HUFF – Hungarian Film Festival, December 1-2, 2017
The Embassy
of Hungary in the Philippines and Shangri-La Plaza are proud to present the
first Hungarian Film Festival in Manila on 1-2 December 2017. The event will
showcase four critically acclaimed films never before screened in the
Philippines.
Hungarian
cinema has a long tradition dating back to the first years of the 20th Century,
during the past decades the inhabitants of the Central European country gave
major contributions to world cinema. Many pioneers of Hungarian cinema
influenced the art form from within Hungary, like directors István Szabó,
BélaTarr and MiklósJancsó, or from abroad, like producers William Fox (founder
of Fox Studios), Adolph Zukor (founder of Paramount Pictures) and Alexander
Korda (a pioneer of the British film industry).
Presenting
the Academy Award Winning Son of Saul (2015) as its main
feature, the festival aims to bring Hungarian culture and history closer to a
new audience in the Philippines. Son of Saul is drama directed by László Nemes
and is set the Auschwitz concentration camp during World War II, and follows a
day-and-a-half in the life of Saul Ausländer (played by GézaRöhrig), a Hungarian
member of the Sonderkommando, a special forced labour unit made up of
prisoners. The film won the Grand Prix of the 2015 Cannes Film Festival, the
the award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards. Son of
Saul was the first Hungarian film to win the Golden Globe for Best Foreign
Language Film and it is the second Hungarian film to win an Oscar, the first
one being IstvánSzabó'sMephisto in 1981.
The 2016
blockbuster Kincsem – Bet on Revenge will also be screened, a historical
drama about the world’s most successful racing horse.
With a more serious tone,
Strangled (2016)
will bring to the screen a psycho-thriller set in the 1960s oppressive Hungary,
when a series of atrocious murders shock a small town.
On a lighter note Paw
(2015) is a family film about a world famous rescue dog and his family.
The Embassy
of Hungary recently reopened in Manila in March 2017 and is endavouring to
provide opportunities to introduce the art, culture and history of Hungary the
the Filipino audience. Join us for the first two day festival of Hungarian
cinema in the Philippines on 1-2 December 2017. Screenings are free of charge,
on a first come, first served basis.
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