Switzerland’s Locarno Film Festival has announced its full lineup, which will see Radu Jude, Abdellatif Kechiche and Ben Rivers competing for its prestigious Golden Leopard.

Jude, who won the Special Jury Prize only two years ago – for “Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World” – will bring the much-anticipated “Dracula.” In a conversation with Variety, the Romanian director said: “If ‘Kontinental’ 25’ is my answer to Roberto Rossellini, let’s say that ‘Dracula’ is my love letter to Ed Wood.”

“There’s a lot of talk about A.I. these days, but after this film, you won’t talk about it in the same way. It’s a very radical film, a crazy political comedy,” said Artistic Director Giona A. Nazzaro.

Among all the 17 world premieres in Locarno’s main International Competition, Abdellatif Kechiche will continue his controversial saga with “Mektoub, My Love: Canto Due” – a decision that has already been hotly debated by people watching the announcement online – and Rivers will focus on “Mare’s Nest.” Hana Jušić will prove why “God Will Not Help,” while Miguel Gomes’ collaborator Maureen Fazendeiro will welcome “The Seasons.”

“It’s a poetic look at the history of Portugal,” said Nazzaro, also praising Dane Komljen’s “Desire Lines”: This is really a film that’s one of ours.”

There will be also some humor. “People always say Locarno is all about serious films – no, you can also smile,” he said, mentioning “Sorella di clausura” – “I laughed myself silly” – as well as “Solomamma” and “Donkey Days,” the latter described as a “very special comedy.”  

Outside of the main competition, Palme d’Or winner Jafar Panahi – for “It Was Just an Accident” – and Joachim Trier, whose “Sentimental Value” was one of the best-reviewed films in Cannes, will now present the titles at Piazza Grande. Jackie Chan, set to receive Locarno’s career achievement award, will bring 1985’s “Police Story.”

Nazzaro said: “It’s the ‘Citizen Kane’ of action films! Jackie Chan did it all himself. He’s an artist, modern-day Buster Keaton. There’s no one like him.”

Among new highlights, “Birthday Party” with Willem Dafoe will see the acclaimed actor playing a tycoon throwing a celebration for his daughter. “Dead of Winter” stars Emma Thompson as a fisherwoman forced to save a kidnapped girl. Thompson will be also awarded at Locarno.

Jean-Stéphane Bron’s Gaumont series “The Deal,” about the U.S.-Iran nuclear agreement, is also shaping up to be quite an event, with Nazzaro admitting to binging the entire show. Speaking to Variety, Bron admitted the idea stemmed from an article in a Swiss newspaper “about a head of protocol and the title was: The one who is never in the photo.”

And then “the grand finale, with songs,” said Nazzaro about Bill Condon’s “Kiss of the Spider Woman” with Jennifer Lopez, already shown at Sundance.

“It’s the best way to conclude the Piazza Grande program. Colors, songs and superstars!”

“In a time when film is undergoing profound transformations – in the technological and economic spheres – Locarno continues to stand as a beacon for independent thought and cinematic experimentation,” said Festival President Maja Hoffmann, promising an “ambitious and exciting edition.”

“More than a celebration, Locarno78 is a defense of cinema as a living, evolving form of art.”

Nazzaro added: “The question is simple, and brutal in its inevitability: what is the place of cinema when the proliferation of images is unstoppable and continuous? […] After all – without ever forgetting Roberto Rossellini – we work for humanity. We regain the world (and perhaps peace) one film at a time.”

According to Nazzaro, the festival is a cinema that does not turn its gaze away from reality, but also “explores the still possible forms of the image without forgetting to smile at the absurdities of our lives.”

Locarno will offer “a cinema that is playful, takes risks, dreams, and provokes; a cinema that stubbornly remains in the world. Looking onward, alongside all human beings,” he said.

Here’s the full lineup: 

International Competition

“Desire Lines”

Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Netherlands, Croatia, Germany 

Directed by Dane Komljen 

World premiere

Branko keeps trailing his brother through Belgrade, trying to understand his unusual behavior, but realizes “that he himself is the strange one – an observer.” As he keeps on walking, he leaves the city behind, “passing through landscapes and borders on his way to somewhere else.” Companies involved are Serbia’s Dart Film, in co-production with SeriousFilm (the Netherlands), Mak Film and Marletti (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Pipser (Croatia) and Flaneur Films (Germany). Ivan Čuić, Branka Katić and Petja Golec Horvat act. 

