Following a recent Los Angeles screening for “Semmelweis,” Hungary’s 2025 Oscars entry for Best International Feature, director Lajos Koltai was greeted by a standing ovation before sitting down for a Q & A hosted by Gold Derby. The Oscar-nominated cinematographer (“Malena”) discussed why he decided to direct his third feature film, which has gone on to become one of Hungary’s biggest hits of the year.
“It was a lucky thing,” he said of the film’s success. “People went to see it and we had record numbers in Hungary. Young people went to see it. Teenagers! They talk to each other and say, ‘I have to see it again tomorrow. I want to learn about it. I want to understand. So they come back the next day and bring their friends. People deeply love it, which is a really good thing.”
“Semmelweis” stars Miklós H. Vecsei as Dr. Semmelweis Ignác...
“It was a lucky thing,” he said of the film’s success. “People went to see it and we had record numbers in Hungary. Young people went to see it. Teenagers! They talk to each other and say, ‘I have to see it again tomorrow. I want to learn about it. I want to understand. So they come back the next day and bring their friends. People deeply love it, which is a really good thing.”
“Semmelweis” stars Miklós H. Vecsei as Dr. Semmelweis Ignác...
- 11/26/2024
- by Denton Davidson
- Gold Derby
In the dimly illuminated medical realm of 19th-century Vienna, a pioneering film arises to chronicle the incredible story of Ignaz Semmelweis, a Hungarian doctor who dared to defy medical convention. Directed by Lajos Koltai, “Semmelweis” depicts a watershed moment in medical history that would ultimately save many lives.
Set in 1847, the film transports viewers to a bleak medical scene in which maternity wards were feared as death factories. Miklós H. Vecsei presents Semmelweis as a passionate and driven young doctor working at Vienna General Hospital, where an unexplained tragedy occurred. Puerperal fever, an unknown murderer of new moms, terrified pregnant women so much that they would prefer to give birth on the street than visit a hospital.
A pregnant woman screaming on the street, afraid of the hospital’s lethal reputation, is the opening scene of the film that best illustrates this horror drama. Semmelweis started a research that would become revolutionary.
Set in 1847, the film transports viewers to a bleak medical scene in which maternity wards were feared as death factories. Miklós H. Vecsei presents Semmelweis as a passionate and driven young doctor working at Vienna General Hospital, where an unexplained tragedy occurred. Puerperal fever, an unknown murderer of new moms, terrified pregnant women so much that they would prefer to give birth on the street than visit a hospital.
A pregnant woman screaming on the street, afraid of the hospital’s lethal reputation, is the opening scene of the film that best illustrates this horror drama. Semmelweis started a research that would become revolutionary.
- 11/20/2024
- by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
- Gazettely
The scream that pierces through the opening of “Semmelweis” sets the tone for the 19th century-set drama from Lajos Koltai, about the groundbreaking Hungarian obstetrician Ignaz Semmelweis, immediately showing its concern for a very pregnant young woman desperately roaming the streets for a proper place to give birth. Loath to check in to local clinics that have acquired a reputation for patients mysteriously dying in postpartum care, her shaken faith in the health care system sets a distinctly modern emphasis for the sturdy, old-fashioned Vienna period piece, selected as Hungary’s official Oscar selection after it became a local box office hit.
Even without taking a look at a picture of the real balding and bespectacled Dr. Semmelweis, it’s immediately clear Koltai wants to deliver something that’s more popcorn than medicinal when he gives a movie star entrance to the dashing Miklós H. Vecsei, playing the film’s title role.
Even without taking a look at a picture of the real balding and bespectacled Dr. Semmelweis, it’s immediately clear Koltai wants to deliver something that’s more popcorn than medicinal when he gives a movie star entrance to the dashing Miklós H. Vecsei, playing the film’s title role.
- 11/19/2024
- by Stephen Saito
- Variety Film + TV
The 21st Sevilla European Film Festival will take place this Nov. 8-16, and Variety has been given an exclusive heads-up on this year’s competition juries that will choose the winners of the Gold and Silver Giraldillos as well as the special judges’ prize and a new award, the Puerta América Award.
Dedicated specifically to contemporary European film, Sevilla aims to bring the best in European cinematographic culture to the south of Spain for dialogues between the new artists and recognized figures from the industry while also dedicating space to new media for cinematographic expression.
Jurists for this year’s main competition section include British producer David Puttnam, who will chair the jury, Oscar-winning British actor Jeremy Irons, Rome Film Fest artistic director Paola Malanga, French programmer Eva Rekettyei, and French-Algerian director Mounia Meddour (“Papicha”).
Accompanying today’s jury announcements, Sevilla shared details about its new Puerta América Award, granted...
Dedicated specifically to contemporary European film, Sevilla aims to bring the best in European cinematographic culture to the south of Spain for dialogues between the new artists and recognized figures from the industry while also dedicating space to new media for cinematographic expression.
Jurists for this year’s main competition section include British producer David Puttnam, who will chair the jury, Oscar-winning British actor Jeremy Irons, Rome Film Fest artistic director Paola Malanga, French programmer Eva Rekettyei, and French-Algerian director Mounia Meddour (“Papicha”).
Accompanying today’s jury announcements, Sevilla shared details about its new Puerta América Award, granted...
