Skwigly Online Animation Magazine Search

The first cinematic highlights of the ITFS programme

// Festival News

Skwigly



“Animation Connects!” is the motto of the anniversary edition of the Stuttgart International Festival of Animated Film, which will take place from 25 to 30 April 2023 for the 30th time. True to this motto, the ITFS will focus on connections between the audience, professionals, artists, talents and established filmmakers.

In different film programs and events, an arc is spanned from “best of programs” to the most current films and topics. As one of the world’s most important festivals for animated film, ITFS 2023 will take place at various venues in Stuttgart, including the Schlossplatz and the Innenstadtkinos, and will bring the world of animation together locally.

Tickets for accreditation and festival passes are now available at www.ITFS.de/en/tickets

At the heart of the festival is the International Competition, featuring the latest animated short films from around the world. The diverse programme showcases important themes such as the exploration of migration and trauma, sexuality and gender, environment, social anxiety and loneliness, as well as films on human abysses. OSCAR 2023 nominated short films will also be screened.

Complete lists of the short film competitions programmes can be find here: https://www.ITFS.de/en/programme/short-and-feature-films

Migration and trauma

In “Letter to a Pig” (France/Israel, 01/2022), award-winning animator and visual artist Tal Kantor shows a unique technique that combines drawing, photography, video, painting, and animation. The story is about a Holocaust survivor reading a letter he wrote to the pig who saved his life. While listening, a young schoolgirl falls into a strange dream, where she is confronted with questions of identity, collective trauma, and the extremes of human nature.

Joseph Wallace’s “Salvation Has No Name” (Czech Republic/France/United Kingdom, 07/2022) is dedicated to the topics of migration and narrow-mindedness. A troupe performs a play about a priest and a refugee woman. As their misguided story unfolds, the boundaries between fiction and reality begin to blur and the situation escalates.

Films with a view to the human abyss

The ITFS will screen the short film “Scale” (Belgium/France/United Kingdom, 04/2022) by award-winning filmmaker Joseph Pierce (among Screen International’s “Stars of Tomorrow” in 2008). Losing the sense of scale: As Will’s drug addiction gets worse, he tries to unravel the sequence of events that led to his predicament before he is lost forever.

French filmmaker Stéphanie Clément’s “Pachyderme” (01/2022) offers a glimpse into one of Louise’s summer days in the countryside with her grandparents. But the familiar is overshadowed by anxiety, sadness, and a monster – so subtle and frightening.

Gender & Identity

The Romanian short film “Sasha” (Serghei Chiviriga, 03/2022) is about a teenager in the shape of a snail, who, confused by the whole world and the own body, is forced to discover the truth about the own sexual identity in a strange way.

 Environment & Society – With a pinch of humour

In a humorous short film, the film “Sandwich Cat” by David Fidalgo Omil (Spain, 09/2022) shows us a mirror image of humanity – with all its good and especially bad qualities. David himself plays a decisive role. Can we humans still be saved?

In 2031, a young female polar bear has to leave her home due to global warming and moves to Zurich. Together with the other animals who have fled, she manages to get by with odd jobs. But then she has a world-changing idea! “The Invention of Less” by Noah Erni (Switzerland, 12/2021) shows in a humorous and entertaining way how the world might be saved by a little trick.

OSCAR Nominated Films at ITFS

In addition to some nominated shorts that screened at ITFS last year, this year ITFS is screening several OSCAR nominated films, and thus possibly the winning film of this year’s Academy Awards. These include the following:

João Gonzalez was the first Portuguese filmmaker ever to be nominated for an Academy Award. In addition to the Jury Prize for Best Short Film in the Critics’ Week Competition at the Cannes Film Festival, “Ice Merchants” (France/Portugal/United Kingdom, 05/2022) received a nomination for Best European Short Film at the 2022 European Film Awards. The film tells the story of a father and his son who parachute out of their vertiginous cliff-mounted cold house every day to go to the distant village on the ground where they sell their ice.

“The Flying Sailor” by Amanda Forbis & Wendy Tilby (Canada, 02/2022) is a film based on a true incident and a meditation on the unexpected voyage of a sailor.

In addition, the OSCAR nominated film “My Year of Dicks” (Sara Gunnarsdottir, Iceland/USA, 03/2022) will be screened in the ITFS supporting programme.

Social anxieties and loneliness

In “Pasajero” (“Passenger”) by Juan Pablo Zaramella (Argentina, 01/2022), we accompany a man on his train journey where he gets into numerous social conflicts. He travels from the solitude of the countryside to the populated city, establishes superficial relationships with random passengers, confronts them with their social codes and finally processes these deep inside himself to find a way to adapt to his surroundings.

The dark stop-motion film Koerkorter (“Dog-Apartment”, Estonia, 2022) by award-winning Priit Tender is about the bizarre relationship between a discarded ballet dancer and his butcher, where he has a job to satisfy his voracious rented apartment. A film full of metaphor, about daily routines, broken souls trapped in a bleak world with their anxieties and hardships.

Tickets now available at the Early Bird rate

Whether for film fans, families, or professionals – the ITFS offers events and programmes for every target audience. This is also reflected in the different types of tickets, which are now available in the ticket shop at www.ITFS.de/en/tickets.For the public, there is the Festival Pass, which grants access to almost all events during the festival. For the industry, the ITFS offers accreditation. Until 15 March 2024, the Festival Pass as well as the industry accreditation are available at the reduced Early Bird rate.

In this article:

ITFS

Want a more specific search? Try our Advanced Search