“Donkey Days”

Netherlands, Germany

Directed by Rosanne Pel

World premiere

Families – you can’t live with them and you can’t live without them. Two sisters, Anna and Charlotte, are back in their old home. It’s time for long-overdue confrontation following a holiday gone wrong. Pel already made “Light as Feathers,” noticed at multiple festivals. “Donkey Days” is a Family Affair Films production, made in co-production with Junafilm and SWR. Family Affair Films backed Steve McQueen’s doc “Occupied City” and Bianca Stigter’s “Three Minutes – A Lengthening.” 

“Dracula”

Romania, Austria, Luxembourg 

Directed by Radu Jude 

World premiere

The extremely prolific Romanian Radu Jude (“Aferim,” “Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn”), at this point known to cinephiles all over the world, finally heads to Transylvania, playing with the vampire mythos. Paris-based Luxbox is already on board. Serban Pavlu, Eszter Tompa and Ilinca Manolache star, while producing are Saga Film and MicroFilm (Romania) and Nabis Filmgroup (Austria), Paul Thiltges Distribution and Samsa Film (Luxembourg), RT Features (Brazil), Bord Cadre Films (Switzerland) and Sovereign Films (U.K.). 

“Dry Leaf”

Germany, Georgia 

Directed by Alexandre Koberidze 

World premiere

The Georgian filmmaker, whose playful dramedy “What Do We See When We Look At the Sky?” was one of the revelations in Berlin back in 2021, takes on the story about sports photographer Lisa who suddenly vanishes without a trace. In her note, the only thing left behind, Lisa’s explicitly asks not to be found. Her father, refusing to accept it, sets out on a long journey alongside her best friend. Produced by New Matter Films, it features the director’s father, David Koberidze, as well as Irina Chelidze, Vakhtang Fanchulidze Giorgi Bochorishvili, and Otar Nijaradze.

“God Will Not Help”

Croatia, Italy, Romania, Greece, France, Slovenia

Directed by Hana Jušić 

World premiere

Sold by Warsaw-based New Europe Film Sales, Jušić’s new film is set in the early 20th century, following a woman from Chile who ends up in a remote Croatian sheepherding community. But her presence quickly upsets its order, forcing her to rethink her own desires. Produced by Ankica Jurić Tilić’s (Kinorama), it has been developed at the Cannesv Festival’s Cinéfondation and TorinoFilmLab’s ScriptLab. This will mark the Croatian director’s second feature after “Quit Staring at My Plate,” awarded in Venice. 

“God Will Not Help”

“Le Lac”

Switzerland 

Directed by Fabrice Aragno 

World premiere

In this film by a frequent Jean-Luc Godard collaborator, a woman and a man (Clotilde Courau and Bernard Stamm) throw themselves into a sailing race, which continues for several days and nights. He told Variety about the film produced by Casa Azul Films that “the story is quite simple. It’s about a couple who want to feel again. I’m using everything I’ve discovered with Godard, playing with the freedom of image and sound. It will be a real ‘spectacle cinématographique.’”

“Mosquitos”

Italy, Switzerland, France 

Directed by Valentina Bertani, Nicole Bertani 

World premiere

In the 1990s, Linda is only eight years old. She has “a few teeth, a very rich grandmother and a beautiful, dangerous and disruptive mother.” But an encounter with two peers, sisters Azzurra and Marta, will teach her “how to become a child.” This Emma Films and Cinédokké production marks the feature debut of the Italian directors, who co-wrote the script with Maria Sole Limodio. Valentina Bertani also directed “The Crown Shyness” in 2022, nominated for Italy’s David di Donatello Award.

“Mare’s Nest” 

United Kingdom, France, Canada 

Directed by Ben Rivers 

World premiere

Beijing sales outfit Rediance reunites with experimental wiz Rivers for the third time, now on a story about a girl called Moon (Moon Guo Barker) traveling through a mysterious world free of adults. “Once I had Moon in my mind, the image of the film became clearer and it became a kind of near future road movie, a world that has an underlying sense of uncertainty and disturbance, but also about possibilities and joy,” said Rivers. It was produced by the director for Urth Films, together with Paris-based 4A4 Productions.

“Mektoub, My Love: Canto Due”

France 

Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche 

World premiere

Following “Canto Uno” and “Intermezzo,” Kechiche returns to his sun-drenched, sensual – and somewhat controversial – trilogy, showing Amin, who returns home to reconnect with family and childhood friends. Visits to his parents’ restaurant, local bars and beaches ensue. With Shaïn Boumedine, cast as Amin, Ophélie Bau and Jessica Pennington. Also behind “Black Venus,” Kechiche is best known for “Blue Is the Warmest Colour,” a Cannes Festival Palme d’Or winner. 

