June 2, 2026 8:12 am EDT

Fifty-year-old Murad’s life is shaken to the core when he learns that his younger brother is gay. Murad would like to support his brother, but their traditional Muslim family is against it. As a result, he finds himself subjected to pressures from all sides – from his father, who has close ties to the local imam, and from his brother’s circle of friends as well. He would like to help everyone, but as he slowly falls into a spiral of conflicts and mounting difficulties, he finds that he, too, is in need of help. Another integral part of this family drama is the theme of migration and dialogue – not just between different religions, but within communities themselves. For his fourth feature film, director Nader Saeivar collaborated with Jafar Panahí, who contributed as producer and editor. 

The Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (KVIFF) on Tuesday unveiled the lineup of its main Crystal Globes competition, the Proxima competition section and the Special Screenings program for its 60th edition and 80th anniversary edition, including Hijamat, a competition movie from Iranian director Nader Saeivar (The Witness), which was produced and edited by Cannes Palme d’Or 2025 winner and Oscar nominee Jafar Panahi (It Was Just an Accident), who is set to again face trial in Iran on charges of “propaganda against the regime.”

Across the lineup, cineastes can find stories about gay and lesbian life, the Ukraine war, as well as such topics as suicide and trauma.

The fest in the Czech spa town, whose 2026 edition will be running July 3-11, also unveiled its competition jury, made up of Joachim Trier co-writer and two-time Norwegian Oscar nominee Eskil Vogt (Sentimental Value, The Worst Person in the World), Amanda Nell Eu (Tiger Stripes), a filmmaker based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Justin Chang, film critic at The New Yorker and NPR’s “Fresh Air,” Czech sound designer, producer, composer and educator Pavel Rejholec, producer Nadia Turincev, who recently launched her solo company Sento Films to produce “unrealizable” films.

Meanwhile, the Proxima jury brings together Estrella Araiza, the general director of the Guadalajara International Film Festival and Cineteca UDG, producer Dirk Decker, co-founder of Hamburg-based Tamtam Film, Devika Girish, editor at Film Comment magazine and a talks programmer at the New York Film Festival, Jakub Felcman, “a Czech screenwriter, festival organizer, film critic, creative producer, director, and qualified plumber,” and Lithuanian director and screenwriter Marija Kavtaradze (The Visitor).

This year’s double anniversary allows KVIFF to “look back at the rich past of an event established shortly after the end of World War II, but also to examine how closely the current programming team’s view of world cinema’s evolution resonates with the pioneering work of their predecessors, both past and recent,” said artistic director Karel Och. The nearly 40 titles in the main program “boast extraordinary geographical diversity,” he emphasized. “The exclusive presence of Myanmar and Colombia in the Crystal Globe competition naturally connects across a six-decade arc with the progressive decision of one of the festival’s founders and long-time director of programming, A. M. Brousil, to focus intensively on the then-young and undiscovered non-European cinemas.”

And Och highlighted that the filmmakers presenting their work this year “cross boundaries, both spiritually and physically.” After all, “the countries of production or filming locations of these projects often differ – even continentally – from the filmmakers’ countries of origin,” which is “far more commonplace today than in the past.”

Concluded the artistic director: “One of the defining characteristics of the films in this year’s main program is the directors’ impressive effort to comprehend the diversity and complexity of the world through firsthand confrontation, and through a relentless search for the relationship between the artistic and the political, the intimate and the societal.”

Veterans of world cinema and first-time directors are both featured at KVIFF this year. Indeed, the fest highlighted 15 first-timers across its Crystal Globe Competition, the Proxima Competition and the Special Screenings section.

Crystal Globe competition film Hijamat, starring Kida Khodr Ramadan, Moritz Bleibtreu and Nastassja Kinski, focuses on Murad, 50, whose life is “shaken to the core when he learns that his younger brother is gay,” according to a synopsis. “Murad would like to support his brother, but their traditional Muslim family is against it. As a result, he finds himself subjected to pressures from all sides – from his father, who has close ties to the local imam, and from his brother’s circle of friends as well. He would like to help everyone, but as he slowly falls into a spiral of conflicts and mounting difficulties, he finds that he, too, is in need of help. … For his fourth feature film, director Nader Saeivar collaborated with Jafar Panahí, who contributed as producer and editor.”

Miroslav Terzić’s 3 Weeks After, about a group of high school students on a class trip to Bulgaria, is also part of the main competition. “When their bus breaks down, they find themselves stranded in an old hotel near the mountains,” reads a synopsis. “The atmosphere grows tense when the quiet and withdrawn Zoza decides to talk about his best friend’s recent suicide.”

Among the Proxima films are the likes of Isabelle Tollenaere’s debut fiction feature Paris Paris, Mein Freund der Pornostar by Austrian director Rosa Friedrich, Italian-U.S. co-production Rain Catcher, set in London, from Michele Fiascaris, and Japanese director Shuntaro Uchida’s Incinerator (Shokyakuro).

Meanwhile, the Special Screenings lineup includes the world premiere of The Story of Documentary Film – 1980s, the doc series from director, and KVIFF veteran, Mark Cousins that has debuted other films at other big festivals earlier this year.

British filmmaker Rebekah Fortune’s (Just Charlie) Learning to Breathe Under Water, starring Rory Kinnear and Maria Bakalova, which was presented at Cannes in the BFI’s Great 8 Showcase last year, is also part of the Special Screenings. “Eight-year-old Leo lives with his dad and a giant shark, which crashed through the roof of their home,” reads its synopsis. “Yes, you read that correctly. The shark is Leo’s best friend, to whom he can confide all his secrets. He can’t really talk to his dad; he must be missing mum, who’s been gone five years now. Then Anya, the au pair, bursts into their lives, and their world suddenly changes.”

Also unspooling in the Special Screenings program will be Robert Richardson: The White Devil from director Jana Hojdová about the famous cinematographer (Kill Bill: Vol. 1 & 2, Inglourious Basterds) and Quentin Tarantino collaborator. “What started as a student exercise and master’s degree project soon evolved into a creative partnership and personal friendship,” explains a synopsis. “The more improbable the film’s premise seems, the more fascinated we become by its portrait of a distinctive and uncompromising artist, three-time Academy Award winner, and acclaimed collaborator of such directors as Oliver Stone, Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino.” 

Check out the full KVIFF 2026 lineup unveiled on Tuesday below.

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 Under Water  
Director: Rebekah Fortune 
Ireland, United Kingdom, Netherlands, 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 

Zpráva pro Minervu 2 / A Report for Minerva 2  
Director: Miroslav Krobot, Lubomír Smékal 
Czech Republic, 2026, 69 min, World premiere  

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