60th Karlovy Vary Film Festival Announces Official Selection and Juries


A celebratory Karlovy Vary International Film Festival revealed its competition lineups on Tuesday. The 60th edition, which will commemorate the 80-year anniversary of the festival’s founding, features a dozen world premieres competing for the Crystal Globe and another dozen films bowing in Proxima–including cinema hailing from Colombia and Myanmar.   

The Czech fest, located in a picturesque spa town just outside of Prague, also unveiled competition juries, including Pulitzer Prize winner and The New Yorker film critic Justin Chang and two-time Oscar nominee Eskil Vogt (“The Worst Person in the World” and “Sentimental Value“). KVIFF runs July 3-11. 

Some of the major highlights of the Crystal Globe competition this year starts with Bulgarian filmmaker Petar Valchanov’s “Black Money for White.” The director’s newest film—he previously co-helmed the Maria Bakalova-starrer “Triumph”—concerns an elderly couple whose dreams of traveling to St. Petersburg to witness the White Nights are upended by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “3 Weeks After” by Serbian director Miroslav Terzić also has ties to Bulgaria: It follows a group of students traveling to the country whose adolescent angst floods to the surface when their bus breaks down. 

Colombia also makes an appearance at the festival with Esteban Hoyos García and Juan Miguel Gelacio Ramírez’s “Five Years, Four Months,” an aching work about a mother making one last bid to find the remains of her long missing son. Joining Colombia is Chile, with Valeria Sarmiento’s “Behind the Rain.” Sarmiento, the esteemed editor behind “City of Pirates” and “Mysteries of Lisbon,” arrives with a film about a psychology graduate coming home to Valdivia only to discover a young girl’s body. The unearthing shakes open traumatic childhood memories. 

Aung Phyoe’s “Fruit Gathering,” which comes from Myanmar, expands the fest’s reach. It concerns two young women employed at a textile factory in Yangon where they face exploitation, social repression, and economic disparity. A romance based in quiet rhythms, it may well be one of more festivals premiering in the resplendent Czech town.

A still from Yashasvi Juyal’s Proxima selection “The Ink-Stained Hand and the Missing Thumb.”

The Proxima competition, a vertical of the festival that grants space to emerging auteurs, is led by an equally geographically eclectic array of films. Indian director Yashasvi Juyal arrives with the most evocatively titled film: “The Ink-Stained Hand and the Missing Thumb.” The picture follows two men working in broken down toll booths in search of an increasingly rare kind of happiness. 

Alex Bertha’s “After Nature” is a Mexico-set story about a man returning to the countryside to be a stonemason. The plot summary to Bertha’s film describes it as, “An evocatively told story of a silent man whose enigmatic nature stems from the dark side of humanity and from his contact with the sacred, the film moves along the boundary between the physical and the spiritual.” Conversely, Japanese Shuntaro Uchida’s “Incinerator,” an adaptation of Kaori Ekuni’s short story, bills itself as a ruminative coming of age story about learning about mortality and family relationships.

Accompanying these competition movies are special screenings, including Maryam Ataei and Hossein Keshavarz’s defiant Tehran-set Sundance political stunner “The Friend’s House is Here” and “The Story of Documentary Film – 1980s” from former Crystal Globe winner Mark Cousins. His epic chronicling of the history of documentary is split into sixteen one-hour parts: the section, which focused on the 1970s, premiered at this most recent Cannes. The second part, about the 1980s, bows at KVIFF. 

Along with these films, are also eleven other works ranging in topics from a portrait of three-time Oscar winning cinematographer Robert Richardson called “Robert Richardson: The White Devil” to an adaptation of Thomas Mann’s The Holy Sinner named “Gregorius, the Chosen One.” It’s also worth noting again that KVIFF will feature a wealth of retrospectives: “A Matter of Life and Death,” “Kes,” Río Escondido,” and more. 

A still from Maryam Ataei and Hossein Keshavarz’s Tehran-set drama “The Friend’s House is Here.”

Below are the competition titles and juries. 