“Phantoms of July” 

Germany 

Directed by: Julian Radlmaier 

World premiere

Spain’s Bendita Film Sales is handling sales for this socially pointed but playful dramedy, starring Locarno winner Clara Schwinning (“A Good Place”) which comes after Radlmaier’s “Self-Criticism of a Bourgeois Dog” and “Bloodsuckers.” “It’s a film about the alchemy of encounter,” said the director. Split into three sections, the film is produced by Kirill Krasovski at Blue Monticola Film, while Westdeutchen Rundfunk co-produces. Bendita Film Sales’ Luis Renart teased: “Julian has created a film that feels as light as a summer breeze yet lingers like a ghost.” 

“The Seasons”

Portugal, France, Spain, Austria

Directed by Maureen Fazendeiro 

World premiere

Maureen Fazendeiro, a French director and screenwriter based in Lisbon, brings a film that travels through the seasons and “through the true and fictional history of a region in Portugal, the Alentejo,” as well as the peoples who inhabited it. Previously, Fazendeiro delivered “The Tsugua Diaries” – co-directed with Miguel Gomes. She also co-wrote his well-received “Grand Tour.” Norte Productions’ Valentina Novati and O Som e a Fúria’s Luís Urbano produce.

“Solomamma”

Norway, Latvia, Lithuania, Denmark, Finland 

Directed by Janicke Askevold 

World premiere

After “Together Alone,” Askevold explores single motherhood. Edith decides to get pregnant via a sperm donor. Buts as her son turns five, parenting all alone becomes increasingly difficult. Lisa Loven Kongsli (“Force Majeure”) and Herbert Nordrum (“The Worst Person in the World”) are in the cast alongside Céline Engbrightsen, Rolf Kristian Larsen and Nasrin Khusrawi. The film is produced by Bacon Pictures Oslo and Danish Bacon Pictures Copenhagen, in co-production with Latvia’s Mistrus Media, Dansu (Lithuania) and It’s Alive Films (Finland).

“Sorella di clausura”

Romania, Serbia, Italy, Spain 

Directed by Ivana Mladenović 

World premiere

MicroFilm (Romania) joins forces with Dunav 84 (Serbia), Nightswim (Italy) and Boogaloo Films (Spain) on a story about Stela, who falls for a Balkan musician she saw on TV. With the help of a starlet named Vera, her dream of meeting him slowly takes shape. Serbian director Mladenović – based in Romania – is known for her documentary “Turn Off the Lights,” which premiered at Tribeca, and “Ivana the Terrible,” the latter awarded also at Locarno. Adrian Schiop co-wrote the script. 

“Tales of the Wounded Land”

Lebanon 

Directed by Abbas Fahdel 

World premiere

Born in Iraq and later based in France, Fahdel has delivered the likes of “Yara,” “Homeland (Iraq Year Zero)” and “Tales of the Purple House.” “Another beloved director, bringing the second chapter of his trilogy about Lebanon,” said Nazzaro during the announcement. “It’s a very intimate film about his family, his house, and living through the war.”

“Two Seasons, Two Strangers”

Japan

Directed by Sho Miyake 

World premiere

Behind “All the Long Nights,” “Small, Slow but Steady” and “Playback,” also shown at Locarno, Miyake takes on works by celebrated manga artist Yoshiharu Tsuge, “Mister Ben of the Igloo” and “A View of the Seaside.” The film follows Li, a screenwriter played by Shim, who embarks on a journey of self-reflection following a chance meeting with Benzo. “Through her writing process, she explores meaningful moments of human connection,” it was stated. The film features Shim Eun-kyung and Shinichi Tsutsumi. Bitters End handles sales. 

“White Snail”

Austria, Germany 

Directed by Elsa Kremser, Levin Peter 

World premiere

The directorial duo returns after “Dreaming Dogs” and “Space Dogs.” In their latest – and their first fiction film – a Belarusian wannabe model is drawn to a mysterious loner (Marya Imbro and Mikhail Senkov) working the night shift at a morgue. It’s described as a “fragile love story of two outsiders who turn each other’s worlds upside down and discover that they are not alone.” Vienna-based Panama Film produces. “It will be a real surprise,” said Nazzaro.

“With Hasan in Gaza”

Palestine, Germany, France, Qatar 

Directed by Kamal Aljafari 

World premiere

Aljafari’s latest film kicks off as three miniDV tapes of life in Gaza from 2001 are rediscovered, standing as a testament to a place and time that no longer exists. “What began as a search for a former prison mate from 1989 led to an unexpected road trip from the north to the south of Gaza, accompanied by Hasan, a local guide whose fate remains unknown.” Hailing from Palestine, Aljafari is known for “A Fidai Film,” “Port of Memory” and “Recollection.”

