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The latest trends in international filmmaking: our competition programmes present recent short films from around the world. The best works will be honoured with prizes at the Award Ceremony on Sunday.
Discover national short filmmaking in the Swiss Competition. We also invite audiences to join us for the Award Ceremony on Sunday – watch live as the jury honours the best films of this year’s festival edition.
With the Sparks programmes, we hope to spark a passion for the medium of short film. Featuring highlights from this year’s competition submissions, the selection offers an excellent introduction to the world of shorts, showcasing a diverse film culture beyond the usual mainstream and YouTube videos.
Kurzfilmtage’s annual Swiss Film School Day is a showcase of Switzerland’s five major undergraduate degree programmes. Ecole cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL), the Geneva University of Art and Design (HEAD), the Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK), and the Lucerne School of Art and Design (Video/Animation) present a selection of their recent short films. The jury of the Swiss Competition gives feedback to the students and awards the prize for the Best Swiss School Film. Admission to the Swiss Film School Day is free – a great opportunity to get a first glimpse of Kurzfilmtage!
Canada is an impossibly vast and wildly diverse country. Accordingly, Canadian cinema is highly eclectic, influenced by language, geography, and various cultural communities. The eight curated programmes presented here showcase the complexity of this cinema as well as its evolution through history.
In the early 1990s, Nigerian cinema experienced its first major commercial success. Themes of love, avarice, spirituality, and redemption became the backbone of Nigerian cinematic storytelling, resonating with audiences across the country and continent. Today, young filmmakers infuse some irreverence into those themes, often using short films as the canvas for their exploration. These shorts bear witness to the new generation’s unique ambition and creativity, and they represent a hyper-conscious departure from mainstream Nollywood.
Willy Hans has developed a unique style characterized by his love of experimentation and a talent for blending genres. His films surprise viewers with unexpected twists and intriguing image compositions. In this Focus on Willy Hans, we present his own works as well as films created by the collective consisting of Paul Spengemann, Jan Eichberg, Steffen Goldkamp, and Hans.
Kurzfilmtage’s Industry Events consist of the Swiss Film School Day, the Industry Lab, and the Creators’ Room. They offer film professionals an opportunity for networking and for discussing current issues, creative methods, and aesthetic trends.
Director Willy Hans – Kurzfilmtage’s Person in Focus this year – is a founding member of the collective Spengemann, Eichberg, Goldkamp, Hans, among other things. In a moderated Master Class, he will talk about his work as a director and as part of the collective.
Willy Hans was born in Freiburg in 1982. In 2009, he began his studies at the HFBK University of Fine Arts Hamburg, where he made several films, including «Der fremde Fotograf und die Einsamkeit» (2012), which screened at multiple festivals. «Das satanische Dickicht – Eins» is his graduation film, which he has since expanded to a trilogy. Currently, Hans is working on his first feature-length film.
Willy Hans has developed a unique style characterized by his love of experimentation and a talent for blending genres. His films surprise viewers with unexpected twists and intriguing image compositions. He doesn’t shy away from unconventional narrative structures and unusual perspectives.
Since 2014, Willy Hans has also been part of a collective with Paul Spengemann, Jan Eichberg, and Steffen Goldkamp, who were fellow students at HFBK Hamburg. The four are by no means a conventional production collective. Instead of striving for control, they like to explore the limitless possibilities of a continuous exchange of ideas, collaborating in a variety of forms.
Kurzfilmtage is showing Hans’s trilogy «Das satanische Dickicht» («The Satanic Thicket»), which features a dark and mysterious world, where the supernatural encounters the mundane. In addition to their impressive visuals and high production values, these shorts stand out for the unique atmosphere that Hans creates. Their somber beauty captivates audiences, immersing them in a world full of secrets and unimaginable horrors. A thrilling masterpiece of short filmmaking that lingers in viewers’ minds long after the closing credits have ended.
The second programme is dedicated to the collective Spengemann, Eichberg, Goldkamp, Hans, whose members appear in different functions – director, cinematographer, screenwriter, etc. – across the six shorts. Both screenings are accompanied by a conversation with the filmmakers, and a 90-minute Master Class with Hans and other members of the collective will be held on Saturday.
Les Internationale Kurzfilmtage Winterthur représentent le plus important festival de courts métrages en Suisse. Chaque mois de novembre, Winterthour se transforme en métropole du court métrage pendant six jours.
Tout le monde trouve son compte dans les programmes soigneusement concoctés par nos curatrices et curateurs sur des thématiques ou des événements actuels et brûlants. Les blocs des compétitions donnent une bonne vue d’ensemble du paysage cinématographique actuel, alors que les installations, performances et autres événements spéciaux montrent au public la diversité des formes audiovisuelles. Le programme d’événements allie concerts, lectures et bien plus encore, complétant ainsi l’expérience du festival.
Le court métrage n’est pas juste un film «court». C’est une forme d’art à part entière à laquelle nous consacrons chaque année un festival.
Il existe des courts métrages de tous genres et de toutes longueurs. Grâce à des voies de production facilitées, il permet de capter rapidement une époque et de l’illustrer. Il divertit, surprend, analyse lasociété, exprime une opinion politique ou donne un aperçu de mondes étrangers.
Nous rassemblons nos courts métrages pour créer des programmes thématiques ou des sections – comme nos compétitions – et nous les projetons dans un ordre bien précis. Pour apprécier le court métrage, il suffit d’être curieux, d’avoir envie de faire des découvertes et de se laisser surprendre.