Focus Netherlands at Transilvania IFF.25

14.05.2026 13:01

The cinema of the Netherlands is celebrated at the 25th edition of the Transilvania International Film Festival (12–21 June 2026, Cluj-Napoca) through a selection that brings together both recent debut films presented at major European festivals and cult classics that have influenced entire generations of filmmakers. Focus Netherlands, curated by Evgeny Gusyatinskiy from the programming team of the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR), unites stories about communities slowly falling apart, families in crisis, characters consumed by their own obsessions, and worlds in which the absurd seems perfectly normal. The selection includes some of the most compelling recent titles from Dutch cinema, alongside classics such as The Vanishing (Spoorloos, dir. George Sluizer, 1988) and Spetters (dir. Paul Verhoeven, 1980). Joining them is the Dutch film already announced in the TIFF.25 Official Competition: Truly Naked, the debut feature of director Muriel d’Ansembourg — a bold and provocative coming-of-age story.

The Netherlands will also be represented on the TIFF.25 juries: Sandra den Hamer (CEO of the Netherlands Film Fund from 2023 to 2026 and a member of the IFFR team for over two decades) will serve on the Official Competition Jury, while René Wolf, with a career spanning more than 35 years as a film programmer at Eye Filmmuseum in Amsterdam, will be part of the Romanian Film Days Jury.

Focus Netherlands at TIFF.25 is made possible with the support of SEE NL, the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Romania, and the Consulate of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Cluj-Napoca.

Whitetail (dir. Nanouk Leopold, 2025) tells the story of Jen, a forest ranger in southern Ireland accustomed to keeping everything under control — until the return of a former lover brings long-buried tensions, memories, and unresolved matters to the surface. The film builds a slow-burning tension against the backdrop of a small community and a forest where danger always seems near, anchored by a powerful performance from Natasha O’Keeffe, widely known from the series Peaky Blinders.

Presented in world premiere in the Semaine de la Critique section at Cannes, Reedland (dir. Sven Bresser, 2025) is a debut film built around a character who cannot tell whether he is trying to find someone to blame or to escape his own guilt. Set in a region of marshes and reed fields, the film traces how a crime slowly transforms a community’s routine into a space dominated by mistrust and uneasy silences.

In De Idylle (dir. Aaron Rookus, 2025), a man in his forties tries to rebuild his life after coming out at the end of a ten-year relationship; his sister, a celebrated soprano, receives a diagnosis that completely alters her outlook on the future; and their grandmother begins searching for a dignified way to end her life. The film moves naturally from awkward situations to deeply intimate moments, finding humour precisely where the characters are trying hardest to keep up appearances.

Fabula (dir. Michiel ten Horn, 2025) blends dark humour, folklore, and elements of magical realism in the story of Jos, a small-time criminal from Limburg who is convinced that his family has been cursed with bad luck for generations. After a drug deal goes wrong, he begins searching for explanations for everything that has destroyed his life, in a world populated by peculiar characters, local superstitions, and events that seem increasingly plucked from an absurd nightmare.

In a world where people can literally explode under emotional pressure, Samuel tries to carry on with his life after the death of his wife. An overly insistent friend and a determined mother set on “fixing” him add to the mix of dark humour, body horror, and mayhem that makes up A Messy Tribute to Motherly Love (dir. Dan Geesin, 2026).

After an accident leaves her blind, Lot — a 17-year-old used to an active and independent life — enters a rehabilitation centre for the visually impaired, where she must relearn the most basic tasks. In I Shall See (dir. Mercedes Stalenhoef, 2025), new friendships and the centre’s routines help her adapt to a completely changed world, even as she continues to dream in images she can no longer see in waking life.

Now regarded as one of the great European psychological thrillers, The Vanishing (dir. George Sluizer, 1988) begins with the disappearance of a woman at a motorway service station in France and gradually ventures into far darker territory than it initially suggests. Variety has called it one of the finest tributes to Hitchcock ever made, and Stanley Kubrick declared it one of the most frightening films ever made — which is no small endorsement.

Another Dutch classic screening in Focus Netherlands is Spetters (1980), directed by none other than Paul Verhoeven (RoboCop, Total Recall, Basic Instinct, Elle). The film follows three young men obsessed with motocross, sex, and the idea of a better life, offering an unromantic portrait of the Netherlands in the early 1980s. Upon its release, Spetters caused a scandal for its explicit treatment of violence, sexuality, and masculinity, but has since become one of the essential titles in Verhoeven’s filmography — one that played a decisive role in his subsequent success in the United States.

The Focus Netherlands selection at TIFF.25 is rounded out by the cine-concert Beyond Sleep (Nooit meer slapen, dir. Boudewijn Koole), in which a film about a geologist on an initiation journey to the edge of survival in the Arctic tundra is accompanied by its score — awarded the Dutch Oscar in 2016 — performed live by two of the musicians involved in the original recording, Alex Simu and George Dumitriu.

Further details about the TIFF.25 programme will be announced shortly. Festival passes are now on sale online at https://tiff.ro/abonamente.

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The Transilvania International Film Festival is organised by the Association for the Promotion of Romanian Film and the Transilvania Film Festival Association.

With the support of: Ministry of Culture, National Centre of Cinematography, Cluj-Napoca City Hall and Local Council, Romanian Cultural Institute, Dacin Sara, UCIN, Dept. of Interethnic Relations – DRI, Florești Municipality, Creative Europe – MEDIA

Under the auspices of: UNESCO City of Film

Presented by: Banca Transilvania

Sponsors: Mastercard, Vodafone, LIDL România, Ursus, Regina Maria, Audi & Autoworld, MOL România, Pepsi, DeLonghi, Adrem, Jidvei, Nikon, Alstom, Emerson, McDonald’s, Farmec, Radisson Blu, Iulius Mall, Conceptual Lab by Theo Nissim, Teilor, Linde, CSI, ECCO, Nova Power

Official coffee: Nespresso

Official beauty partner: Armani Beauty

Official insurer: Groupama

Technology partner: Reea

Hospitality partner: Eximtur

Partners: Bolt, PMA, Promelek, Intend, Lecom, Luna Cleaning, Cărturești, Mobexpert, Supecom, Goto Parking

Main media partner: PRO TV & VOYO

Recommended by: ROCK FM

Monitoring partner: MediaTRUST

Media partners: Radio România Cultural, TV5, Adevărul de Weekend, A LIST, Agerpres, Hotnews, Liternet, Observator Cultural, Revista FILM, Zile și Nopți

International media partners: Variety, Screen International