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Sauna Day wins grand prize at Brno Film Festival

“Sauna Day.” Source: Screenshot

The Estonian short film “Sauna Day” (“Sannapäiv”) by Anna Hints and Tushar Prakash which premiered during this year’s Cannes Film Festival Critics’ Week, has won the grand prize at the BRNO16 Film Festival in the Czech Republic.

More than 1,000 short films were initially submitted to BRNO16. An international jury selected “Sauna Day” as the winner from a field of 34 films in the competition for the grand prize.

“Spatial intimacy, body interaction and human relationships leave an unmistakable feeling under our skin,” said the jury. “A subtle but subversive emotionality is presented to us in a ritualistic culture, with a touch of history that reveals the ambiguous nature of gradually revealed male desire. The brilliant camerawork and the carefully crafted film language left a mark in our cinematic consciousness.”

The film’s producer Johanna Maria Paulson said that winning the festival’s top prize is a great honor, as the standard is high and the competition fierce.

“The jury was unanimous about the grand prize and for us, what makes this event even more special is that it is the first time that “Sauna Day” has won such a prestigious award. To date, the film has already made it to 14 festivals, including two of the film world’s big guns, Cannes and Toronto, where it has a very low chance of making it. This is a remarkable achievement for an Estonian short film,” Paulson said.

“Cohabitants” goes to IDFA

The short film “Cohabitants,” which tells the story of Piirissaare, will premiere in November at one of the world’s largest documentary film festivals, IDFA. The short film, produced as part of the Tartu 2024 Arts of Survival documentary program, has been selected for the festival’s international short film competition.

According to one of the film’s producers, Olga Hartšuk, reaching the competition category of such a prestigious film festival demonstrates that “the story of Piirissaare’s unique community has touched people.”

The director of “Cohabitants” is Viesturs Kairišs. The cinematographers are Wojciech Staroń and Tomek Pawlik, the editor is Andres Hallik, the composer is Juris Vaivods, and the sound director is Leonid Bragin. The film’s producers are Esko Rips and Olga Hartšuk. The production company is Nafta Films (Estonia).

Estonian viewers had the chance to see “Cohabitants” earlier this spring in the short film collection “Wild South,” which premiered in Tartu and has attracted over 1,500 viewers in Estonian cinemas. This collection consists of the visions of four Estonian and four international directors, capturing life in Tartu and Southern Estonia just before the year 2024.

“Cohabitants” was produced with the support of the Estonian Film Institute, the Tartu 2024 Foundation, the Cultural Endowment of Estonia, and the Tartu Film Fund.

IDFA Festival Link