KVIFF Promises, part of the industry program of Karlovy Vary Intl. Film Festival, has unveiled the works-in-progress projects from Central Europe selected for the KVIFF Central Stage showcase, as well as the books selected for the first edition of Book-to-Screen at KVIFF, a showcase for books seeking film adaptation deals.
The 11 upcoming films selected for KVIFF Central Stage are directed by established filmmakers with extensive festival pedigrees, including Nicolas Steiner, Antonio Lukich, Olga Chajdas and Cristina GroÈan.
These films in the making, seeking co-production, financing, sales, distribution and festival opportunities, will be showcased during an interactive talk show on the Film Industry Main Stage on July 6.
The festival also unveiled the eight literary works selected for Book-to-Screen at KVIFF, a new showcase that seeks to create a market for film adaptation rights to original IPs from Central and Eastern Europe and strengthen cooperation between the film and publishing industries. The books, selected by an international jury, will be presented to producers in a talk show moderated by Niki Théron of the Frankfurt Book Fair on July 7.
In total, this yearâs KVIFF Promises will present 38 projects across five programs to producers, sales companies, distributors, festival programmers and other professionals seeking emerging films or works available for adaptation: 11 feature films in KVIFF Central Stage, nine treatments in Works in Development â Feature Launch and four in Works in Development â Focus Queer, six feature film or series projects in KVIFF Talents and eight original literary IPs in Book-to-Screen at KVIFF.
KVIFF Central Stage Introduces 11 Upcoming Films From the Central European RegionThe aim of KVIFF Central Stage, created by the KVIFF Film Industry Office in cooperation with the national film institutes of eight Central European countries, is to showcase upcoming feature films of established filmmakers in late-stage development, production or post-production.
âThis format addresses a notable gap in the Central European film landscape, where mid-career filmmakers typically have fewer opportunities for visibility and financing than emerging ones. Thanks to cooperation with film institutes across the region, including Swiss Films as a new partner this year, we present experienced filmmakers working on anticipated projects already resonating with audiences,â Hugo RosĂĄk, the head of KVIFF Film Industry Programs, said.
Switzerland will be represented by the project âFlying Mountain,â written and directed by Nicolas Steiner, whose previous films, such as âAbove and Below,â were screened at Berlinale, Rotterdam and KVIFF.
Ukraine will present two co-productions by filmmakers with extensive festival credentials: âScreaming Girlâ by director Antonio Lukich, whose comedy-drama âLuxembourg, Luxembourgâ premiered at Venice and whose previous film âMy Thoughts Are Silentâ was also shown at KVIFF, winner of the Special Jury Prize in the East of the West section in 2019, and âNoahâ by director and screenwriter Marysia Nikitiuk.
The documentary âTraces,â which she co-directed, had its world premiere and won the Audience Award in the Panorama section of this yearâs Berlinale. Her debut feature âWhen the Trees Fallâ earned a nomination for best debut at the 2018 Berlinale and received the Krzysztof Kieslowski ScripTeast Award for best Eastern European screenplay in 2016. Her films were also shown in Cannes or at Tallinn Black Nights.
The Czech Republic has two representatives in the selection. TomĂĄĆĄ Hodan (âPoslednĂ zĂĄvod,â âPrezident BlanĂkâ) will showcase âThe Stones Are Rolling to Prague,â which recalls an iconic moment of the Czech 1990s through the story of preparations for the Rolling Stonesâ concert in Prague in 1990. Czech cultural phenomenaânamely cottage cultureâare also explored in the comedy âA Few Branches Offâ by TomĂĄĆĄ PavlĂÄek.
Romanian-Hungarian director Cristina GroÈan (âOrdinary Failures,â which was awarded at Venice) will present her upcoming mob drama âLesdenzero.â
Polish director Olga Chajdas, known to Karlovy Vary audiences from âImagoâ (which played in Proxima competition and won the FIPRESCI Prize in 2023), will present her female road movie âTribe.â
German multidisciplinary artist Sebastian Fritzsch, whose debut âEndzeitâ premiered at Berlinale, will present the visually and atmospherically rich upcoming film âTrainrider.â
Slovenian writer and director Goran VojnoviÄ will present the upcoming film adaptation of his own book âYugoslavia, My Fatherland.â The selection concludes with the Slovak coming-of-age drama âCowgirlâ by Michal BlaĆĄko (âVictimâ) and Austrian director Sebastian Brauneisâs boxing biography âHansi,â which captures 1960s Vienna.
