A total of 18 titles will compete for the Zabaltegi-Tabakalera Award of the San Sebastian Festival’s all-encompassing competitive section, where any kind of style or length goes. This year thirteen features, one medium-length film and four shorts will compete, including works by Joanna Hogg, Radu Jude and Gaspar Noé. Several of the films selected come from festivals including Venice, Cannes and Berlin – including the Golden Bears for Best Feature Film and Best Short Film at the Berlinale. There are also works by filmmakers with connections to San Sebastian –Jean Gabriel Périot, Kiro Russo, Laura Wandel– for their participation in sections such as Nest and programmes like Ikusmira Berriak.
Kiro Russo, winner of the Nest Section’s First Prize and Orona Award with his short film Nueva Vida / New Life (2015), will participate in Zabaltegi-Tabakalera five years after screening his feature film debut, Viejo calavera (2016) in Horizontes Latinos. Following its premiere in the Orizzonti section of the upcoming Venice Festival, the Bolivian director will bring his second work to San Sebastian, El gran movimiento, developed at the Ikusmira Berriak programme with the title of La loba, the story of a sick worker who turns to a healer to save his life.
Also arriving from Orizzonti is the latest work by the Slovak Peter Kerekes Cenzorka / 107 Mothers, a film combining fiction and non-fiction set in a prison for women in Ukraine. With extensive experience in the field of documentary films, the Slovak filmmaker is the author of works including 66 sezón / 66 Seasons (2003), Ako sa varia dejiny / Cooking History (2009), Zamatoví teroristi / Velvet Terrorists (2013) and Occupation 1968 (2018).
The film, theatre and TV director Kirill Serebrennikov will present the film with which he competed in the Official Selection at Cannes, Petrov’s Flu, about a man who lives his life on the border between fantasy and reality. This is the third feature from the Russian moviemaker, whose debut, The Student (2016), premiered in Un Certain Regard at the Festival de Cannes and who went on to compete for the event’s Golden Palm with Leto / Summer (Perlak, 2018).
Zabaltegi-Tabakalera has also programmed the winning film of Un Certain Regard at the Festival de Cannes, Razzhimaya Kulaki / Unclenching the Fists, a story set in northern Ossetia where a young girl tries to flee from her family’s asphyxiating control. This is the second feature from the Russian filmmaker, Kira Kovalenko, who made her debut with Sofichka (2016).
Un monde / Playground, an immersion in the school universe through the eyes of a little girl whose brother is the victim of bullying, is the first work by Laura Wandel premiered this year in Un Certain Regard, where she won the Fipresci Prize. The Belgian director had previously presented her short film Murs (2007) at different international festivals, including San Sebastian’s Nest section, while Les corps étrangers (2014) competed in the Official Short Film Competition at Cannes.
Another title retrieved from the French festival, precisely from the Cannes Première section, is Vortex, by Gaspar Noé, the tale of the relationship between two poorly elderly people. The French-Argentine filmmaker participated in Perlak with Irréversible (2002), screened years later in 2009 as part of the retrospective Backwash: the cutting edge of French cinema, and was one of the directors of the anthology feature film 7 días en La Habana / Seven Days in Havana (Zabaltegi Specials, 2012).
The French festival’s Special Screenings saw the participation of Mi Iubita, Mon Amour, the feature directorial debut from the Parisian actress Noémie Merlant, who starred in Portrait de la jeune fille en feu (Portrait of a Woman on Fire, Perlak 2019), by Céline Sciamma. Now, after filming the shorts Shakira (2019) and Je suis une biche (2017), Merlant directs and stars in the story of a woman who meets a man younger than herself while celebrating her hen party.
Arriving from the Cannes Quinzaine des Réalisateurs is The Souvenir: Part II, second instalment of the autobiographical story from the British director Joanna Hogg, author of films including Archipelago (2010), Exhibition (2013) and The Souvenir (2019), winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance Festival. Her latest film is a portrait of the artist that transcends the halting particulars of everyday life - a singular, alchemic mix of memoir and fantasy.
