Film archive
Memoria Memoria
Apichatpong Weerasethakul / Colombia, Qatar, China, Mexico, Thailand, Switzerland, Germany, United Kingdom, France / 2021 / 136 min / Spanish, English
In his first film, shot outside his homeland, the Thai poet Apichatpong Weerasethakul, together with Tilda Swinton and Jeanne Balibar, takes us on a secret inner journey, triggered by a big bang. A film to be watched in the cinema! Jury Prize in Cannes.
Menashe Menashe
Joshua Z Weinstein / USA / 2017 / 81 min / English, Yiddish
Featuring a young widower straying from the designated path while bending strict Hasidic rules in a Jewish enclave, Menashe is an orthodox take on the typical Woody Allen-esque eccentricity.
The Monk and the Gun The Monk and the Gun
Pawo Choyning Dorji / Bhutan, Taiwan, USA, France / 2023 / 107 min / Dzongkha, English
A warm, funny story of the socio-political transformation of Bhutan and the ambivalence towards encroaching modernity, in which Western values crash against age-old culture.
Santa Swap Snekker Andersen og Julenissen
Terje Rangnes / Norway / 2016 / 70 min / live dubbing, Slovene subtitles, Norwegian / 6+
The Swedish Meatballs Köttbullarna
Johan Hagelbäck / Sweden / 2010 / 7 min / Slovene subtitles, Swedish / 6+
City of Light Mesto svetlobe
Marko Kumer Murč, Nina Cijan / Slovenia / 2017 / 68 min / Slovene
This poetic and deeply personal documentary is a gentle love story between the residents of Šoštanj and their fading town.
Metrobranding – A Love Story Between Men and Objects Metrobranding – A Love Story Between Men and Objects
Ana Vlad, Adrian Voicu / Romania / 2010 / 92 min
Metronom Metronom
Alexandru Belc / Romania, France / 2022 / 102 min / Romanian
A teen romance and a drama about coming of age in communist Romania. 17-year-old Ana and her boyfriend spend their last days together before he emigrates from the country.
Us Us
Jordan Peele / USA / 2019 / 116 min / English
A family vacations at their seaside retreat, but when night falls, uninvited guests arrive at their door…Jordan Peele follows his outstanding debut feature Get Out! to pose the uncanny question whether we are our own worst enemies