
Ágnes Máhr
2021Az állampolgár
Roland Vranik
Cake-Baly Marcelo, Ágnes Máhr
The heart-wrenching story of The Citizen begins with a citizenship exam, where the examination committee rigorously questions a middle-aged African man. No matter how beautifully he recites Hungarian poetry, Wilson, a political refugee in his late fifties, fails the exams for the umpteenth time, because he doesn’t know where the periodical ‘Magyar Közlöny’ got its name from, and what the Corvinae are. Moreover, inspired by Vörösmarty’s poem, the committee chairman even questions his reasons for leaving his mother country. Wilson argues that his reasons include his fellow citizens cutting pregnant women in half, yet he doesn’t manage to soften the heart of the committee members.
The Citizen
Legjobb tudomásom szerint
Nándor Lőrincz, Bálint Nagy
Balázs Bodolai, Gabriella Hámori
No equal signs of justice can be drawn between those who are accused of a crime, those who are convicted of a crime and those who are the true offenders. That triangle always contains the accused who are not guilty and true offenders whose guilt cannot be ultimately proven. Throughout history, one of the greatest deviations in the strive towards equality has occurred in the triangle of guilt in sexual crimes, where guilt is largely proven on the basis of a woman’s will.
As Far As I Know
Szerepzavar
Márton Szirmai
Zoltán Friedenthal, Ágnes Máhr
Soma is a professional actor, he is willing to get his father's compliment. An unforeseen event changes their relation more empty. Soma is forced to do something. He can now only rely on himself, his confidence, and his ability to act skillfully.
Szerepzavar