In 2011 a
number of Hungarian coproductions were completed and released in cinemas, but
only a few started shooting. Adrienn Pál by Ágnes Kocsis was released
on 19 March 2011, almost a year after the Hungarian-Dutch-Austrian-
There are two majors coproductions yet to be released in Hungary. The Maiden Danced to Death by Endre Hules, which premiered at the Montreal International Film Festival, had Slovenian and Canadian coproducers. The national premiere of the film is set to be in November. The highly anticipated new film by Ferenc Török, Isztambul was made as a Turkish-Irish-Dutch coproduction. The film is still in postproduction, but the Turkish and the Hungarian premieres are both expected to take place in October.
Rebecca Daly’s feature film debut The Other Side of Sleep is a minority Hungarian coproduction which premiered on the Cannes Film Festival in the Quinzaine Director’s Fortnight. It was shot as an Irish-Dutch-Hungarian coproduction with Hungarian coproducer Ferenc Pusztai of KMH Films. István Szabó’s new film The Door has a budget of 6 million EUR. The project finished shooting and is in postproduction now. Jenő Hábermann of FilmArt teamed up with German company Intuit Pictures to produce the film. The film should be released in the end of 2011 or the beginning of 2012.
The animation film Egill by Áron Gauder has been in production for several years. The movie has a 3.2 million EUR budget, and it has German and Icelander contributors. Árpád Bogdán plans to start a film with Laokoon with Finnish and Serbian partners, The Necromancer, which participated in a few pitchings at festivals. Ferenc Pusztai will work again with Attila Gigor, the director of The Investigator. Their new project is The Man Who Didn’t Get Shot, planned to start filming it in 2012 as an Irish-Swedish-South African coproduction.
Andy Vajna, government commissioner of the film industry and developer of the post-MMK support system of Hungarian film culture, stated that coproductions will be crucial in the future of the film industry. Film professionals expect the Hungarian National Film Fund to give priority to the support of these collaborations.