The Official Section will also feature films by three promising new filmmakers: Shih-Ching Tsou, Eva Victor and Mascha Schilinski
Renowned filmmakers such as Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Sergei Loznitsa, Bi Gan, Lav Díaz and Gabriel Mascaro, together with representatives of a new generation of filmmakers, will participate in the Official Section of the 70th edition of the Valladolid International Film Festival (SEMINCI). These filmmakers, along with others to be announced shortly, will compete for the Golden Spike at the 2025 edition, which will take place from 24 October to 1 November.
The official selection brings together titles that are not only triumphing at the world’s most important film festivals, but also engage in dialogue with each other, exploring universal themes such as family, overcoming trauma and social transformation through diverse cinematic languages.
Authors with their own voice and style
The brothers Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne (Palme d’Or for Rosetta in 1999 and The Child in 2005) aspire to repeat in 2025 the Golden Spike they obtained at SEMINCI in 1996 with The Promise. In Young Mothers, the Belgian directors offer an optimistic look at the lives of five teenage mothers in a shelter and the family and social tensions they face. This film won the award for best screenplay and the Ecumenical Jury Prize at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival.
Another filmmaker who has won awards at international festivals, particularly for his documentary review of Eastern European history, and who shares the Dardennes’ strong political and social commitment, is Sergei Loznitsa (State Funeral, Donbass). In Two Prosecutors, the Belarusian-born, Ukrainian-adopted director offers a contemporary political interpretation of Stalinism based on a work by the little-known Soviet writer, physicist and engineer Georgy Demidov, a victim of the Soviet regime of terror. A master of using archival material to make documentaries, Loznitsa turns his gaze in his third fiction film to the trials instigated by Stalin, which he already documented in The Trial (2018).
The list of renowned international authors competing for the Golden Spike in 2025 also includes Filipino filmmaker Lav Diaz (Golden Lion in 2016 for The Woman Who Left). The most renowned independent filmmaker in his country, and the most awarded at international festivals, he goes back to the 16th century in Magellan, a co-production in which Albert Serra participates through his production company Andergraun Films. Starring Gael García Bernal, Díaz constructs a visually epic tale about colonial maritime expeditions and the moral degradation of the protagonist.
Chinese director Bi Gan (Long Day’s Journey Into Night) has established himself as one of the most unique and visionary voices in contemporary cinema, especially within the Asian arthouse film scene, thanks to his ability to create dreamlike and surreal atmospheres. The film with which he will compete at SEMINCI, Resurrection (Special Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival), is a cinematic fable about a dystopian world where humanity has lost the ability to dream, filmed in six episodes that combine the dreamlike with the historical.
Gabriel Mascaro (Neon Bull, Divine Love) is not far behind as one of the most original filmmakers in contemporary Brazilian cinema. In the futuristic dystopia The Blue Trail, Grand Jury Prize winner at the 2025 Berlinale, he takes us on a journey through the Amazon starring a 77-year-old woman (Denise Weinberg) who confronts the authorities when they decide to isolate people her age in remote colonies.
A new generation of independent filmmakers
Alongside these masters, the advanced titles in the Official Section of the 70th edition of SEMINCI also include three emerging filmmakers representing a new generation with a marked personal stamp, both in terms of themes and visual tone, who address human issues from a gender and emotional perspective.
Shih-Ching Tsou, producer of titles by Anora director Sean Baker, such as Tangerine and The Florida Project, makes her solo debut with Left-Handed Girl, after co-directing Take Out with Baker in 2004. The film, co-written, produced and edited by Sean Baker, explores themes such as adapting to life in present-day Taipei and the tension between tradition and modernity within a family marked by secrets and traditions.
Also a first-time director, but with experience as an actress (Billions), Eva Victor won the award for best screenplay at Sundance for the tragicomedy Sorry, Baby, backed by Barry Jenkins (Moonlight) as producer. Victor writes, directs and stars in this film with sensitivity and humour, which tells the story from a fresh and personal perspective of how a university professor deals with trauma and healing after experiencing sexual abuse in the workplace.
Completing the trio is German filmmaker Mascha Schilinski, who will present Sound of Falling in competition at SEMINCI, preceded by the Jury Prize, ex aequo with Sirat, at the Cannes Film Festival. In her second film after the also award-winning Dark Blue Girl, Schilinski weaves together the stories of four young people over almost a hundred years in a temporal framework in which the traumas and violence experienced in other eras reverberate in the present. Although the plot is strongly rooted in a German farm, it reflects universal themes such as memory, loss, the female condition, and the fragility of childhood.
PREVIEW OF THE OFFICIAL COMPETITION SECTION OF THE 70TH EDITION OF SEMINCI
The Blue Trail (O Último Azul). Gabriel Mascaro (Brazil, Mexico, Netherlands, Chile, 2025)
Sorry, Baby. Eva Victor (United States, 2025)
Young Mothers. Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne (Belgium, France, 2025)
Left-Handed Girl. Shih-Ching Tsou (Taiwan, United States, United Kingdom, France, 2025)
Sound of Falling (In die Sonne schauen). Mascha Schilinski (Germany, 2025)
Two Prosecutors. Sergei Loznitsa (Ukraine, 2025)
Resurrection. Bi Gan (China, 2025)
Magellan. Lav Diaz (Portugal, Spain, France, Philippines, Taiwan)