Nikolai must take care of their one-year-old daughter while he waits for his wives’ return, whenever that may be.
Klaus Härö’s The Fencer is a touching drama about a man who finds meaning in his life through the children who need him. The Finnish entry for the Oscars 2016, Best Foreign Language Film.
An optimistic anti-western about the possibility to attain the inscrutable and benevolent indifference towards all mundane affairs even here, in the midst of the pointless and sad life of contemporary Europeans.
Love can strike you like a bolt from the blue – when you’re least prepared for it.
There is no triangle without corners. There is no direction without a triangle. There is no movement without a direction.
Once upon a time, there lived a man who had nothing besides himself. And a dream, a great big dream. But an immense and dangerous sheet of water spread out between him and his dream. The man set out. He arrived at his destination due to his courage and tenacity. But was that what he had been searching for?
“Happy Birthday” is an outlook vision about the duel between the bible hero Jesus and a man-made robot.
Suspense film full of black humour directed by Margus Paju tells about the seemingly decent family that practises weed trafficking.
Short film directed by Kaur Kokk about a middle-aged woman entrapped in loneliness and her attempts trying to remain a human being in an absurd world.
The Maggot Feeder is an ancient Chukchi folk tale.
The symbolistic grotesque directed by Veiko Õunpuu is telling the story of a successful man in his mid-life crisis who is suffering moral issues. One of the most successful festival films in Estonia.
Romantic comedy with old people.
Our body remembers more than we can expect and imagine.
On one totally ordinary warm summer night the residents of a totally ordinary apartment house happen to gather in the yard. A citizen of questionable motives takes advantage of the situation and the ending of course is quite expectable.
The feature film directed by German filmmaker Chris Kraus has been inspired by the memoirs of the director's great aunt of Baltic German origin, Oda Schaefer, where she talks about her youth in Estonia directly before the World War 1.
The crime comedy directed by Peeter Simm is based on the story "Arnold" by Toomas Raudam. It is an adventurous tale about friendship, humanity and discovering love.