Crystal Globe Competition

3 nedelje posle / 3 Weeks After 

Director: Miroslav Terzić

Serbia, Bulgaria, 2026, 94 min, World premiere 

Cherni pari za beli noshti / Black Money for White 

Director: Kristina Grozeva, Petar Valchanov

Bulgaria, Greece, 2025, 94 min, World premiere 

Chica Checa 

Director: Šimon Holý

Czech Republic, France, Slovak Republic, 2026, 96 min, World premiere 

Cinco años, cuatro meses / Five Years, Four Months 

Director: Esteban Hoyos García, Juan Miguel Gelacio Ramírez

Colombia, USA, 2025, 83 min, World premiere 

Detrás de la lluvia / Behind the Rain 

Director: Valeria Sarmiento

Chile, 2026, 97 min, World premiere 

Gæsten / The Guest 

Director: Mads Mengel

Denmark, 2026, 99 min, World premiere 

A Happy Family 

Director: Jan-Eric Mack

Switzerland, 2026, 120 min, World premiere 

Hijamat 

Director: Nader Saeivar

Germany, 2026, 103 min, World premiere 

The Lion at My Back 

Director: Tonia Mishiali

Cyprus, Luxembourg, Greece, 2026, 106 min, World premiere 

Pipes

Director: Karim Kassem

Lebanon, 2025, 112 min, World premiere 

Prameň / Only Beautiful Things to Look At

Director: Ivan Ostrochovský

Slovak Republic, Czech Republic, Hungary, 2026, 90 min, World premiere 

Thit-thee Khu / Fruit Gathering 

Director: Aung Phyoe

Myanmar, France, Czech Republic, 2026, 97 min, World premiere 

Proxima Competition

33 krokov / 33 Steps 

Director: Anna Domček, Šimon Domček

Slovak Republic, Czech Republic, 2026, 71 min, World premiere 

Camionero / Truck Driver 

Director: Francisco Marise

Spain, Argentina, 2026, 84 min, World premiere 

Contra la Naturaleza / Against Nature 

Director: Axel Bertha

Mexico, 2026, 86 min, World premiere 

Enas olokliros anthropos schedon / A Whole Person Almost 

Director: Efthimis Kosemund-Sanidis

Greece, Bulgaria, Germany, Cyprus, Romania, 2025, 111 min, World premiere 

Homo Sive Natura 

Director: Giovanni C. Lorusso

Italy, 2026, 115 min, World premiere 

The Ink-Stained Hand and the Missing Thumb 

Director: Yashasvi Juyal

India, 2026, 120 min, World premiere 

Mein Freund der Pornostar / My Friend the Porn Star 

Director: Rosa Friedrich

Austria, 2026, 94 min, World premiere 

Milovník, nie bojovník / Lover, Not a Fighter

Director: Martina Buchelová

Slovak Republic, 2026, 108 min, World premiere 

Paris Paris 

Director: Isabelle Tollenaere

Belgium, 2026, 78 min, World premiere 

Rain Catcher 

Director: Michele Fiascaris

Italy, United Kingdom, 2026, 109 min, World premiere 

Shokyakuro / Incinerator 

Director: Shuntaro Uchida

Japan, 2026, 97 min, World premiere 

Sitni lopovi / Petty Thieves 

Director: Mate Ugrin

Croatia, Germany, France, 2026, 106 min, World premiere 

Special Screenings

Bára Basiková / Bára – Diary of a Rockstar  

Director: Helena Třeštíková

Czech Republic, 2026, 97 min, World premiere 

Dvě deci tuše / A Pint of Ink 

Director: Ester Geislerová

Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, 2026, 83 min, World premiere 

Kdyby se holubi proměnili ve zlato / If Pigeons Turned to Gold 

Director: Pepa Lubojacki

Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, 2026, 110 min 

Khaneh doost injast / The Friend’s House is Here 

Director: Maryam Ataei, Hossein Keshavarz

Iran, USA, 2025, 96 min, International premiere 

Learning To Breathe Underwater 

Director: Rebekah Fortune

United Kingdom, Netherlands, Ireland, 2026, 95 min, World premiere 

Město otců / City of Fathers  

Director: Zdeněk Tyc

Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Poland, 2026, 100 min, World premiere 

Mistryně / Everything As It Should Be 

Director: Bohdan Karásek

Czech Republic, 2026, 101 min, World premiere 

Morten 

Director: Ivan Pavljutskov

Estonia, Lithuania, 2026, 101 min, World premiere 

Robert Richardson: The White Devil 

Director: Jana Hojdová

Czech Republic, USA, 2026, 105 min, World premiere 

The Story of Documentary Film – 1980s 

Director: Mark Cousins

United Kingdom, 2026, 120 min, World premiere 

To Die to Live 

Director: Yuliia Hontaruk

Ukraine, Latvia, Slovak Republic, 2026, 116 min, World premiere 

Vyvolený / Gregorius, the Chosen One 

Director: Tomasz Mielnik

Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, 2026, 90 min, World premiere 

Zpráva pro Minervu 2 / A Report for Minerva 2 

Director: Miroslav Krobot, Lubomír Smékal

Czech Republic, 2026, 69 min, World premiere 

Crystal Globe Jury

Justin Chang

Justin Chang is a film critic at The New Yorker and NPR’s “Fresh Air”. He won the 2024 Pulitzer Prize for criticism for his writing at the Los Angeles Times, where he spent eight years as a critic. Previously, he was the chief film critic at Variety. Chang serves as chair of the National Society of Film Critics and secretary of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, and is a member of the New York Film Festival selection committee. He teaches at the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California.