Moving beyond traditional pitches, the projects will be showcased through interactive conversations about the filmmakersâ career paths and co-production possibilities across the participating countries. The most promising films in development, selected by an international jury, will be eligible for the âŹ20,000 Eurimages Co-Production Development Award.
The participating projects will also gain access to post-production through a partnership with UPP and Soundsquare. Films that meet the criteria for the Czech Audiovisual Fundâs 35% digital production incentive will receive an additional 15% discount on audio-visual post-production services from both studios.
The KVIFF Central Stage showcase will take place at 2 p.m. on July 6, on the Industry Main Stage in Kaiserbad.
KVIFF Central Stage selected projects:âThe Flying Mountainâ (Switzerland, Ireland, Austria)Direction, Screenplay: Nicolas SteinerProduction: Katrin Renz, Stefan JĂ€ger, Nicolas Steiner, David Collins, Eamon Hughes, Alexander Dumreicher-Ivanceanu, Bady Minck
âScreaming Girlâ (Ukraine, Ireland)Direction: Antonio LukichScreenplay: Antonio Lukich, Ailbhe KeoganProduction: Volodymyr Yatsenko, Anna Yatsenko, Jessie Fisk, Annie Barclay
âNoahâ (Ukraine, Croatia, Belgium)Direction, Screenplay: Marysia NikitiukProduction: Igor Savychenko, Hrvoje OsvadiÄ, SĂ©bastien Delloye
âLesdenzeroâ (Czech Republic, Switzerland, Hungary, Romania)Direction: Cristina GroÈanScreenplay: Arne Kohlweyer, Cristina GroÈanProduction: Marek NovĂĄk
âThe Stones Are Rolling to Pragueâ (Czech Republic, Slovakia)Direction, Screenplay: TomĂĄĆĄ HodanProduction: Jakub Kraus, Martin PalĂĄn, Tibor BĂșza
âA Few Branches Offâ (Czech Republic)Direction, Screenplay: TomĂĄĆĄ PavlĂÄekProduction: Eva VĂĄchovĂĄ, Pavel VĂĄcha
âTribeâ (Poland, Albania)Direction, Screenplay: Olga ChajdasProduction: Karolina Galuba
âTrainriderâ (Germany)Direction: Sebastian FritzschScreenplay: Jan Bredehöft, Sebastian FritzschProduction: Corinna C. Poetter, Daniel Ehrenberg
âYugoslavia, My Fatherlandâ (Slovenia, North Macedonia, Serbia)Direction: Goran VojnoviÄScreenplay: Goran VojnoviÄ, Aleksandar PopovskiProduction: BoĆĄtjan Ikovic, MiloĆĄ IvanoviÄ
âCowgirlâ (Slovakia, Czech Republic, Hungary)Direction: Michal BlaĆĄkoScreenplay: Jakub MedveckĂœProduction: Jakub ViktorĂn, TomĂĄĆĄ HrubĂœ
âHansiâ (Austria)Direction: Sebastian BrauneisScreenplay: Sebastian Brauneis, Helmut EmersbergerProduction: Ulrich Gehmacher
Book-to-Screen at KVIFF: Establishing a Central-Eastern European Market for IP AdaptationsA new collaboration with the Frankfurt Book Fair, Moravian Library in Brno and Book World, supported by the PPF Foundation, brings literary adaptations into the KVIFF Industry Days program.
Inspired by a Berlinale program, Book-to-Screen at KVIFF will spotlight eight books with strong screen potential, written by authors from Central and Eastern Europe, a region that RosĂĄk describes as still underrepresented when it comes to IP development and the systematic handling of literary rights.
Producers seeking new material for film and television adaptations will have the opportunity to discover these literary works during an interactive talk show hosted by Niki Théron, senior manager international projects and film at the Frankfurt Book Fair, on July 7 (10.30 a.m. Film Industry Main Stage).
