ESTONIAN STAND has moved to a slightly NEW LOCATION in Berlin and is now situated at G10 - the same upper floor in Martin Gropius Bau, but slightly larger and roomier place. You are most welcome to check us out! The stand is very simply called "Estonia". The Latvian separate national stand is right beside us.
From 9 to 19 February the 62nd Berlin Film Festival is taking place. This year as many as three Slovenian films, supported on the basis of the public call for minority o‑productions in 2010, will be presented in the official festival programme.
The Croatian minority co-production, feature dramedy Parade, written and directed by Srđan Dragojević, starring Croatian actors Dejan Aćimović and Bojan Navojec, is included in the official PANORAMA selection of the 62nd Berlinale.
{mosimage}How much do you know about Lithuania and its film industry? That it is a small country near the Baltic Sea, creating a record low amount of films? Unfortunately we have to disappoint you because your knowledge might be a bit outdated. Lithuanian film industry has reached something that could be described as a breaking point in 2011 and it is going though a revival process.
An interview with Romanian filmmaker and producer Florin Iepan about his latest documentary project Odessa, Romania's involvement in WW2, pigeonholing, resurgence of intolerance, observational fog, Michael Moore, and more...
{mosimage}
FAMU, Prague's national film academy and one of Europe's oldest and most famous film schools, has opened the application process for its English-language international programmes. FAMU (www.famu.cz), located in a historic landmark palace in the heart of Prague, offers one-, two- and three-year intensive programmes.