Sabzian is a free online magazine that relies on the work of a group of dedicated volunteers. We could use your support. Please consider a donation! Sabzian est un magazine en ligne gratuit qui dépend du travail d’un groupe de bénévoles dévoués. Votre soutien nous aide beaucoup. Pensez à faire un don ! Sabzian is een gratis online magazine dat afhankelijk is van het werk van een groep toegewijde vrijwilligers. We kunnen uw steun goed gebruiken. Overweeg een donatie!
Sabzian x Avila
Together with Avila, the non-profit film distributor dedicated to showcasing Belgian auteur cinema online and in cinemas, we’re happy to present a curated selection of interviews from our archive with Belgian filmmakers whose work can be watched on Avila. These include, among others, Ellen Vermeulen, Bas Devos, Eric de Kuyper, Boris Lehman, the Dardenne brothers, as well as several founding members of Sabzian. A rich collection of voices that spans more than half a century of Belgian film history.
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This Week’s Agenda
This week, all three selected screenings take place on Tuesday. At Cinema Sphinx, Courtisane and Art Cinema OFFoff are screening Robina Rose’s recently restored Nightshift (1981). Based on her own experiences as a night receptionist in a London hotel, the film was shot in five days with Jon Jost as cinematographer and a small crew. Nightshift depicts the nocturnal life of a hotel where guests and staff drift by like dreamlike figures, while also offering a snapshot of the eighties London art scene. Through its slow pace and warm red-golden tones, the film unfolds as an introspective, almost hallucinatory experience and becomes a dreamy portrait of desire and loneliness.
At Cinema Zed, Michelangelo Antonioni’s film L’avventura (1960) is being shown on a 35mm print. During a boat trip along the Sicilian coast, a young woman called Anna disappears without a trace, prompting her lover and her friend to embark on an intense search. L’Avventura is the first part of Antonioni’s famous unproclaimed trilogy, followed by La notte and L’eclisse. At its premiere in Cannes, the film’s final, meditative sequence provoked strong reactions and 37 filmmakers (including Rossellini) would defend the film in an open letter. Antonioni wrote on the film: “L’avventura is expressed through images in which I hope to show not the birth of an erroneous sentiment, but rather the way in which we go astray in our sentiments. Because as I have said, our moral values are old. Our myths and conventions are old. And everyone knows that they are indeed old and outmoded. Yet we respect them.”
“Nothing can fix the finite which lies between the two infinities that enclose and flee from it.” In a text previously published on Sabzian, Boris Lehman frames Edmond Bernhard’s (1919-2001) cinema with this Pascal quote. The complete oeuvre of this Belgian filmmaker, “the most brilliant,” according to Lehman, consists of “only” five short films made between 1954 and 1972, two of which screen on Tuesday at Cinema RITCS: Dimanche (1963) and Échecs (1972). Bernhard was a self-taught filmmaker whose work began with careful observations of the everyday, which he transformed into meditative reflections on time, rituals, and meaning. He taught at INSAS in Brussels, where he had a significant influence on multiple generations of filmmakers, cinematographers, and editors (including Lehman, Jean-Jacques Andrien, Thierry Knauff, Olivier Smolders, and the French filmmaker Philippe Grandrieux). He combined a reserved artistic life with a sharp, philosophically informed film practice. Lehman aptly characterizes Bernhard’s approach: “While others wear themselves out making films without thinking, Bernhard questions himself like a yogi, his camera participating in his questioning.”
Belgian Premieres and Festivals
Each month, Sabzian lists upcoming Belgian premieres, releases and festivals.

