In addition to parties, concerts, the Vampire Ball competition, all-night horror film events, theme-based afternoons to showcase Turkish and Bollywood cinema, as well as Japanese animated film, the festival will hold tributes and retrospectives to honour three film artists: America’s Tom Savigny, king of special effects gore and make-up artist for George Romero, who will be a special guest at the festival, and Syd Mead (designer of several sets, including Ridley Scott’s well known Blade Runner); as well as French cartoonist and film director Enki Bilal, four of whose films will screen at the Musée du Cinéma.

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(Translated from French)

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