First- and second-time directors are set to compete for top honours at the 24th edition of the Transilvania International Film Festival, taking place in Cluj-Napoca from June 13 to 22, 2025. Twelve films from around the world will vie for the coveted Transilvania Trophy and other accolades in the Official Competition, while ten works will compete for the top prize in the What's Up, Doc? section.
Spanish director Rodrigo Cortés (Buried, Escape), Estonian director Rainer Sarnet (The Invisible Fight), and Kazakh filmmaker Adilkhan Yerzhanov (Yellow Cat, The Owners) will attend the festival in June, with dedicated retrospectives. Also confirmed are Academy Award winner Danis Tanovic with his newest film My Late Summer, Uberto Pasolini, the British-Italian producer of The Full Monty and director of Still Life and The Return; Italian-Romanian executive producer Alessandro del Vigna (Triangle of Sadness, The End); and acclaimed Danish script consultant and producer Vinca Wiedemann, who has worked closely with auteurs such as Lars von Trier (Melancholia, Nymphomaniac).
Other names include Ukrainian director Pavlo Ostrikov and celebrated Spanish actor Eduard Fernández, known for roles in Everybody Knows, The Method, and While at War, and winner of four Goya Awards, including Best Actor for Marco, the Invented Truth.
“Completely unintended, but highly plausible considering the chaos of our times, the 12 films in the Competition form a strange yet fascinating Babel—where people don’t understand each other and are at odds with the world. In the absence of a better, more conciliatory reality, art remains the only force that can positively transform this chronic lack of communication, empathy, and authenticity into something meaningful.” — Mihai Chirilov, Transilvania IFF Artistic Director
To a Land Unknown (dir. Mahdi Fleifel) – A raw refugee drama set in modern-day Athens, where two Palestinian brothers dream of reaching Germany.
Xoftex (dir. Noaz Deshe) – Set in a purgatory-like refugee camp blending grim reality with psychedelic imagination.
Peacock (dir. Bernhard Wenger) – An Austrian satire about identity in a hypocritical society, centered on a “Rent-A-Friend” employee.
The Kingdom (dir. Julien Colonna) – A gritty Corsican thriller about survival and clan violence in the '90s.
Three Days of Fish (dir. Peter Hoogendoorn) – A gently humorous and touching father-son reunion tale.
Sorda (Surzenie) (dir. Eva Libertad) – A Spanish debut that intimately examines a deaf couple awaiting news about their newborn.
Acts of Love (dir. Jeppe Rønde) – A powerful northern drama of religious trauma and reconciliation within a cult.
Rains Over Babel (dir. Gala del Sol) – A Colombian psychedelic fantasy of identity and flamboyant self-discovery.
Hysteria (dir. Mehmet Akif Büyükatalay) – A drama about art, morality, and chaos triggered by filming a controversial scene.
The Weeping Walk (dir. Dimitri Verhulst) – A dark comedy road movie that satirizes the journey of a quirky funeral procession.
Myocardium (dir. José Manuel Carrasco) – A Groundhog Day-esque introspective loop uncovering relational truths.
Debut, or Objects of the Field of Debris, as Currently Catalogued (dir. Julian Castronovo) – A cinematic detective story exploring the blurry lines between truth and illusion in art.