Another competitor in the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs was Jean-Gabriel Périot, who presented his feature debut, Une jeunesse allemande / A German Youth (2015), in Zabaltegi-Tabakalera and won the award in the same section with the short film Song for the Jungle (2018). He has also competed in New Directors with the feature Lumières d’été-Natsu no hikari / Summer Lights (2016) and with Nos défaites (Our Defeats, 2019) in Zabaltegi-Tabakalera, to which the French filmmaker returns this year with Retour à Reims (Fragments) / Returning to Reims, using Didier Eribon’s text to narrate, with archive footage, an intimate and political tale of the French working class from the 50s until today.
Coming from the last Annecy Animation Film Festival, where it landed the Jury Distinction, is La traversée / The Crossing, the first feature film by Florence Miailhe about two siblings who flee from the war and the persecution of immigrants. With more than three decades’ experience in animated short films, some of her works have landed awards at festivals such as Clermont-Ferrand or Cannes, as well as having received a number of French cinema’s César awards.
The Japanese director Kyoshi Sugita will present the film with which he won the Grand Prix and Audience Award at the last FIDMarseille. Haruharasan no Uta / Haruhara-san's Recorder, following a woman as she tries to recover from her partner’s suicide, is the latest work from the producer of titles including Hitotsu no uta (A Song I Remember, 2011) and Hikari no uta (Listen to Light, 2017), both presented at Tokyo Festival.
The Romanian Radu Jude will present Babardeală cu bucluc sau porno balamuc / Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn, the story of a schoolteacher who lands herself in hot water over a personal video with sexual content. The film carried off the Golden Bear at Berlin Festival, where the moviemaker had previously bagged the Best Director Award for Aferim! (2015). Among her other distinctions are the Special Jury Prize in Locarno for Inimi cicatrizate / Scarred Hearts (2016) and the Crystal Globe for Best Film at Karlovy Vary for Îmi este indiferent daca în istorie vom intra ca barbari / I Do Not Care If We Go Down in History as Barbarians (2018).
For her part, Olga Lucovnicova will participate with Nanu Tudor / My Uncle Tudor, the work earning her the Golden Bear for Best Short Film at Berlin Festival. The Moldovan director, who documents her own return to the home of her great-grandparents, is the author of short films including O crenguță de scoruș / One Little Rowan Branch (2016), Nu am, moarte, cu tine nimic... / I Do Not Hate You, Death (2016) and Nu e sfârșitul / It's Not the End (2019).
Hailing from China, Zhang Dalei will present Xia Wu Guo Qu Le Yi Ban / Day is Done, which also screened as part of Berlinale Shorts at the last Berlin Festival. The short film, following on from his previous Ba yue / The Summer is Gone (2016), opens when a young boy returns to his grandfather’s house.
In addition, Zabaltegi-Tabakalera will include two world premieres. On the one hand, the Catalan Laura Rius Aran, co-director of Les amigues de l'Àgata / Àgata's Friends (2015), will bring the medium-length Les filles du feu / My Friends and the Fire, the story of a reunion between five friends and continuation of her earlier short film, Millions (and Millions) of Memories (2018). On the other hand, the French / Italian filmmaker Lubna Playoust will screen with her latest short film, Le cormoran / The Cormorant, set in the house on an island where a mother and her son are shut away.
In addition to all of these titles are the already announced Eles transportan a morte / They Carry Death, by Helena Girón and Samuel M. Delgado, and Heltzear, Mikel Gurrea’s short film. The feature from Girón and Delgado, an adventure story with a critical discourse towards colonisation, arrives following its screening at the Venice Critics’ Week. For its part, Heltzear, selected for the Kimuak catalogue 2021 and programmed for the Orizzonti competitive section of the Venice Mostra, tells a tale of beating the odds in a context of political violence.
A jury designed by San Sebastian Festival will decide the winning film of the Zabaltegi-Tabakalera Award, coming with 20,000 euros: 6,000 going to the director of the film, and the remaining 14,000 to its distributor in Spain.
The Festival’s all-ecompassing competitive section will include titles to have been awarded or programmed at Venice, Cannes and Berlin, among other festivals, and two world premieres.