Balkan Film Week 2026

from 9 March 2026 | UT Connewitz | Free admission
#bfw26 #traduki #utconnewitz

This year’s – now already eighth – Balkan Film Week will take place from 9 to 12 March 2026.

The Balkan Film Week is part of the TRADUKI project and a cinematic introduction to the diverse literary programme at the Leipzig Book Fair. As in previous years, the programme was curated by Marija Katalinić.

All film screenings will take place at the UT Connewitz. Admission is free.

Programme

Monday, 9 March

  • SLO/MK 2025, D: Kukla, 98′, feature film, English subtitles

    Mihrije, Sina and Jasna are best friends who live in Slovenia. They refuse to conform to the conservative system they live in. Their world turns upside down when they meet Fantasy, a transgender woman. They will embark on a journey that explores the complexities of gender, desire, and self-discovery. In 2022, TRADUKI screened Kukla’s short film Sestre. The director developed the story of the three friends in her feature film, Fantasy, which has already garnered several accolades, including at the Trieste film festival.

  • BG/USA 2025, D: Kristina Nikolova, 78′, documentary film, English subtitles

    In March 2025, Ivo Dimchev’s concert was the crowning cherry on the top of the TRADUKI Balkannacht. So we could not be more delighted to show Nikolova’s film about this wonderful artist at our film week. This intimate portrait shows Ivo Dimchev with his parents in Bulgaria, with his sister in the USA, in sold-out theatres in front of raptured audience members and in small, humble living rooms, where he performs concerts during the pandemic. Dimchev sings and talks about love and Jesus Christ, about heaven and hell. He certainly has our blessing. We will follow him.

Tuesday, 10 March

  • XK 2025, D: Redon Kika, 68′, documentary film, English subtitles

    Tringa, Jeta, and Atdhe have never left Kosovo. In their twenties, they’ve spent their lives imagining the world through screens, grounded by visa restrictions. When they finally board a plane for the first time, the reality they encounter is far from what they imagined. Yet something shifts. In the space between departure and return, they begin to understand that growing up isn’t about where you go, but who you become along the way.

  • HR/I/SLO 2025, D: Igor Bezinović, 113′, documentary film, English subtitles

    An aristocratic Italian poet and journalist sets out to occupy a city on the Adriatic coast. Stranger than fiction? At the end of World War I, Gabriele D’Annunzio embarks on a journey to take over the city of Fiume, also known as Rijeka, in autumn of 1919. D’Annunzio and his “legionaries” take over the city for a year and a half and plunge its citizens into utter chaos. In his film collage, Bezinović uses the city’s current population as storytellers, who play out this strange episode in the city’s history take by take. In front of the eyes of the spectators, a ghostly and ghastly reimagining of ultranational ideologies is conjured.

Wednesday, 11 March

  • Koki, Ciao! / A Whisper I Hear / Granny’s Sexual Life / Lavender

    Koki, Ciao
    NL 2025 D: Quenton Miller, 11’, short film, English subtitles

    The star of this short is 67-year-old cockatoo Koki, who once belonged to Tito. In Yugoslav times, Koki was part of the entertainment programme on the Brijuni Islands, where Tito used to meet with important leaders of the Nonaligned movement. Decades later, Koki is still an attraction and tourist draw. The film combines new recordings with yet unseen archival footage to recount Koki’s life next to Tito and his eminent guests, including Sophia Loren and Orson Welles.

    A Whisper I Hear
    ME 2023 D: Aleksa Bujišić, 13’, short film, English subtitles

    The daily rituals that inform life, Bujišić observes them. He observes his mother and grandmother and how they live life – day by day, step by step. The combing of hair, the starting of the fire, the knife chiming against a ceramic plate. Patterns that set a rhythm. Then evening comes, then night. The next morning everything repeats again. But the rhythm is imbued with melancholy. Slavka’s husband has passed away.

    Granny’s Sexual Life
    F/SLO 2021, D: Urška Djukić, Emilie Pigeard, 14’, short film, English subtitles

    Four elderly women, all grandmothers, remember the past and talk about their youth, their relationships, and, as the title already gives away, sex. How different things were in their times! Through a combination of film footage and animated sequences, the four stories of the grandmothers flow together and offer – without pulling punches – an unflinching portrait of their intimate lives governed by old traditions. A tender portrait of Slovene women in the first half of the 20th century.

