Darkly poetic and visually arresting, Swedish duo Pella Kågerman and Hugo Lilja’s sci-fi film follows the fate of a marooned colony vessel and its doomed passengers.
Films — by Language
- Arabic
- Arrernte
- Bosnian
- Cantonese
- Danish
- Dari
- Dutch
- English
- French
- Gaelic
- Galician
- German
- Gujarati
- Hebrew
- Hindi
- Hungarian
- Icelandic
- Indonesian
- Italian
- Japanese
- Kazakh
- Korean
- Macedonian
- Malay
- Mandarin
- Nawat
- Norwegian
- Palawa Kani
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Pukapukan
- Quechua
- Romanian
- Russian
- Sami
- Samoan
- Spanish
- Swedish
- Swiss-German
- Tamazight
- Te reo Māori
- Thai
- Tibetan
- Tongan
- Ukrainian
- Vietnamese
- Welsh
- no dialogue with English intertitles
Swedish
Koko-di Koko-da
Visually arresting and very adult, Swedish director Johannes Nyholm’s devilishly devised folktale focuses on a grieving couple’s infinite camping trip from hell.
La Flor: Part I
Spanning international espionage, torch song melodrama, supernatural horror and silent film homage, Mariano Llinás’ eccentric and expansive narrative epic is a Herculean film creation – and at 14 hours, a record-breaking one. Screening in three parts.
La Flor: Part II
Spanning international espionage, torch song melodrama, supernatural horror and silent film homage, Mariano Llinás’ eccentric and expansive narrative epic is a Herculean film creation – and at 14 hours, a record-breaking one. Screening in three parts.
La Flor: Part III
Spanning international espionage, torch song melodrama, supernatural horror and silent film homage, Mariano Llinás’ eccentric and expansive narrative epic is a Herculean film creation – and at 14 hours, a record-breaking one. Screening in three parts.