Screened as part of NZIFF 2022

You Won't Be Alone 2021

Directed by Goran Stolevski Widescreen

In 19th century Macedonia, a young shapeshifting witch learns what it means to be human by inhabiting the lives of others in this one-of-a-kind feature debut from Australian-Macedonian filmmaker Goran Stolevski.

Aug 21

Matakana Cinemas

Australia In Macedonian with English subtitles
108 minutes DCP

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Kristina Ceyton
,
Samantha Jennings

Cinematography

Matthew Chuang

Editor

Luca Cappelli

Production designer

Bethany Ryan

Costume designer

Sladjana Peric-Santrac

Music

Mark Bradshaw

Cast

Noomi Rapace (Bosilka)
,
Alice Englert (Biliana)
,
Anamaria Marinca (Maria)
,
Sara Klimoska (Nevena)
,
Carloto Cotta (Boris)
,
Félix Maritaud (Yovan)

Festivals

Sundance
,
Sydney 2022

Elsewhere

“Writer-director Goran Stolevski brings something fresh to the folk horror genre with his strikingly assured debut feature You Won’t Be Alone. The title offers the promise of something both threatening and comforting. The film is equally generous in what it delivers. Stolevski blends the supernatural with the existential to chart the multiple lives of a witch… Stolevski has directed some two dozen shorts and his experience shows in a film that feels fully realised and uncompromising. If someone had filmed a tale by the brothers Grimm with the sensibility of Terrence Malick it might look a lot like You Won’t Be Alone.” — Allan Hunter, Screendaily

“Set in Macedonia in the 19th century, this film… isn’t so much a horror story about a witch terrorizing a series of villages as it is an autopsy of a lonely being trying to understand humanity. Based on regional folklore, the tale follows a shapeshifting entity who embodies a series of different characters (played by an ensemble cast including Noomi Rapace) and narrates her observations and thoughts in halting, affecting asides. Stolevski treats every frame with a gentle touch, creating a contemplative – and spellbinding – study of the human condition through the eyes of an unconventional subject.” — Shirley Li, The Atlantic