Amanda Nell Eu

Amanda Nell Eu is a filmmaker based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Her debut feature film Tiger Stripes was the Grand Prize winner of Semaine de la Critique in the 2023 Cannes Film Festival. The film was also the official Malaysian submission for the Academy Awards in 2023. Amanda graduated from the London Film School with an MA in Filmmaking and is an alumna of Berlinale Talents, Tokyo Talents and Locarno Filmmakers Academy. She has also served as a jury member at various film festivals and mentored film workshops internationally.

Pavel Rejholec

Pavel Rejholec is a Czech sound designer, producer, composer, and educator. He graduated from the Department of Sound Design at FAMU, where he has been head of the department since 2011. Throughout his career, he has worked as a sound designer on more than fifty Czech and international feature films. Since 2003, he has served as the managing director of the Soundsquare studio. He has won eight Czech Lion Awards for Best Sound, for instance, for the films Zátopek or The Painted Bird. As a dubbing supervisor, he collaborated with Lucasfilm on Star Wars: Episode II and Star Wars: Episode III. He is a member of the Motion Picture Sound Editors and serves on the board of the Czech Film and Television Academy.

Nadia Turincev

Nadia Turincev was born in Moscow, grew up in Paris and studied cultural anthropology. She started off in the movie industry aged 16, making sandwiches for Marcello Mastroianni. In 2007, she co-founded Rouge International, producing 25+ films (Fix ME, Mimosas, Raw, Oscar-nominated The Insult and Faces Places). In 2019 she left Rouge and created Easy Riders Films (Mariupolis 2, Crossing, Only Rebels Win) with Omar El Kadi. She recently opened her solo company Sento Films to produce “unrealizable” films.

Eskil Vogt

Eskil Vogt is a two-time Oscar-nominated Norwegian filmmaker. His directing debut Blind (2014) premiered at the Sundance FF where it won the Screenwriting Award. His sophomore effort, The Innocents (2021), premiered at the Cannes FF before going on to win more than 20 international awards. Eskil also collaborates closely with Joachim Trier, co-writing all of Trier’s features since Reprise (2006), including Oslo, August 31st (2011), The Worst Person in the World (2021) and Sentimental Value (2025). Vogt is a directing graduate from La Fémis, the French national film school.

Proxima Jury

Estrella Araiza

Estrella Araiza is the General Director of the Guadalajara International Film Festival (FICG) and Cineteca UDG, where she has focused on strengthening the presence of Mexican and Latin American cinema across both institutions. Her professional career includes experience as Director of Industry and Market at FICG, as well as work as a sales agent, academic, and film distributor in Mexico. She began her career in international film distribution in 2005, and in 2012 founded her own company, Vendo Cine. Since 2018, she has overseen FICG’s special projects, including the acclaimed exhibition Guillermo del Toro: At Home with My Monsters in Guadalajara.

Dirk Decker

Dirk Decker is a producer and co-founder of Hamburg-based Tamtam Film. Through Tamtam, he works with emerging talents and supports distinctive auteur cinema across fiction and documentary. His productions have premiered at major international festivals. Recent titles include Rain Fell on the Nothing New (Karlovy Vary 2025), Short Summer (Venice 2025, Lion of the Future) and Trial of Hein (Berlinale 2026, Teddy Jury Award).

Jakub Felcman

Jakub Felcman is a Czech screenwriter, festival organizer, film critic, creative producer, director, and qualified plumber. He studied film at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University, and FAMU, published interviews and film analyses (for Cinepur), programmed film festivals, and co-founded two of them (Ostrava Kamera Oko, Marienbad). As a script editor he collaborated on films by Jan Němec, Petr Václav, Radu Jude, and Corneliu Porumboiu. Cinemas have screened several films that he co-wrote or produced (such as A Night Too Young, A Certain Kind of Silence, and The Wolf from Royal Vineyard Street).

Devika Girish

Devika Girish is editor at Film Comment magazine and a Talks programmer at the New York Film Festival. Her writing also appears in The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, The Nation, The New Republic, Sight & Sound, The Criterion Collection, and others, and she has programmed series and festivals for the Criterion Channel, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Film at Lincoln Center, the Mumbai Film Festival, the Berlin Critics’ Week, and more. Devika has been invited to juries at CPH:DOX, the Locarno Film Festival, SEMINCI, and Visions du Réel.

Marija Kavtaradze

Marija Kavtaradze is a Lithuanian director and screenwriter. Graduating from the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Theatre in 2014, she made her feature debut with Summer Survivors in 2018, which premiered at the Toronto IFF, followed by Slow (2023), which earned her a Directing Award at the Sundance Film Festival and had its European premiere at KVIFF in 2023. Marija works as a screenwriter on shorts and feature films, including The Visitor (dir. Vytautas Katkus, KVIFF 2025), Runner (dir. Andrius Blaževičius, KVIFF 2021), the animated TV series BFF for kids, and others. 



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