    Lavender
    ME 2025, D: Mateja Raičković, 17’, short film, English subtitles

    Lavender is a personal documentary that follows director Mateja Raičković on a journey of healing and self-reclamation. Through intimate conversations, family encounters, and moments of reflection in nature, the film explores themes of vulnerability, trauma, connection, and inner strength. It is a quiet and emotional meditation on transformation and acceptance.

  • RO/F/BE 2016, D: Cristian Mungiu, 128’, feature film, English subtitles

    Romeo Aldea works as a doctor in a small Romanian town. The caring father only has one wish – for his daughter Eliza to study psychology in England, where a better future is bound to be waiting for her. But shortly before her finals she is the victim of a horrible and brutal assault. Utterly shattered and traumatized, she fails to prepare for her exams. In order to help his daughter, her father sees only one solution. This film by celebrated director Cristian Mungiu received the award for best director at the Cannes film festival 2016. It is a complex picture about failed dreams, betrayal, and corruption.

Thursday, 12 March

  • BiH 2024, D: Jasmila Žbanić, 75’, documentary film, German & English subtitles

    Jasmila Žbanić uses interviews, archival footage and old TV interview snippets to piece together her documentary on Emerik Blum and the Yugoslav model for workers’ self-government. Sarajevo-born Blum, who had survived the Shoa, established „Energoinvest“ in 1951. Over the years, the company became one of the most successful companies of socialist Yugoslavia internationally. Blum’s recipe for the company’s success: its people, its workers’ self-government, and relentless innovation. An extraordinary life story. And a business career between east and west, which today, is unimaginable.

  • RS/SLO 2025, D: Želimir Žilnik, 118′, documentary film, English subtitles

    Milan Kovačević alias Stevan Arsin is in Vienna and just about to buy some vinyls of his old jazz band, when the telephone rings. The Serbian state has decided to return the family house, which had been taken from the family during World War II, to its former owners. And so, the elderly Arsin sets out to return to his homeland, which is made up of a lot of Habsburg nostalgia and new Serbian features – with only little of the former Yugoslavia left. Arsin travels through the country meeting family and friends and encounters new obstacles along the way. In 1969, Žilnik won the Goldenen Bear for Early Works, in 2023, he opened the 5th Balkan Film Week with his film The Most Beautiful Country in the World.

Trailers

  • Fantasy

    SLO/MK 2025, D: Kukla, 98', feature film, English subtitles

  • In Hell with Ivo

    BG/USA 2025, D: Kristina Nikolova, 78', documentary film, English subtitles

  • I Have Never Been on an Airplane

    XK 2025, D: Redon Kika, 68', documentary film, English subtitles

  • Fiume o morte!

    HR/I/SLO 2025, D: Igor Bezinović, 113', documentary film, English subtitles

  • Koki, Ciao

    NL 2025 D: Quenton Miller, 11’, short film, English subtitles

  • A Whisper I Hear

    ME 2023 D: Aleksa Bujišić, 13’, short film, English subtitles

  • Granny's Sexual Life

    F/SLO 2021, D: Urška Djukić, Emilie Pigeard, 14’, short film, English subtitles

  • Lavender

    ME 2025, D: Mateja Raičković, 17’, short film, English subtitles

  • Graduation

    RO/F/BE 2016, D: Cristian Mungiu, 128’, feature film, English subtitles

  • Blum

    BiH 2024, D: Jasmila Žbanić, 75’, documentary film, German & English subtitles

  • Eighty Plus

    RS/SLO 2025, D: Želimir Žilnik, 118', documentary film, English subtitles

A Conversation Between the Past and the Present, Between the Old and the Young

Marija Katalinić

Credits: private

Solidarity is a word often evoked with nostalgia in the Balkan region. A speck of the past ideological and social system that once strived to promote and ensure connection, empathy and support between its citizens. Solidarity signified a moment for joint recognition of each other’s struggles and offered (even if sometimes only symbolically) comradeship in times of need. It meant; one is seen in their state of existence and if that sight denoted a requirement for assistance, it would be provided by the other. Albeit solidarity has a more proactive tone of engagement, one can also read into it a will to participate in others’ lives by sharing the same humanness and by recognising all that this entails. In that sense, assisting, sharing, and learning were all signs of the shared experience of ploughing through life.  Nowadays, unfortunately, solidarity sounds archaic or alludes to political leanings. In a world shaped by capitalism of extreme heights and newly awoken national aspirations, being there for another is often seen through an ethnic lens, “distracting” or even “inefficient”. Yet, if there is one guiding idea that the states of the wider Balkan region are able to relearn for themselves, and to teach others – it is the importance of community and participation.