âFor this first edition, we were delighted to receive more than 70 submissions from 14 countries. Selecting just eight was a real challenge, but the final line-up now reflects the regionâs diversity of countries, genres and themes, from historical epics and folk horror to childrenâs stories and bold contemporary voices. We look forward to spotlighting these stories at KVIFF and helping pave the way for new book-to-screen partnerships across Central and Eastern Europe,â ThĂ©ron said.
âTrue Way Out,â journalist Patrik Bangaâs memoir about growing up in a Roma community in Pragueâs ĆœiĆŸkov neighbourhood in the 1990s, won the Magnesia Litera award for Best Debut in 2023.
âPlaying Wolfâ is âa village novel you want to read in the safety of the city.â This folk-horror thriller by writer and literary scholar Zuzana ĆĂhovĂĄ, former head of Czech Studies at Oxford, was published in France and the U.S. by Ăditions du Seuil and Catapult, respectively.
In the graphic novel âThe Zoneâ by Slovak author and playwright Daniel Majling, a mysteriously hostile space takes on the title role itself. Absurd characters, dark humor, striking visuals and cult status among Central European comics fans (the novel received the Czech Muriel Prize) all contribute to its adaptation potential.
âQueen of Hearts,â a dystopian satire by Moldovan author Iulian Ciocan, explores an ever-expanding, all-consuming crater in the middle of post-communist ChiÈinÄu.
âAspic Bistroâ by Ieva DumbrytÄ, set in a surreal, almost Orwellian-controlled kitchen environment, won several awards in her native Lithuania, including the prize for the Most Creative Book of the Year.
The historical drama âCupid at the Kremlin Wallâ takes place during a tragic train journey across Georgia, at the height of the Stalinist terror in the 1930s. Historian Aka Morchiladze, its author, is an accomplished writer who has over 30 novels published in 15 countries. He has written several screenplays, and his previous book âJourney to Karabakhâ was adapted into a film.
The selection also includes a strong representative of childrenâs literature, the Polish title âThe River Odyssey of Kora From Willow Meadowâ by Adam RobiĆski. The story of a young beaver named Kora offers strong potential for visually and emotionally compelling family film with ecological relevance.
The war in the Donbas serves as the starting point in âAmadoka,â a novel that combines an intimate human story with the vast historical trauma of Eastern Europe in a deeply cinematic way. Writer Sophia Andrukhovych won the International Hermann Hesse Prize 2024 for it. Her debut novel âFelix Austriaâ already won the BBC Ukrainian Book of the Year award and was adapted into a film titled âDevoted.â
The showcase will be complemented by an IP-focused producersâ think-tank and networking session.
âOur long-term ambition with Book-to-Screen at KVIFF is to become a true Central-Eastern European IP market that helps develop dialogue between the film and publishing industries and create a more transparent environment for adaptation rights in the region,â RosĂĄk said.Book-to-Screen at KVIFF projects:âPlaying Wolfâ (Czech Republic)Author: Zuzana ĆĂhovĂĄGenre: folk horror, psychological thrillerPublisher: Argo
âThe True Way Outâ (Czech Republic)Author: Patrik BangaGenre: coming-of-age, autobiographyPublisher: Host
âCupid at the Kremlin Wallâ (Georgia)Author: Aka MorchiladzeGenre: historical drama, detective novelPublisher: Sulakauri Publishing
âAspic Bistroâ (Lithuania)Author: Ieva DumbrytÄGenre: magic-realism satirePublisher: Kitos knygos
âQueen of Heartsâ (Moldova)Author: Iulian CiocanGenre: dystopian novelPublisher: Polirom
âThe River Odyssey of Kora From Willow Meadowâ (Poland)Author: Adam RobiĆskiGenre: childrenâs literaturePublisher: WidnokrÄ g
âThe Zoneâ (Slovakia)Author: Daniel MajlingGenre: graphic novelPublisher: Brak
âAmadokaâ (Ukraine)Author: Sophia AndrukhovychGenre: historical/war novelPublisher: The Old Lion Publishing House