Cinema

TiSFF / Day 7

Thessaloniki International Short Film Festival

11 Oct - 17 Oct 17:00

Seats

UNLIMITED

BLANCHE

Joanne Rakotoarisoa, France
25’34”

Blanche is dead. She was an old lady.
As everyone gathers at the village for her funeral, Zaza, a bi-racial teenager, arrives with her mother. Amidst family conflicts, she meets a lonely little girl – her cousin.

Director Biography – Joanne Rakotoarisoa

After graduating from film school in Paris, Joanne Rakotoarisoa started working for different film producers. Meanwhile, she travelled to Ukraine to meet young people and directed a group of them in “We are not dead yet”, which won the Best First Film Award at Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival 2021.
She went on to produce and direct “Blanche”, a fiction short inspired by her family story.

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Les jours heureux

Johanna Legrand, France
15’47”

Un couple de personnes âgées se réunit dans la chambre de l’hôtel, où ils se sont rencontré, pour se donner la mort. Avant cet instant de grâce, ils vivent leurs dernières heures. Un dernier bain. Un dîner. Une dernière danse. Des regards, caresses et des confidences. L’intimité d’une vie de couple s’achève dans l’intimité de leur mort choisie.

Director Biography – Johanna Legrand

Trained in screenwriting by LA FEMIS in Paris and the Conservatoire d’Ecriture Européen Audiovisuel, Johanna explores, through her films, radical proposals that oscillate between different genres, on themes such as death, violence, sexuality .

She received several writing grants from the CNC for her television and cinema projects and signed several societal units, accompanied by Scarlett and Lincoln TV.
His feature film, Les macaronis, is a finalist for the Junior Prize for Best Feature Film (Ex-Sopadin) and selected for the DreamAgo international residency in Switzerland and the VILLA MEDICIS in Italy.
Happy Days, produced by Orphée Films, is her first production.

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The Blue Girls of Summer

Geneviève Boiteau, Canada
15′

Chloé and Clara leave Montreal together for their childhood cottage. While looking at the lake, they get to know a new perception of themselves and time. The two women observe each other, discuss and run in the forest: one to escape her body and the other to inhabit it.

Director Biography – Geneviève Boiteau

Born in Quebec City, Geneviève has been working professionally as a production designer since obtaining a bachelor’s degree in film production at Concordia University in 2018. She mainly devotes herself to fiction while working as a director, first with Pissenlit (2018), now with Les filles bleues de l’été (2023).

Director Statement

The Blue Girls of Summer offers a feminist and young vision of the twenties. I strongly dare to believe that the actions and thoughts of Clara and Chloé, beautifully performed by Marianne Fortier and Léa Roy, will touch young adults and give them a model to establish a close relationship with their vulnerability and transparency.

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for here am i sitting in a tin can far above the world

Gala Hernández López, France
18′ 35”

A woman dreams of the American cryptographer Hal Finney. A major economic crisis affects the cryptocurrency market, tens of thousands of people are cryogenized waiting for a better future. Are they suspended or falling into the void? What strange relationship do we have with the future?

Director Biography – Gala Hernández López

Gala Hernández López is an artist-researcher and filmmaker. Her work articulates interdisciplinary research with the production of essay films, video installations and performances on the new modes of subjectivation specifically produced by computational digital capitalism. She examines from a feminist and critical lens the discourses and imaginaries circulating in virtual communities as symptomatic fictions of a state of the world. Her work has been shown at Berlinale, DOK Leipzig, Cinéma du Réel, IndieLisboa, Transmediale and the Salon de Montrouge, among others. Her film “The Mechanics of fluids” was selected for the César awards 2024 and won the Experimental Work Award 2023 of la Scam (France), among a dozen awards. She is a PhD candidate at the University Paris 8, where she is developing a research-creation project on screen capture and where she has taught for 3 years. She has been an Associate Professor (ATER) at the University Gustave Eiffel and a visiting researcher at the Filmuniversität Babelsberg Konrad Wolf (Germany) thanks to a DAAD research grant. In 2023-2024, she is an artist in residence at the French Academy in Spain – Casa de Velázquez. She co-directs the research and creation collective After Social Networks (www.after-social-networks.com). She regularly gives workshops and lectured-performances, in places such as the Filmuniversität Konrad Wolf, Beaux-Arts de Marseille, The Photographers Gallery or the Locarno Film Festival. www.galahernandez.com

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Dinosauria, We

Maxime-Claude L’Écuyer, Canada
5’05”

Dinosauria we, is an experimental short film, that explore the consequence of human kind corruption, ultra capitalism and the exploitation of natural ressources in a dystopian post-apocalyptic vision of the end of the world imagine by poet Charles Bukowski.

