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BERLINALE 2019 EFM

Le HNFF World Sales prépare l’avenir à Berlin

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- Avec 15 titres en post-production, la division ventes internationales du Hungarian National Film Fund ne manquera pas de munitions à l’EFM

Le HNFF World Sales prépare l’avenir à Berlin
Éden d’Ágnes Kocsis (© Birtalan Zsolt)

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

The HNFF (Hungarian National Film Fund)’s international sales team, which is run by Klaudia Androsovits, is due to touch down at the European Film Market of the 69th Berlinale (from 7 to 17 February) with a whopping 26 features in its line-up and a particular focus on its very attractive post-production section, which features 15 titles.

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Of particular note is Éden [+lire aussi :
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by Ágnes Kocsis (whose first two features, Fresh Air [+lire aussi :
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and Adrienn Pál [+lire aussi :
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interview : Agnes Kocsis, réalisatrice…
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were screened at Cannes), the black comedy Comrade Draculich [+lire aussi :
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interview : Márk Bodzsár
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by Márk Bodzsár and the social drama Final Report [+lire aussi :
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interview : István Szabó
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 by István Szabó (article – which marks the Oscar-winning filmmaker’s union with the Austrian actor Klaus Maria Brandauer).

The HNFF’s World Sales team will also be pre-selling the thriller Tall Tales by Attila Szász (article), the romantic comedy Seveled [+lire aussi :
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by Dénes Orosz and Seven Small Coincidences [+lire aussi :
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by Péther Gothár.

With regard to first features in post-production, of particular interest is the drama Spiral [+lire aussi :
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by Cecília Felméri (article), the romantic comedy Cream by Nóra Lakos and the thriller Valan by Béla Bagota (article).

Also in the line-up are four first features developed as part of HNFF’s incubator programme: Fomo: Fear Of Missing Out [+lire aussi :
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 by Attila Hartung, On the Quiet [+lire aussi :
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interview : Zoltán Nagy
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by Zoltán Nagy and the documentaries Tales From the Prison Cell by Ábel Visky (which explores relationships between fathers in prison and their children at home – a Proton Cinema production) and Colors of Tobi [+lire aussi :
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interview : Alexa Bakony
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(working title: Tobias) by Alexa Bakony (which focuses on a family grappling with their daughter’s desire for a sex change).

Two other documentaries in post-production also feature in the line-up: Liquid Gold by Tamás Almási (which focuses on three men attempting to trace the roots of the famous Tokay d’Aszu vin blanc, adored by the likes of Louis XIV, Queen Victoria, Goethe and Beethoven) and Tamas Barta, The Legend by Eszter Hajdú (about the most famous rock star to come out of Hungary in the 1970s, who then went on to make it big in the USA in 1974 before dying under mysterious circumstances in 1982).

The HNFF will also be pursuing sales for 11 completed films, including Bad Poems [+lire aussi :
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by Gábor Reisz, X–The Exploited [+lire aussi :
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by Karoly Ujj Meszaros, the animated film Ruben Brandt, Collector [+lire aussi :
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by Milorad Krstic, His Master’s Voice [+lire aussi :
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by György Pálfi, the romantic comedy Open [+lire aussi :
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by Orsi Nagypál and the documentary Ghetto Balboa [+lire aussi :
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interview : Árpád Bogdán
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by Árpád Bogdán.

Finally, it’s also worth noting the representation of various Hungarian films at this year’s Berlinale 2019, with the market premiere of Guerilla [+lire aussi :
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by György Mór Kárpáti (sold by The Match Factory) and screenings of restored versions of Tango de Satan by Bela Tarr (the Forum section - sold by Luxbox) and Adoption by Márta Mészáros (winner of the Golden Bear in 1975) in the Berlinale Classics programme.

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