UK, London: Thursday 23rd March 2023 – Conic is thrilled to announce the release of PAMFIR in UK and Irish cinemas from 5th May. The striking Ukrainian directorial debut of Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk celebrated its World Premiere in the Festival du Cannes 2022 Quinzaine (Directors’ Fortnight) strand and went on to win Best Feature Film Audience Award at Torino Film Festival 2022, many prizes at the Ukrainian Film Critics’ Awards, including Best Director and Best Feature Film, and Best Cinematography at Raindance Film Festival 2022.
When reformed ex-smuggler Pamfir returns to home to his village on the Ukrainian border after working abroad for several years, he’s determined to earn an honest living and set a good example for his beloved teenage son Nazar. But in a town where corruption runs deep and crime and religion are inextricably linked, his plan is quickly thwarted when Nazar sets fire to the local church in a misguided effort to keep him at home. To pay for the damage, Pamfir must take on one last job for a crime syndicate operating a risky smuggling venture in a place where all the rules have changed.
Part drama, part thriller, part noir-inflected fairytale, Pamfir is violent, raw and bloody, but also a tender portrait of a family man trying to raise his son well despite his own shady past. Shot in long takes and set amid forests swirling with mist in the run up to the traditional ‘Malanka’ carnival — a wild pagan festival featuring straw costumes, wooden masks and centuries-old rites and traditions — this is a propulsive, genre-defying debut exploring the thin line between good and evil and fate vs free will in our complex modern world.
Atmospheric, scary fairytale-ish at times, completely edge of the seat cinema. Watch, smile, hope, gasp, groan, and love it.
PAMFIR is released by Conic in UK/Irish cinemas from 5th May
Screenings will be listed onhttps://www.conic.film/films/pamfir
Trailer:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bLy2z6fZaWk
Ukraine, France, Poland, Germany, Chile 2022
Dir: Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk
Ukrainian / 106 mins