Latest Breaking News On - Cream could be dangerous - Page 1 : comparemela.com
Ice Cream Could Be Dangerous for Natasa Stork
cineuropa.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cineuropa.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Ice Cream Could Be Dangerous for Natasa Stork
Actress Natasa Stork and director Fanni Szilagyi during the shoot for
Ice Cream Could Be Dangerous (© Fabó Tóth)
Having previously turned heads with her short film
End of Puberty,
Ice Cream Could Be Dangerous (
Veszélyes lehet a fagyi). Topping the bill is
Natasa Stork (giving an exceptional turn in
Márton Patkós (set to grace screens soon in
Things Worth Weeping For),
Máté Szabó and
The story, written by
Zsófi Lányi, revolves around thirtysomething identical twins Éva and Adél. They are very distant and different from one another, but they lead equally hypocritical lifestyles and need to face up to reality when they fall in love with the same guy, who is everything they are not: radically open, direct and naive. They end up in a bizarre, unfulfilled love affair, which contributes to making both of their lives a little less miserable.
Hungarian Film and TV Biz Make Play for Global Stage at Berlin Festival
Alissa Simon, provided by
FacebookTwitterEmail
For the first time ever, two Hungarian films are competing for the Berlinale’s Golden Bear: “Forest – I See You Everywhere,” a standalone sequel to the 2003 Berlinale hit “Forest,” from veteran auteur Bence Fliegauf, and “Natural Light” from feature debutant Dénes Nagy. Csaba Káel, chairman of the National Film Institute of Hungary (NFI), says, “I believe it demonstrates the vitality and strength of the Hungarian industry flourishing despite the unprecedented circumstances caused by the pandemic worldwide.”
The two films represent opposite poles of current Hungarian filmmaking. Brimming with discourse, the independently funded “Forest” tells multiple complex, engaging stories of contemporary life in Hungary. And as he did in his Berlinale-winner “Just the Wind” (2012), Fliegauf creates deep empathy for his characters who deliver sta
photo: Inforg-M&M Film
BUDAPEST: The year 2020 started as a good one. The National Film Institute – Hungary (NFI) was established in January 2020 as the successor of the Hungarian National Film Fund, and Barnabás Tóth s historical drama Those Who Remained / Akik maradtak, produced by Inforg-M&M Film, got on the short list in the Academy Awards International Feature Film category. The film didn t make it into the nominations list and with the outbreak of the Coronavirus pandemic the Hungarian film industry faced serious challenges.
Luckily, there was also good news. Kornel Mundruczó s first English language film Pieces of a Woman, produced by BRON Studios (Canada) in coproduction witth Little Lamb (Canada) and Proton Cinema (Hungary), was invited into the main competition of the Venice Film Festival, and it is among the Academy Awards 2021 contenders for a nomination in various categories.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.