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Future Frames at KVIFF 2026

f.l.t.r. top row: Hae-Sup Sin (Switzerland), Helmi Donner (Finland), Júlia Coldwell Serra (Spain), David Champaigne (Slovenia), Jozo Schmuch (Croatia); bottom row: Marie Lukáčová (Czech Republic), Teilo Quillard (France), Arnas Balčiūnas (Lithuania), Ollie Launspach (The Netherlands), André Vaara (Sweden)
09.06.26

a new generation of european filmmakers steps into the international spotlight

EFP FUTURE FRAMES – Generation NEXT of European Cinema returns to the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival with a new selection of standout emerging directors from across Europe, underlining the programme’s role as a key launchpad for the continent’s next generation of filmmaking talent.

Presented by European Film Promotion (EFP) in cooperation with Karlovy Vary International Film Festival and with the support of Creative Europe – the MEDIA Programme of the European Union, the 2026 edition welcomes Allwyn as the programme’s new main partner.

The line-up brings together recent European film school graduates whose short films will screen during this year’s festival. Nominated by their respective national film promotion institutes, EFP’s member organisations, and selected by KVIFF Artistic Director Karel Och and his programming team, the filmmakers will take part in a curated programme of promotion, industry meetings and networking activities before and during the festival.

Showcasing a broad range of voices, styles and perspectives, this year’s FUTURE FRAMES filmmakers reflect the creative diversity shaping the future of European cinema:

Several of the selected directors are already making an impact on the international festival circuit. Finnish filmmaker Helmi Donner presents The Lightning Rod, which was selected for La Cinef, the official Cannes Film Festival section for short films made in film schools. The poetic horror drama follows a young mother fleeing a toxic relationship and reconnecting with her grandmother, who carries wounds of her own. The film is Donner’s MA graduation work from ELO Film School Finland at Aalto University.

Family, memory and unresolved histories form one of the strong thematic threads across the line-up. Croatian director Jozo Schmuch’s Shallow Ground (Academy of Dramatic Arts in Zagreb) follows an elderly mother whose son, missing since the war thirty years earlier, suddenly appears at her door looking exactly as he did when he disappeared. Lithuanian filmmaker Arnas Balčiūnas (Lithuanian Theatre and Music Academy) explores emotional distance and family estrangement in Past the Hill of Napoleon’s Hat, in which a son brings his father home from a psychiatric hospital to an indifferent family. Most recently, Balčiūnas was selected for this year’s Cannes Critics’ Week Short Film Competition. In Ban Dal (Half-moon), Swiss-Korean director Hae-Sup Sin (Zurich University of the Arts, ZHdK) turns to international adoption, following a Swiss adoptive mother and her son as they travel to South Korea to meet his biological mother.

Other films take more formally playful, genre-driven or visually distinctive approaches to personal and social questions. Spanish director Júlia Coldwell Serra’s award-winning Nobody Barks (Catalonia Film and Audiovisual School, ESCAC) uses absurd comedy and folklore to examine guilt after a woman accidentally kills her nephew’s dog and invents a myth to cover it up. Czech filmmaker Marie Lukáčová(UMPRUM) combines live action, 2D and 3D animation and rap-inspired musical sequences in Orla, an eco-feminist fairytale that had its world premiere at IFFR Rotterdam. In Zampano, French filmmaker Teilo Quillard (La Fémis, École Nationale supérieure des métiers de l'image et du son) draws on his own circus background for a dreamlike story of vertigo, inheritance and the intense bond between a son and his father.

Questions of the body, identity and growing up are also central to the selection. Dutch director Ollie Launspach’s graduation film from the Netherlands Film Academy, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, is an intimate and playful portrait of transition, insecurity and love, built around conversations with his girlfriend, Sterre Mulder, and premiered in the IDFA Competition for Short Documentary. Swedish filmmaker André Vaara’s Sister of Mine (Stockholm University of the Arts) is a sensitive coming-of-age portrait of longing beyond the norms of 2000s boyhood. It explores childhood, jealousy and sibling rivalry through the story of ten-year-old Noel.

The pressures of youth, family responsibility and social environment come into focus in Slovenian-American director David Champaigne’s Self-Sown (University of Ljubljana, Academy of Theatre, Radio, Film and Television). Set in a summer-scorched Ljubljana district, the film follows teenage Nikola as he moves between street life, caring for his mother and the vulnerability beneath his tough exterior.

As part of its ongoing commitment to supporting emerging creative talent, Allwyn will once again award one director from this year’s FUTURE FRAMES selection a one-month scholarship in Los Angeles, with the recipient chosen by a jury of US talent agents from Range Media Partners and United Talent Agency.

Further strengthening FUTURE FRAMES’ long-term support for emerging talent, EFP’s new partnership with Les Arcs Industry Village will offer one participant a wild card entry into the festival’s Talent Village programme in December. The final selection will be made by the Industry Village team.

