Chris the Swiss
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Samir
Sinisa Juricic
Iikka Vehkalahti
Philipp Künzli Gabriel Sandru
| Chris the Swiss | |
|---|---|
![]() Film poster | |
| Directed by | Anja Kofmel |
| Written by | Anja Kofmel |
| Produced by | Sereina Gabathuler Samir Sinisa Juricic Iikka Vehkalahti |
| Cinematography | Simon Guy Fässler
Philipp Künzli Gabriel Sandru |
| Edited by | Stefan Kälin
Sophie Brunner Vladimir Gojun Višnja Skorin |
| Music by | Marcel Vaid |
Production companies | Dschoint Ventschr Filmproduktion AG Nukleus Film Ma.Ja.De Filmproduktion IV Films SRF Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen |
| Distributed by | Switzerland: First Hand Films GmbH
France: Urban Distribution International |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
| Countries | Switzerland Croatia Germany Finland |
| Languages | English Swiss German Spanish German |
Chris the Swiss is a 2018 Swiss animated documentary film written and directed by Anja Kofmel. It follows Kofmel’s investigation into the death of her cousin Chris during the Yugoslav Wars. The film premiered in the Critics’ Week section at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival and won Best Documentary Film at the 2019 Swiss Film Awards.[1][2]
During the Yugoslav Wars, Swiss journalist Chris is found dead in Croatia while wearing the uniform of an international mercenary group. His cousin Anja Kofmel later investigates his death in an effort to understand his involvement in the conflict.[1]
Cast
The cast includes:[1]
- Susanne-Marie Wrage as German Narrator / Voice Anja
- Megan Gay as English Narrator / Voice Anja
- Joel Basman as Voice Chris
- Domagoj Janković as Voice Flores
- Marko Cindrić as Voice Julio
- Barbara Durović as Voice Heidi
- Dean Krivačić as Voice Alex
- Damjan Simić as Voice Paul
- Milton Welsh as Voice Frenchy
- Eva Japundžić as Voice Kid 1
- Grgur Japundžić as Voice Kid 2
Production
Kofmel chose a hybrid documentary-animation format to depict the more speculative parts of Chris Würtenberg’s story. She worked on the film for six years with a team of 35 artists, and one second of animation required nine and a half hours of work.[3]
Reception
Awards
At the 2019 Swiss Film Awards, the film won Best Documentary Film, Best Film Editing, and Best Film Score. It also won the Zürich Film Prize in 2018, the Award for Best Feature Film at the Animator International Animated Film Festival in 2019, and the Preis der Norbert Daldrop Förderung für Kunst und Kultur at the Deutscher Dokumentarfilmpreis in Stuttgart in 2019.[1]
Critical response
Stephen Dalton of The Hollywood Reporter said "Swiss director Anja Kofmel revisits the wild life and strange death of her war reporter cousin with an innovative blend of animation and documentary".[2] Variety described the film as a “compelling and artistic hybrid” of memoir and biographical documentary that “does not attempt to sand the troubled history it explores down to smoothness”.[4] Filmdienst described the film as a striking hybrid of documentary and animation, with interviews and nightmarish black-and-white animated sequences.[5]
