Screened as part of NZIFF 2020

Fritzi: A Revolutionary Tale 2019

Fritzi: Eine Wendewundergeschichte

Directed by Ralf Kukula, Matthias Bruhn Curated

A riveting animated tale of the fall of the Berlin Wall – and people brave enough to change the world – told through the eyes of a courageous 12-year-old girl.

Germany In German with English subtitles
80 minutes VOD

Producers

Matthias Bruhn
,
Ralf Kukula
,
Richard Lutterbeck

Screenplay

Beate Völcker
,
Péter Palátsik
,
Based upon the book Fritzi war dabei by Hanna Schott and Gerda Raidt

Editor

Stefan Urlaß

Music

André Dziezuk

Voices

Ali Lyons (Fritzi)
,
Oisin Conroy (Bela)
,
Lucy Carolan (Sophie)

Festivals

Francophone 2019

Elsewhere

PRESENTED IN ASSOCIATION WITH

Square Eyes

East Germany, 1989. Summertime. While her best friend Sophie visits Hungary, 12-year-old Fritzi dog-sits her little pup, Sputnik. When Fritzi discovers public protests stirring around her, she realises that Sophie may have left for more than a summer break, so she and Sputnik set out to find her. Historically accurate and authentic, and loaded with rich period detail and atmosphere, Fritzi: A Revolutionary Tale shares a powerful all-ages story of peaceful revolution and social uprising. — Nic Marshall

“[Fritzi] does a great job of showing what happened in 1989 in the former communist countries. And it also does a great job of giving kids a lesson to be remembered: how a non-violent protest can cause substantial, long-lasting social and political change – and how the voice of the many can disrupt the power of the few… The parallel with the migrants and refugees of the present day is difficult to miss, no matter the age of the viewer. Fritzi… [reminds] us that everyone, at a certain point in history, was a fugitive, a person searching for a better place to live and raise a family. And this turns Fritzi not only into a history lesson, but also into a lesson in compassion.” — Stefan Dobroiu, Cineuropa

About the Filmmaker
Ralf Kukula and Matthias Bruhn are German animators and directors. Kukula is the co-founder of the German Institute for Animated Film; Bruhn is the chief executive of animation studio Trick Studio Lutterbeck. Fritzi: A Revolutionary Tale is their first collaboration as filmmakers.