Director Biography – Maxime-Claude L’Écuyer

Director, screenwriter and editor, Maxime-Claude L’Écuyer has written and directed 8 short films, including Resonance and Squad Leader TD-73028 Soliloquy. All of them have been presented in various festivals both in Quebec and internationally, some of which have been awarded, among others, Zsofika, has been awarded 8 international prizes. He is currently developing his first fiction feature, Pentimenti and has just completed his last experimental short Dinosauria, We. His first feature documentary, released in 2022, 305 Bellechasse received the Yolande and Pierre Perrault prize at the last edition of Rendez-Vous Québec Cinéma.

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Three Legs in the Evening

Niyalic Khun, Cambodia
10’11”

In a world where the Khmer Rouge achieved its ultimate goal, Man wanders the post-apocalyptic city of Phnom Penh. Through the old world, he rediscovers Man’s first impulses of humanity; at the rebirth of a world that Man has yet to imprint language, art, structure, and culture again.

Director Biography – Niyalic Khun

Niyalic Khun is a Cambodian filmmaker born amidst the age of artistic revival of Cambodia. His opposing academic and professional backgrounds, going from political science to international law, to contemporary theatre constitute a vital touch to his artistic work.
Niyalic’s first short film draws inspiration from the identity complex of Cambodia, the Khmer people, its reawakening, and his experience in creating a contemporary art space.
He co-founded សាលា សិល្បៈ សម្ដែង (The Acting Art Academy) in 2022, a Cambodian non-profit performing arts center dedicated to training aspiring actors for cinema and contemporary theatre.
Through these projects, Niyalic continues to challenge the current status quo of the art industry in Cambodia.

Director Statement

The Khmer Rouge regime is a difficult yet prevalent topic in Khmer art. It is this fear of imagining ourselves being able to commit heinous acts that drive the work of memory. Three Legs in the Evening is a film that faces these imaginations in a hypothetical world stripped of euphemism.
Hence, the vision for Three Legs in the Evening was to explore this constant cycle of destruction and reconstruction of humanity, and how fast it will inexorably spin before it finally ceases; whether resulting in the eradication of humanity or its true enlightenment to elevate from this cyclic path.
Alongside adopting a capitalistic economic model, the age of digitalization, and the recovery from the genocide, the film challenges the notion of the Modern Cambodian person. It is ultimately an experimentation of sound, body movement, and frame.
Three Legs in the Evening mirrors the balance between our nature and our legacy to shape the human trajectory.

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Familes’ Albums

Moïa Jobin-Paré, Canada
8′

Photographic images, scenes of everyday life. Connected together, a new landscape emerges.

Director Biography – Moïa Jobin-Paré

After studying film and music in Montreal, Moïa Jobin-Paré continued her training as a percussionist and self-taught audio-visual artist. A filmmaker at the crossroads of animation and photography, she has been producing since 2015 a multidisciplinary creation dedicated to «actual image» and its hybrid forms and which brings together her great passions: the moving image, pictorial work, hybrid material and digital practices and sound. She has developed a singular and innovative experimental animation technique of scratching on silver photographs, making exhibitions of it and using it to make short films and live performances. Her first animated film «4min15 au révélateur» has been selected and awarded in many festivals.

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What Men Do For Love

Sai Karan Talwar, United Kingdom
14’57”

An aging dentist kidnaps a young man with intentions of killing him because he’s had an affair with his wife, but an unlikely connection starts to form between them.

Director Biography – Sai Karan Talwar

Sai Karan Talwar is an award-winning writer and director. Sai is currently a fellow in the BBC Writersroom Writer’s Access Group and is a 2023 Alumni of the Disability Belongs Entertainment Lab, with over forty accolades as a writer in some of the most esteemed screenwriting competitions. His Debut ‘GHANIMAH’ is a BAFTA & BIFA Qualified Short Film that has been selected at just over 60 film festivals, including OSCAR-accredited festivals, with over a dozen wins and nominations; the film is about Islamic enrolment into the British Military. His upcoming short ‘What Men Do for Love’ is a 15-minute single-take film about the masculine ego at breaking point; the film is currently BIFA Qualified and has been selected by BAFTA and OSCAR accredited festivals.

Film has always been a passion for Sai since growing up in his late Grandfather’s video shop. Initially working with MADE in 2016, a charitable organization with a vision to reduce discrimination against BAME & LGBTQ+ Londoners. With MADE, he ran filmmaking workshops and screening events, held exhibitions at BFI Southbank and co-produced over 30 short films with 100,000+ online views. He worked in production companies such as Origin Pictures and 42 Management and Production within the development departments. He studied Economics and Finance at Durham University, which led to his undergraduate dissertation: ‘What are the key determinants of success for the box office within the UK motion picture industry?’, which received a first.

Director Statement

I strongly believe that “What Men Do For Love” has the potential to significantly contribute to the dialogue surrounding toxic masculinity, misogyny and their affects on men’s mental health and challenge the existing stigma on a global scale. Post-COVID, loneliness has been a significant issue affecting men’s behavior, leading them to engage in immoral actions and concerning attitudes.

