The 73rd Sydney Film Festival has announced its first selection of 13 films, giving cinephiles a compelling glimpse of what awaits when the acclaimed festival runs from 3–14 June in the country’s biggest metropolis. The carefully chosen programme features an varied combination of global acclaim, award-winning debuts and engaging Australian stories, with the complete lineup scheduled for release on 6 May. Leading the inaugural announcement are standout roles from Isabelle Huppert and Tony Leung Chiu-wai, together with documentaries examining cultural icons and individual accounts. The announcement signals the festival’s commitment to championing varied perspectives whilst honouring films that connect across continents, from the Berlin prize recipient to Sundance award winners and the most acclaimed Venice selections.
International Stars and Acclaimed Films
The festival’s opening lineup brings together some of cinema’s finest talents, with Isabelle Huppert taking on a vampire role in Ulrike Ottinger’s “The Blood Countess,” a darkly inventive film scripted by Nobel Prize-winning author Elfriede Jelinek. Meanwhile, Tony Leung Chiu-wai stars alongside Léa Seydoux in Ildikó Enyedi’s “Silent Friend,” a intergenerational narrative grounded in a symbolic ginkgo tree. Both films showcase the standard of international excellence that Sydney Film Festival continually secures, engaging viewers keen to discover bold, unconventional storytelling from innovative filmmakers.
Several titles come fresh from major festival triumphs, reinforcing the programme’s standing. İlker Çatak’s “Yellow Letters,” recipient of Berlin’s Golden Bear, explores a family’s unravelling after an act of defiance in Türkiye’s authoritarian environment. Rafael Manuel’s debut film “Filipiñana,” a Sundance award winner, chronicles a young caddy at a Manila golf course, revealing class distinctions beneath a polished exterior. Ildikó Enyedi’s “Silent Friend” received the prestigious Fipresci Prize at Venice, whilst Firouzeh Khosrovani’s “Past Future Continuous” claimed honours at the Amsterdam International Documentary Film Festival.
- Isabelle Huppert stars in Ottinger’s vampire drama written by Elfriket Jelinek
- Tony Leung Chiu-wai features in Enyedi’s multi-generational ginkgo tree-centred narrative
- Berlin Golden Bear winner examines authoritarian consequences in modern Türkiye
- Sundance-winning first film documents class tensions at Manila golf course
Australian Stories Come to the Fore
The 73rd Sydney Film Festival showcases a robust commitment to Australian film, with Australian narratives representing a key component of the opening lineup. Selina Miles’ “Silenced” offers a striking documentary examination, following lawyer Jennifer Robinson and survivors like Brittany Higgins and Amber Heard as they grapple with defamation law and the larger ramifications of the #MeToo movement. This contemporary piece establishes Australian filmmaking at the forefront of current cultural debate, exploring the intricate legal and personal matters surrounding accountability and justice in the contemporary period.
Enhancing this socially conscious offering, Ian Darling AO comes back to Sydney Film Festival with “In the Valley,” a contemplative study of rural Australian life located in Kangaroo Valley. Taking cues from the rhythms and traditions of the community itself, Darling’s film—following his 2019 festival success with “The Final Quarter”—conveys the character of regional existence with subtlety and warmth. Together, these local films emphasise the festival’s dedication to amplifying local voices whilst addressing pressing modern challenges.
Documentaries and Personal Profiles
Documentary filmmaking occupies a esteemed position within the festival’s opening programme, with “Broken English” examining the remarkable life and enduring legacy of Marianne Faithfull. Featuring input from Tilda Swinton and George MacKay, the film arrives from the filmmaking team behind “20,000 Days on Earth,” which was screened at Sydney in 2014. This close study is set to illuminate Faithfull’s multifaceted career, offering spectators new insights on an celebrated figure whose influence spans music, film and cultural heritage.
Firouzeh Khosrovani’s “Past Future Continuous,” an prize-winning entry from the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, takes an entirely different angle to human relationships. The film documents a woman who left Iran as she rebuilds connections with her aging parents through cameras placed in their Tehran home, crafting a touching exploration on displacement, technology, and family bonds across geographical and political boundaries. These documentary works collectively demonstrate film’s distinctive ability for intimate narrative.
Key Festival Features and Varied Themes
| Film Title | Key Details |
|---|---|
| Yellow Letters | İlker Çatak’s Golden Bear winner from Berlin; explores a family’s collapse following an act of defiance in Türkiye under authoritarian rule |
| Filipiñana | Rafael Manuel’s Sundance award-winning debut; follows a teenage tee-girl at a Manila golf course navigating class violence |
| Silent Friend | Ildikó Enyedi’s Venice Fipresci Prize winner; stars Tony Leung Chiu-wai and Léa Seydoux in a multigenerational drama centred on a ginkgo tree |
| The Blood Countess | Isabelle Huppert plays a vampire in Ulrike Ottinger’s film, with a screenplay by Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek |
| Erupcja | Pete Ohs’ film following a Warsaw getaway that unravels, featuring musician Charli xcx in a lead role |
| El Sett | Marwan Hamed’s epic biography of Umm Kulthum, tracing the Egyptian singer’s ascent to becoming the Arab world’s most celebrated voice |
The festival’s opening slate showcases impressive thematic diversity, ranging from intimate character studies to grand historical dramas. Featuring renowned filmmakers such as Gus Van Sant—whose “Dead Man’s Wire” reconstructs a 1977 American broadcast hostage situation featuring Bill Skarsgård, Dacre Montgomery and Al Pacino—appear bold new voices challenging conventional cinema. The programme demonstrates the festival’s commitment to offering cinema that stimulates, questions and reveals, ensuring broad audiences discover films that resonate with current issues whilst celebrating cinema’s enduring artistic power.
What to Expect This June
The 73rd Sydney Film Festival delivers an remarkably varied programme when it opens on 3 June, with this first collection of 13 films providing a tantalising preview of what is in prospect for cinephiles across the fourteen days. From personal, character-focused stories to sweeping period sagas, the festival has curated a selection that spans continents and genres, showcasing contemporary global cinema’s central preoccupations. The full programme will be revealed on 6 May, but preliminary indications suggest audiences can look forward to a abundantly diverse experience that champions both seasoned veterans and daring up-and-coming talents.
Australian cinema maintains a notable position in the festival’s opening slate, with locally-made documentaries and features attracting considerable focus. Selina Miles’ “Silenced” brings the stories of major defamation cases and #MeToo testimonies to the screen, whilst Ian Darling AO returns with “In the Valley,” a meditative exploration of rural community life in Kangaroo Valley. These characteristically Australian perspectives sit alongside international award-winners and distinguished European productions, creating a programme that celebrates local voices whilst maintaining the festival’s global reach and ambition.
- Full programme announcement scheduled for 6 May prior to the June festival dates
- Isabelle Huppert and Tony Leung Chiu-wai headline the global cinema programme
- Several prize-winning films from Berlin, Venice, Sundance and IDFA featured in inaugural lineup
- Films across documentary and narrative formats examine themes of displacement, authority and cultural identity
- Festival takes place 3–14 June 2026 at venues throughout Sydney, Australia