This year’s Balkan Film Week theme is concerned with conversations led between the younger and older generations in the region. What and how does solidarity contribute to this generational cinematic conversation? Solidarity does not only contribute to the conversation but paints the engagement with a colour of genuine interest and attention. For what use are stories and storytelling if not to engage one another in a process of listening, reflecting and ultimately caring for that what is shared. We often forget the importance of personal curation; choosing ideas and memories that are close to us or that we find important to share with others as a response to their actions or worries. Nowadays, contributing attentiveness to the stories told is an act of solidarity in itself. What can happen when generations talk to each other, or better yet, listen? The older generation could teach the younger one about wars, survival and resistance, about the pains of the body and heart, about failed ideologies and expectations. They could speak of failures and aspirations, but also also reflect on passed experiences, reinforce calm and a believe and faith in human values that matter and which lead forward, rise above and gather all that is chaotic and unpredictable. On the other hand, younger generations could share their current hopes and fears for the future, their challenges and milestones; their wins that enrich their lives and the obstacles they strive to move out of their way. A pathway that has been passed by the older generations and that was perhaps not expected to be revisited again.

The Balkan Film Week programme opens with the film Fantasy by Katarina Rešek (AKA Kukla). Fantasy is the name of the protagonist, but it can also allude to a space where one can imagine, reinterpret and redefine the identity frames one grows from or into. A fantasy can come true, or it can show itself as cruel and false as Lauren Berlant[1] would warn. Is the community we belong to safe or unsafe, and who is our community? Is it our families or those we choose on our own terms? The questions of belonging, family and negotiation are the themes of the films Lavender’(Mateja Raičković), A Whisper I Hear (Aleksa Bujišić ), In Hell with Ivo (Kristina Nikolova) and Graduation by director Cristian Mungiu.

Today, connection feels all-pervading in this digitally imbued reality. The concerns are global, the trends are common, and the desires are cloned. However, this is not the reality for the majority of youth still struggling for opportunities. The film I Have Never Been on an Airplane addresses the issue by following a group of friends from Kosovo in their desire to see Berlin. It can be easy to take things for granted if one is in the privileged position, yet, films like these show that the best stories lie in everyday quests and desires. Thinking about travelling, it is perplexing when the stories of the younger generation meet or even clash with those of the older generation. Questions of movement, sexuality and love, but also workers’ rights, have been addressed decades ago, yet today it seems that these rights have never been addressed and have evaporated.

It is exactly here at this threshold of past and present that this year’s programme invites the viewer to explore the memories of the older generation. Brave, longstanding and courageous in their past endeavours but also fatigued. The latest release by director Želimir Žilnik, Eighty Plus, follows an older gentleman who returns to the land of his roots, seeking justice for his home, but also finding love. Žilnik’s new film evokes the past yet is happy for the future that lies ahead; a wise contribution of a cineaste in his own right and his own legacy. Bringing the past also back to the frame with a mixed sense of nostalgia, sadness and potential, is Jasmila Žbanić in Blum, which pays homage to a once successful company and a labour system that worked with and for the people engaged in it. There is a sense of awe and despair when one compares the current state of labour markets and human rights in relation to the ones depicted in this film. In this respect, the winner of this year’s European Film Award for Best Documentary – Fiume o morte!, is a cleverly made film that reflects the local history of Rijeka (Croatia) as a response to global governance failures; reminding us all how fascism operates, deludes and destroys. In the same manner, but with a bit more fun, the short films Koki, Ciao! by Quenton Miller and Granny’s Sexual Life by Urška Djukić and Emilie Pigeard, contribute to the way in which the past can be interesting to experience through the eyes and mouths of those who witnessed it.

We live in a world where attention is monetised and profitable for those who do not consider the impact of their actions on the community. Questions about where and how one invests time and one’s attention have been, and now more than ever, political. In that sense, making, sharing and witnessing films that enhance connection and reflection between different generations, groups and communities is a political act that continues to be a mark of solidarity, humanity and hope for us all.

[1] Berlant, Lauren, ‘Cruel Optimism’, Duke University Press, 2011.

Thank you to all distributors and especially UT Connewitz

Programme Curator: Marija Katalinić | Project Manager: Barbara Anderlič | Illustration: Lea Zupančič | Postcard: Janett Andrejewski | Website: Matthew Morete

Looking Back

Want to find out more about past Balkan Film Week editions? Check out the links below:

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