The 3rd edition of the Biarritz Film Festival - Nouvelles Vagues is ready to open its doors - Festivals / Awards - France
- Sofia Coppola and Keira Knightley will dazzle among the many guests invited to the festival, unspooling between 24 and 29 June and comprising an eight-feature-film competition
New Wave by Richard Linklater
Birds of a feather flock together, so, naturally, tomorrow will see Cannes competitor New Wave [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile], by US director (who’ll also be talking about how his film was made), opening the 3rd edition of the Biarritz Film Festival - Nouvelles Vagues, an event which seems to have imposed itself with lightning speed in the French festival panorama, thanks, not least, to the support of a fistful of powerful partners.
Steered by general delegates and , this youth-focused festival will notably offer up a competition comprising eight feature films, which are set to be assessed by a jury led by Norwegian filmmaker (and further composed of , , , , , , and ).
In the running are Live a Little [+see also:
film review
interview: Fanny Ovesen
film profile] by Sweden’s (well-received in Gothenburg), Perla [+see also:
film review
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interview: Alexandra Makarová
film profile] by Austria’s (in competition in Rotterdam, released in France on 30 July via Maverick Distribution), Diciannove [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile] by Italy’s (discovered in Venice’s Orizzonti line-up), The Girl in the Snow [+see also:
film review
interview: Louise Hémon
film profile] by French director (discovered in the Directors’ Fortnight and due for release in French cinemas on 24 December via Condor Distribution), L’épreuve du feu by fellow French filmmaker (screening in a world premiere and due for release by Paname Distribution on 13 August), The Crowd by Iran’s , and two titles which also graced Cannes’ Official Selection back in May: the French co-production Love on Trial by Japan’s , and Urchin [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile] by English director (winning the Best Actor prize in the Un Certain Regard section for ).
Stealing focus out of competition among the various premieres and Special Screenings on the agenda are numerous titles also unveiled on the Croisette: competitors Romería [+see also:
film review
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film profile] by Spain’s and Sentimental Value [+see also:
film review
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interview: Joachim Trier
film profile] by Norway’s (which won the Grand Prize), The President’s Cake by Iraq’s (scooping the Directors’ Fortnight’s Caméra d’Or and Audience Award), My Father’s Shadow [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Akinola Davies Jr
film profile] by British-Nigerian director (nabbing a Special Mention in the Caméra d’Or line-up), Homebound by India’s (set to close the present festival), Dangerous Animals by Australia’s and the French films Love Letters [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile] by French director , Summer Beats [+see also:
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interview: Lise Akoka, Romane Gueret
film profile] by the duo and Romane Gueret and The Wonderers by fellow French filmmaker Joséphine Japy. The gathering will also host the French premiere of Jone, Sometimes by Spain's Sara Fantova.
Equally noteworthy are the Gazteria ("youth" in Basque) guests of honour: American filmmaker Sofia Coppola, English actress Keira Knightley and French actor Vincent Lacoste, not to mention the short film selection, the line-up of movies chosen and presented by film school students (hailing from Madrid’s ECAM and the Norwegian Film School, among other institutions), the day dedicated to protecting the oceans, the focus session on Brazilian new wave cinema, and a variety of conferences (notably on the subject of artificial intelligence).
(Translated from French)