“The Seasons”
Marianne Andrea Borowiec

Filmmakers of the Present

“Affection Affection”

France

Directed by Alexia Walther, Maxime Matray 

World premiere

“A Balcony in Limoges”

France

Directed by Jérôme Reybaud 

World premiere

“Balearic”

Spain, France 

Directed by Ion de Sosa 

World premiere

“Becoming”

France, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, Lithuania, Sweden 

Directed by Zhannat Alshanova 

World premiere

“Blue Heron”

Canada, Hungary 

Directed by Sophy Romvari 

World premiere

“Don’t Let the Sun”

Switzerland, Italy 

Directed by Jacqueline Zünd 

World premiere

“Don’t Let Me Die”

Romania, Bulgaria, France 

Directed by Andrei Epure 

World premiere

“Fantasy” 

Slovenia, North Macedonia 

Directed by Kukla 

World premiere

“The Fin” 

South Korea, Germany, Qatar 

Directed by Park Syeyoung 

World premiere

“Follies”

Canada

Directed by Eric K. Boulianne 

World premiere

“Hair, Paper, Water…”

Belgium, France, Vietnam 

Directed by Nicolas Graux, Trương Minh Quý 

World premiere

“Hijo Mayor”

Argentina, France 

Directed by Cecilia Kang 

World premiere

“Olivia” 

Argentina, United Kingdom, Spain 

Directed by Sofía Petersen 

World premiere

“The Plant from the Canaries”

Germany

Directed by Ruan Lan-Xi 

World premiere

“Sweetheart”

Italy

Directed by Margherita Spampinato 

World premiere

“Don’t Let the Sun”

Piazza Grande

“In the Land of Arto” 

France, Armenia 

Directed by: Tamara Stepanyan 

World premiere

“The Birthday Party” 

Greece, Spain, Netherlands, United Kingdom

Directed by: Miguel Ángel Jiménez

World premiere

“The Dead of Winter”

USA, Germany

Directed by: Brian Kirk

World premiere

“The Deal” 

Switzerland, France, Luxembourg, Belgium 

Directed by: Jean-Stéphane Bron

Swiss premiere

Episodes 1&2

“Heads of Tails?”

Italy, USA 

Directed by: Alessio Rigo de Righi, Matteo Zoppis

Swiss premiere

“Irkala – Gilgamesh’s Dream”

Iraq, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, France, United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia 

Directed by: Mohamed Jabarah Al-Daradji

World premiere

“It Was Just an Accident”

Iran, France, Luxembourg

Directed by: Jafar Panahi

Swiss premiere

“Kiss of the Spider Woman”

USA, Uruguay 

Directed by: Bill Condon

International premiere

“La Petite Dernière”

France, Germany

Directed by: Hafsia Herzi

Swiss premiere

“Police Story” 

Hong Kong

Directed by: Jackie Chan

“Sentimental Value” 

Norway, France, Denmark, Germany, Sweden

Directed by: Joachim Trier

Swiss premiere

“The Shining” 

United Kingdom, USA

Directed by: Stanley Kubrick

“Rosemead”

U.S.

Directed by: Eric Lin 

International premiere

“Together”

Australia, U.S. 

Directed by: Michael Shanks

Swiss premiere

“Irkala – Gilgamesh’s Dream”

Fuori Concorso

“Bobò”

Italy

Directed by Pippo Delbono 

World premiere

“The Deal” 

Switzerland, France, Luxembourg, Belgium

Directed by: Jean-Stéphane Bron 

World premiere

Episodes 3-6

“Deathstalker”

Canada

Directed by Steven Kostanski 

World premiere

“E” 

Finland

Directed by Anna Eriksson

World premiere

“Exile”

Tunisia, Luxembourg, France, Qatar, Saudi Arabia 

Directed by Mehdi Hmili 

World premiere

“I Live Here Now”

U.S.

Directed by Julie Pacino 

European premiere

“Judas’ Gospel”

Italy, Poland 

Directed by Giulio Base 

World premiere

“Keep Quiet”

U.S.

Directed by Vincent Grashaw 

World premiere

“Kerouac’s Road: the Beat of a Nation”

U.K., U.S.

Directed by Ebs Burnough 

International premiere

“Le Chantier”

France, Switzerland 

Directed by Jean-Stéphane Bron 

World premiere

“Legend of the Happy Worker”

U.S.

Directed by Duwayne Dunham 

World premiere

“Nova ’78”

UK, Portugal

Directed by Aaron Brookner, Rodrigo Areias

World premiere

“Silence”

Spain

Directed by Eduardo Casanova 

World premiere

“Some Notes on the Current Situation”

Israel

Directed by Eran Kolirin 

World premiere

“Kerouac’s Road: the Beat of a Nation”

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