The schedule will be enriched every Monday and Thursday, films will be available for 7 days. Everyone (MOVIES) at home! #ostanidoma
Slovenian film
Every year, the Slovenian Film Festival (FSF) presents the production of full-length and short feature films, documentaries and animated films that were made in Slovenia in the previous year. At the festival, the Metoda Badjure Lifetime Achievement Award is awarded, which is the most prestigious award in the field of filmmaking in Slovenia, and the Vesna Award is awarded for the most prominent achievements of filmmakers in the previous year. This year's recipient of the Metoda Badjure award for lifetime achievement in the field of filmmaking is scenographer Dušan Milavec.
Between September 12 and 16, the 20th jubilee Slovenian film festival will take place in Portorož, where the highlights of last year's Slovenian film production will be on display. At this year's festival, 84 films from the official program and 13 films from the accompanying program will be shown, totaling as many as 97 films, which testify to the rich film creativity of our filmmakers.
Immediately after young Mara gives birth to Ivan, her worst nightmare begins. A drama that focuses on motherhood and, according to some critics, is considered the best Slovenian film after 1990. Definitely worth watching.
Two animations for the price of one. Both, which were taken as their own by both viewers and critics around the world. Both with a Slovenian touch. One through dubbing, the other entirely the result of domestic production. We are talking about The Boxers (from Laika-Carolina, ParaNorman) and Koyaa Roža, a prequel that is returning from a tour of more than 25 international short film festivals. If that doesn't make you interested in going to the movies, then we don't know what will.
Toni Riff is a rock star from the 80s who came to Slovenia during the war and married Sonja, his fan at the time.
Is the view through the eyes of a child more authentic? Does the child see boundaries? The ones in your head, the ones on the map? After the Slovenian documentary film "Mama Europe" by Petra Seliškar made the rounds of as many as 20 film festivals in 16 countries and was richer for the international response and two awards, it will now project its story on Slovenian screens, premiering on 1. in October at 7 p.m. in Kinodvor, which will be followed by a talk with the team.
Strah is a short Slovenian film by Dejan Bobošek. Fear has become the number 1 weapon, especially in the hands of politicians, watching the movie, for which a shocking video clip was shot by Trkaj. It will premiere on November 8, 2016 at the Šiška Cinema at the start of the campaign for tolerance, followed by screenings elsewhere in Slovenia. Its purpose is to raise public awareness of the problem of growing intolerance of all forms.
The students of two secondary schools - Ravne na Koroškem gymnasium and Trgovska akademija from Velikovac - filmed the film Bergmandlc, a futuristic horror film that is the result of Slovenian-Austrian cooperation and is based on the story of the mining legend Perkmandeljec. The film had its premiere in Klagenfurt, and soon the film by young filmmakers will also be screened in Slovenia.
When we look through the film archive of Slovenian cinema, we can count genre films on the fingers of one hand. But with the first real Slovenian full-length horror film Idila, after a long time something other than drama is coming to the cinema screens. Idila is the debut of director and screenwriter Tomaž Gorkič, which recently premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and premiered at the 11th Grossmann Fantastic Film and Wine Festival.
Julija in alfa Romeo is a Slovenian full-length teenage comedy by director Blaž Završnik, who in 2012 won the best student film 2012 with Vesna with the short film 'Nad mestom se dani'. Julija in alfa Romeo tells the story of a handsome high school student who falls for the ground beneath your feet as an innocent oath of love loyalty turns into an emotional merry-go-round of spells, love and death.
It doesn't happen very often that Slovenian films get sequels, but this fall we will be able to see one. It is a sequel to the Slovenian film Milice, which is coming to the big screen twenty years after the original.