Der 10. Mai
When Nazi Germany invaded the Benelux, Switzerland faced the question: what if we’re next? Restored 1950s masterpiece.
93'
Switzerland
IFFR 2021
Mohammad Reza Aslani’s long-lost, legendary classic of Iranian New Wave cinema, Chess of the Wind, was probably the most internationally celebrated revelation/restoration of 2020. And no wonder. On the plot level, it’s a fabulously scary crime movie with gothic overtones reminiscent of classics like Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Les Diabolique (1955) or any ‘Who’s driving me nuts?’ thriller written in the 1960s by Jimmy Sangster – while formally, it’s a monument to artistic control, a show of perfectionist care and dedication beyond the norm.
The creepiness of Chess of the Wind lies not so much in its arsenal of warped souls and broken minds but in the film’s textures: fabrics and the play of light on them, as well as its forcefully rigorous visual compositions that make every image look like a painting depicting the situation’s interior hierarchy, and every tracking shot feel like an earth-shaking shift in power relations.
IFFR 2021
Programme IFFR 2021
A sphere of collective remembrance and imagination offering restored classics, documentaries on film culture, and explorations of cinema’s heritage.
Read more about this programmeWhen Nazi Germany invaded the Benelux, Switzerland faced the question: what if we’re next? Restored 1950s masterpiece.
93'
Switzerland
IFFR 2021
As Japanese monsters like Godzilla have so often saved the world, could they now help us fight Covid-19? Find out here!
88'
Japan
IFFR 2021
Can we find a different feminism in the images of state-sponsored Soviet documentaries about women and their role in socialism? Yes.
20'
Russia
IFFR 2021