Focus on Cinema
Insights and recommendations from top Sooner filmmakers
Protests, Exile and Structural Change: Jasmin Astaki Bardeh on documentary film and journalism
Edgy, uncomfortable, rebellious – Pola Beck's female figures and freedom in short films?
Identity, masculinity and social justice – a conversation with the BABYBOY crew
Ayla Yildiz has created a moving documentary that openly addresses child-free living, idealized motherhood and the social pressure on women.
Laetitia Masson's new film SUMMER FROST (with Clémence Poésy), soon to be released on SOONER, offers a poetic portrait of human encounters during an unusual cold spell. In our SOONERCAST, Masson talks to Sebastian Urzendowsky about her work, which she sees as an exploration of the human condition.
Malte Wirtz is a German director and writer celebrated for his unconventional filmmaking approach. After graduating in 1999, he has worked as a theater and film director, collaborating with various theaters in Germany.
With a passion for film and television production, her professional journey began, encompassing various fields and artistic projects. However, she found her true calling when she decided to study directing at the renowned Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg.
Philippe Grégoire is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from the small village of Napierville, Quebec, whose debut feature film The Noise of Engines (Le Bruit des moteurs) was released in 2021 and is shown on Sooner. Philippe shares some insides how Noise Of Engines was created
Why do people make films? Why do we need festivals and why do fathers always sneeze so loudly? We discussed these questions and others with the filmmaker Sophie Linnenbaum. Sophie Linnenbaums interest in social issues was awakened early on by the strong regional patriotism of her home region - keyword: annual bratwurst summit.
ELINE GEHRING began her career in 2006 as a camerawoman and editor for German reporting in Paris, Prague, Kiev and Berlin. She shot a documentary for the German Bundestag in St Petersburg and worked for Deutsche Welle in Cairo in 2008
Pia Frankenberg explores the uncertainties around us as she leans into the chaotic confusion of life without drawing set-in-stone conclusions. After first making two short films, she made two feature-length movies then released her last feature as director, "Never Sleep Again", in 1992. It is fair to say that her storytelling has retained relevance and topicality thanks to the frictions she addresses in her work where the personal and political collide. SOONER is showing all 5 Pia Frankenberg films, and spoke to her and released the interview on Soonercast.