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Our verdict of the 24th Transilvania International Film Festival

Lida Bach attended the 24th edition of the biggest film festival of Romania; she reveals the prizes, the special honours, and some highlights from the event's vast and colourful programme

The Transilvania International Film Festival (Tiff Romania) once again celebrated cinema in ClujNapoca, between June 13th and 22nd. These ten days reaffirmed the festivals role as a major platform for global and Romanian cinema. This edition showcased over 200 titles from 53 countries across 20 venues, ranging from classic movie theatres to enormous openair screenings.

We attended the event for six days, with Lida Bach at the helm. In total, we published 43 pieces (including reviews of films that were covered in other festivals, and reprised at Tiff Romania). Just click here in order to view our full coverage.

The festival opened in the sunny Piața Unirii with Brendan Cantys comingof‑age drama Christy, fresh off its Grand Prize win in the Berlinales Generation 14plus section. At the gala, Romania’s 89‑yearold screen legend Florin Piersic (who even has a cinema named after him in Cluj) and Romanian documentarian Andrei Ujică (TWST – ThingsWeSaidToday) both received Excellence Awards, celebrating their lasting impact on Romanian cinema. Hungarian auteur and Guest of Honour Béla Tarr received the Lifetime Achievement Award. His masterclass was a highlight of the festival that screened eight of his feature works. Actress Emilia Dobrin and film critic Valerian Sava were recognized for their lifetime contributions to Romanian film and criticism.

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The Official Competition

The Feature Film Competition showcased 12 bold features from first‑ or second‑time directors. Among these were Mahdi Fleifel’s moving refugee tale To a LandUnknown (pictured at the top of this article), Noaz Deshe’s haunting Xoftex, Gala del Sol’s surreal Colombian journey of self-discovery Rains Over Babel, and Eva Libertad’s poignant Deaf (pictured below).

Though thematically rich, the lineup included only two female directors, one queer narrative, and no underclass representation.

The Transilvania Trophy, the event’s top prize, was awarded to To a LandUnknown. Noaz Deshe received Best Directing for the brooding Xoftex, while Julian Castronovo’s cryptically titled Debut, or, Objects of the Field of Debris as Currently Catalogued earned the Special Jury Award. Ghjuvanna Benedetti’s restrained intensity in Julien Colonna’s TheKingdom garnered her Best Performance.

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Beyond the core selection

Among the 172 feature films and 28 shorts of the main program, Romanian director Radu Jude titillated the audience with two characteristically edgy entries: the webcambased Sleep #2, and the Berlinale Silver Bear winner Kontinental ’25, which was shot in Cluj. Audience interaction continued to thrive through Tiff’s signature Q&A sessions. The 3×3 spotlight celebrated Rodrigo Cortés (Spain), Rainer Sarnet (Estonia), and Adilkhan Yerzhanov (Kazakhstan).

In the Romanian Days section, Bogdan Mureșanu’s The New YearThat Never Came won Best Feature, with Andra MacMasters’ Bright Future named Best Debut.

Standout Romanian works included Tudor Giurgiu’s The Spruce Forest, and compelling documentaries such as Tooth and Nail (Mihai Gavril Dragolea and Radu Mocanu) and Little Syria (Reem Karssli and Madalina Rosca). Cannes selections Vasile Todinca’s Alișveriș and Andrei Tache‑Codreanu’s Milk and Cookies underscored the strength of Romanias emerging voices. The Festival closed with another highlight: Óliver Laxe’s highly poetic Sirât.

Tiff Romania reaffirmed its mission: championing firstand secondtime directors, to amplify Romanian creativity and serve as a crossroads for international cinematic dialogue.

Click here in order to view our full coverage of the event.


By Lida Bach - 23-06-2025

Born in Berlin, buried in Paris (not yet). Loves movies. Hates some, too. Critic of film and most other things. Professional movie journalist. Apart from the “getting paid“ part. When she was...

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To a Land Unknown

Mahdi Fleifel
2024

Victor Fraga - 28-06-2024

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Kontinental ’25

Radu Jude
2025

Victor Fraga - 19-02-2025

While retaining his anti-cinema aesthetic, Radu Jude turns away from the absurd into the sad and profound - political drama about guilt and comfort is in cinemas on Friday, October 31st [Read More...]

Rains Over Babel (Llueve Sobre Babel)

Gala del Sol
2025

Lida Bach - 19-06-2025

Spanish-Colombian filmmaker turns purgatory into a gay nightclub where identity and faith collide, in this colourful reimagining of Dante's Inferno - from Tiff Romania [Read More...]