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HOT DOCS 2022

L’initiative de l’EFP à Hot Docs "The Changing Face of Europe" va accueillir dix films

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- La European Film Promotion a annoncé la sélection de la cinquième édition de ce programme organisé en collaboration avec le plus grand festivals du documentaire nord-américain

L’initiative de l’EFP à Hot Docs "The Changing Face of Europe" va accueillir dix films
Band d'Álfrún Örnólfsdóttir

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

European Film Promotion's (EFP’s) “The Changing Face of Europe” programme, which will take place at Toronto's Hot Docs (28 April-8 May), features ten outstanding new European documentaries selected by the festival from among over 60 submissions made by the EFP member organisations, which are national film institutes. In addition to festival screenings and access to a comprehensive industry programme, the directors and producers of the films will be matched with key distributors, buyers and festival programmers via prior virtual one-to-one meetings arranged by EFP.

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“Hot Docs is thrilled to be partnering with EFP for the fifth year to present a selection of documentaries that give us glimpses of a Europe in transition,” says Shane Smith, director of programming for Hot Docs. “The talented filmmakers in this programme offer new perspectives while bringing a sense of urgency to a wide range of topics.”

“Films about one’s own identity, about fears in relation to war and environmental destruction, and about the future are the focus of this year’s selection. In times like these, the different perspectives are all the more important, with dialogue and exchange at the core of our programme,” says EFP’s managing director, Sonja Heinen. “We thank Hot Docs for the opportunity to share the vibrancy of Europe through its films, and to connect documentary filmmakers with the North American industry.”

The selection features ten pictures, including three world premieres. Two of these deal with atomic energy – Frankie Fenton's Atomic Hope - Inside the Pro-Nuclear Movement [+lire aussi :
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 (Ireland) and Emilija Škarnulytė's Burial [+lire aussi :
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 (Lithuania/Norway) – while former Icelandic European Shooting Star Álfrún Örnólfsdóttir's directorial debut, Band [+lire aussi :
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interview : Álfrún Helga Örnólfsdóttir
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, introduces us to an all-female art-rock band.

Croatian director Vedrana Pribačić's Bigger than Trauma [+lire aussi :
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interview : Vedrana Pribačić, Mirta Pu…
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will have its international premiere in Toronto, after world-premiering at ZagrebDox, while Ketavan Kepenadze's How the Room Felt [+lire aussi :
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interview : Ketevan Kapanadze
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 (Georgia), Saila Kivelä and Vesa Kuosmanen's Just Animals [+lire aussi :
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(Finland), and Ole Jacobs' and Arne Büttner’s Nasim [+lire aussi :
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(Germany) will enjoy their North American premieres, following their bows at IDFA, CPH:DOX and DOK Leipzig, respectively.

Finally, the Canadian premieres in the selection include Paweł Łoziński's Locarno title The Balcony Movie [+lire aussi :
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interview : Paweł Łoziński
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(Poland), Sean Wang's IDFA entry A Marble Travelogue [+lire aussi :
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(Netherlands/Hong Kong/France/Greece) and Myleine Guiard-Schmid's 35-minute animated documentary Crotch Stories [+lire aussi :
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(France/Belgium).

The Changing Face of Europe, in collaboration with Hot Docs – Canadian International Documentary Festival, is made possible thanks to the support of the European Union’s Creative Europe – MEDIA programme and the participating national film promotion institutes (EFP’s member organisations): the Croatian Audiovisual Centre, the Finnish Film Foundation, the Georgian National Film Center, German Films, the Icelandic Film Centre, the Lithuanian Film Centre, the Polish Film Institute, Screen Ireland, SEE NL (Netherlands) and Unifrance.

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(Traduit de l'anglais)

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