This pattern is evident worldwide. What Men Do for Love is an exploration of the masculine ego at breaking point. A provocative, profane yet tender piece amidst the overwhelming unbridled testosterone. We are typifying an account of the broken male ego, where many projects don’t choose to delve into, men can’t seem to open up their emotional state of mind. What on the surface alludes to a revenge plot is more of a red herring for a film that is actually about lost love to another, and the emotions one feels as a result. In such circumstances, revenge may be hugely desired, but that it is not something that many of us get the opportunity or inclination to go through with.

Going against the grain of a film that can very easily be reduced to genre thrills and violent sensationalism. The single location I would hope augments the sense of loneliness and accentuates Charles’s pain, only exemplified by the choice of black and white. We had a day and a half for rehearsal, and then we shot within half a day in a single take, out of fourteen takes we used the last one. We believe this escalates the tension of the scene, as well as, present a more natural and vulnerable performance from our actors. A film about love and loss with an important message; love hurts, but revenge will not take the pain away. Thus bringing the vulnerabilities of how men deal with mental health issues.

The script was an Official Selection at the HollyShorts Screenwriting Competition 2023, A Quarterfinalist at the ScreenCraft Short Film Screenplay Competition 2023, and a Semifinalist at the ScreenCraft Film Fund Fall 2023. However, although of the accolades for the screenplay, I had to self-fund in order to get it made.

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-200 degrees

Nikolas Passaris, Greece
14’08”

A young couple discovers the true nature of their relationship after a -far from successful- ski trip.

Director Biography – Nikolas Passaris

Nikolas Passaris, an Athens based Film Director, realised his MFA studies at Dodge College of Film and Media Arts of Chapman University in 2012. Since then he has been directing TV commercials and music videos. He has earned multiple awards for his work and his music video for Marina Satti, Mantissa, went viral with over 56 million views.
His short film “at dawn” that he directed for the 2009 Gogreen 48hourfilmfestival was granded the runner up best film award.

Director Statement

During Covid lockdown a lot of relationships came to the test. Being stuck with your significant other every single day with no room to escape, created a prism under which every small thought or feeling was magnified, and it filled you up until you would burst.
Like many others, I went through this “incarceration” with my partner and despite the uniqueness of this global crisis, a lot of these magnified feelings seemed familiar.
That’s when I realized that I had put myself in this situation before willingly, without the force of an obligatory lockdown.
When you fall in love with someone you attach yourself so much to the other, that you start pushing away everything else. And there is a thin line on how much of your life you will push away before the relationship becomes toxic.
With this film my intention was to explore this thin line, in an imaginary situation where seemingly the characters are victims of fate, but they are the ones ultimately choosing to be together. I perceive this film as a black comedy where the two protagonists are condemned to go through the cycle of an oppressive relationship, again and again.
My main goal is to make the two protagonists believable and relatable. Ideally everyone who watches this film will laugh and feel intimate with what is happening between the two characters and at the same time ponder when a behavior is ok and when it starts being abusive.

 

The North

Sveta Gertman, Russian Federation
24′

Cold weather come to the world. A young family was broken. They come to parental home to let parents know about their divorce. On the way to the lawyer, they are overtaken by a snowstorm.

 

Director Biography – Sveta Gertman

Was born in 1996 in Khabarovsk. Studied at GITIS at the acting faculty. In the second year, Decided to move to a directing workshop. In 2022, graduated from Dmitry Mamulia’s directing workshop at the Moscow School of New Cinema. For several years worked on set as a DOP assistant and focus puller.

Director Statement

The idea for the film was born in 2022, when I especially felt how the space around me had changed. It was filled with fear. Confusion over time became a metaphor for the blizzard in the film. The meteorological plan in the film is one of the main ones. Little people are placed into a corner by a force against which they are powerless. The snowstorm dispels everything that once seemed indestructible and stable – home, family, human connections. The intensification of the blizzard in the village where the heroes arrive, as a reflection of world change, a historical breakdown, when everything turns into chaos.
I wanted to create a heroine whose existence in life suddenly becomes questionable. The characters seem to be placed in a glass ball with snow, and someone decided to shake it.
It was not my goal to tell a coherent story or create objectively comprehensible meanings. The DOP and I tried to use film language to tell story about our current state of mental health: pulsating, anxious and piercingly cold.
The film crew went to an expedition to the Vologda region. In the extreme conditions of the night forest, we had to make decisions very quickly. We didn’t have the opportunity to do a lot of takes. Thanks to our preparation, we knew exactly what we needed.
Now my DOP and me are working on a feature film. We are developing an idea. It seems important to us to talk about the diseases of the time, about their influence at private lives of ordinary people. If you once felt what heartburn is, then how can you explain the sensations of this pain to a person who has never experienced it? I believe cinema can do this.

 

SCALE

Joseph Pierce, United Kingdom
15′

Driving along the motorway, Will loses his sense of scale. As his crippling drug addiction deepens, he struggles to unpick the sequence of events that led to his predicament, before he’s lost forever.
TiSFF / Day 7
11 Oct - 17 Oct 17:00

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