EFP FUTURE FRAMES – Generation NEXT of European Cinema, in collaboration with KVIFF, is made possible thanks to the support of Creative Europe – MEDIA, Allwyn, and the participating national film promotion institutes, EFP’s member organisations. The main media partner is Variety, with Cineuropa and Fred Film Radio as additional media partners.


About Karlovy Vary International Film Festival

Karlovy Vary International Film Festival is the largest film festival in the Czech Republic and one of the world’s oldest A-list festivals. It is widely regarded as the leading film industry event in Central and Eastern Europe.

About Allwyn

Allwyn is a leading multi-national lottery-led entertainment company operating across Europe and the US. As a partner of KVIFF and EFP FUTURE FRAMES, Allwyn supports emerging European filmmaking talent and will once again award one FUTURE FRAMES director a scholarship in Los Angeles.

the 2026 future frames selection

Croatian filmmaker Jozo Schmuch holds a Master’s in Film and TV Direction from the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Zagreb. His narrative and documentary shorts often explore identity, memory and social tension. Shallow Ground is his latest film and has already screened at a number of festivals including PÖFF Shorts, Sarajevo and Zagreb where it won the Best Short Film Award.

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Jozo Schmuch
Shallow Ground
Croatia

Marie Lukáčová is a visual artist and film director who in recent years has showcased her work both internationally and domestically. Her film Moréna Rex (2019) won an award in the experimental film category at the Jihlava IDFF while film Milena’s Song (2019) received an honorable mention for at the Oberhausen Short Film Festival. Her latest film Orla, developed within the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival Talents scheme, premiered at IFF Rotterdam 2026.

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Marie Lukáčová
Orla
Czech Republic

Helsinki born Helmi Donner studied film directing at Aalto University. Fascinated by the interplay between past and present, she has also sourced archive material for several feature films. The Lightning Rod is Donner’s MA project and was selected in 2025 for La Cinef, the official section of the Cannes Film Festival for short films made in film schools. The film has gone on to screen at festivals such as Uppsala and Helsinki – Love and Anarchy where it won the Audience Award.

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Helmi Donner
The Lightning Rod
Finland

Son of a French trapezist and an English aerialist, Teilo Quillard Eliot grew up in the circus. Trained in theatre and then at La Fémis film school, he has directed both fiction and documentary short films. He is developing a feature rooted in the circus world, a legacy of his childhood.

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Teilo Quillard
Zampano
France

Arnas Balčiūnas is a Lithuanian film director and a graduate of KIMO (Lithuanian National Film School). His debut short, Through Gloom (2022), won Best International Film at Friss Hús ISFF in Hungary. His follow-up, Hubble’s Law (2024) has screened at more than 25 international festivals, while his 2026 film Class Photo premiered at Semaine de la Critique 2026. His 2025 bachelor’s graduation film, Past The Hill of Napoelon’s Hat, received a Special Mention at Drama ISFF, Greece.

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Arnas Balčiūnas
Past The Hill Of Napoleon's Hat
Lithuania

Ollie Launspach is a Dutch filmmaker. After studying History and working on a number of set jobs in the production and camera departments, he began the Documentary Directing course at the Netherlands Film Academy in 2020. His latest film Kiss Kiss Bang Bang premiered in the short film competition at IDFA.

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Ollie Launspach
kiss kiss bang bang
The Netherlands

Ljubljana born David Champaigne is an American Slovenian film director and screenwriter. He completed his MA in Film Directing at the Academy of Theatre, Radio, Film and Television (AGRFT) in Ljubljana. His short films 2030 (2022) and After (2024) received multiple awards, including the Vesna Award for Best Student Short Film at the Festival of Slovenian Film. He is currently developing his debut feature film Self Sown.

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David Champaigne
Self-Sown
Slovenia

Júlia Coldwell Serra is a Spanish director and screenwriter who graduated in Directing from the Catalonia Film and Audiovisual School (ESCAC) with Nobody Barks. The film premiered at SEMINCI Valladolid and has continued its journey at festivals such as Busan (Grand Prix winner), 2ANNAS Riga (Best Fiction Film), Brussels Short Film Festival (Grand Prix & Youth Jury Prize), Clermont-Ferrand and many others.

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Júlia Coldwell Serra
Nobody Barks
Spain

Swedish filmmaker André Vaara holds a bachelor’s degree in film from HDK-Valand and a master’s degree in film directing from Stockholm University of the Arts. In his filmmaking, André often explores intimate stories about identity, gender roles, and power. His latest film Sister of Mine premiered in Startsladden at the Gothenburg Film Festival. André is currently developing his first feature film, which received the Swedish Film Institute’s Wild Card award.

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André Vaara
Sister of Mine
Sweden

Hae-Sup Sin is a Swiss-Korean director from Opfikon in Switzerland. In 2015, he began his studies at the Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK), which he completed in 2019 with a bachelor‘s degree in 2019, followed by a master‘s degree in feature film directing in 2025. His work focuses on cross-cultural stories set in diasporic communities. He is currently working on his first feature film Some Korean Summer.

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Hae-Sup Sin
Ban Dal (Half-moon)
Switzerland