- 10/11/2024
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
Lajos Koltais Biopic über den österreich-ungarischen Chirurg und Geburtshelfer Ignaz Semmelweis geht für Ungarn ins Rennen um eine Oscarnominierung in der Kategorie „Bester internationaler Film“.
„Semmelweis“ geht für Ungarn ins Oscarrennen (Credit: Nfi World Sales)
Lajos Koltais Biopic „Semmelweis”, mit 350.000 Besuchern der erfolgreichste ungarische Film in den dortigen Kinos seit fünf Jahren, geht für Ungarn ins Rennen um eine Oscarnominierung in der Kateogrie „Bester internationaler Film“.
„Semmelweis” spielt im 19. Jahrhundert in Wien und erzählt die Geschichte des österreich-ungarischen Chirurgs und Geburtshelfers Ignaz Semmelweis, der sich für Einführung verbesserter Hygienevorschriften in Geburtskliniken zur Eindämmung des Kindbettfiebers stark machte, dabei aber nur wenig Unterstützung erhielt, da die Ärzte Hygiene als Zeitverschwendung empfanden.
Über den Protagonisten seines Films sagt Lajos Koltai: „Semmelweis‘ Leben ist ein Beispiel für uns alle: ein Mann, der immer und unter allen Umständen seinen eigenen Weg ging, mit einem Mut, der dem Tod trotzte, der sich nicht durch Hass oder Gewalt ablenken ließ.
„Semmelweis“ geht für Ungarn ins Oscarrennen (Credit: Nfi World Sales)
Lajos Koltais Biopic „Semmelweis”, mit 350.000 Besuchern der erfolgreichste ungarische Film in den dortigen Kinos seit fünf Jahren, geht für Ungarn ins Rennen um eine Oscarnominierung in der Kateogrie „Bester internationaler Film“.
„Semmelweis” spielt im 19. Jahrhundert in Wien und erzählt die Geschichte des österreich-ungarischen Chirurgs und Geburtshelfers Ignaz Semmelweis, der sich für Einführung verbesserter Hygienevorschriften in Geburtskliniken zur Eindämmung des Kindbettfiebers stark machte, dabei aber nur wenig Unterstützung erhielt, da die Ärzte Hygiene als Zeitverschwendung empfanden.
Über den Protagonisten seines Films sagt Lajos Koltai: „Semmelweis‘ Leben ist ein Beispiel für uns alle: ein Mann, der immer und unter allen Umständen seinen eigenen Weg ging, mit einem Mut, der dem Tod trotzte, der sich nicht durch Hass oder Gewalt ablenken ließ.
- 9/11/2024
- by Jochen Müller
- Spot - Media & Film
Hungary has picked Lajos Koltai’s biopic Semmelweis as its contender for the 2025 Oscars in the best international feature category.
The feature traces the life of Hungarian doctor Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis, an early pioneer of antiseptic procedures who became known as “the savior of mothers” for his efforts in fighting deadly infections following childbirth. Set in 19th-century Vienna, it shows Semmelweis, played by Miklós H. Vecsei as a passionate, if short-tempered, doctor determined to find the cause of puerperal fever, a mysterious epidemic decimating patients after childbirth. Even after he discovers the cause of the infection and a means to prevent it, his peers and superiors work to discredit him.
Semmelweis was a commercial hit back home, selling more than 350,000 tickets and grossing more than $2 million on its theatrical release, becoming the most successful Hungarian movie of the past five years. Nfi World Sales is handling world sales on the title.
The feature traces the life of Hungarian doctor Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis, an early pioneer of antiseptic procedures who became known as “the savior of mothers” for his efforts in fighting deadly infections following childbirth. Set in 19th-century Vienna, it shows Semmelweis, played by Miklós H. Vecsei as a passionate, if short-tempered, doctor determined to find the cause of puerperal fever, a mysterious epidemic decimating patients after childbirth. Even after he discovers the cause of the infection and a means to prevent it, his peers and superiors work to discredit him.
Semmelweis was a commercial hit back home, selling more than 350,000 tickets and grossing more than $2 million on its theatrical release, becoming the most successful Hungarian movie of the past five years. Nfi World Sales is handling world sales on the title.
- 9/10/2024
- by Scott Roxborough
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
“Semmelweis,” which Nfi World Sales will be selling at the European Film Market in Berlin, has become the highest grossing Hungarian movie in local theaters in five years.
The film is directed by Lajos Koltai who was Oscar nominated as the cinematographer of Giuseppe Tornatore’s “Malena.” “Semmelweis” marks Koltai’s first return to directing since “Evening” in 2007.
“Semmelweis” is a period biopic about a Hungarian doctor who became known as the “saviour of mothers” for introducing antiseptic procedures at a Vienna maternity clinic.
The film has attracted more than 280,000 moviegoers since its premiere on Nov. 30, and was among the top three movies for nine weeks. It has grossed more than $1.7 million.
Set in 19th century Vienna, the film tells the story of Ignac Semmelweis, the short-tempered but passionate doctor, who delivers babies and also carries out autopsies on a daily basis while looking for the cause of puerperal fever,...
The film is directed by Lajos Koltai who was Oscar nominated as the cinematographer of Giuseppe Tornatore’s “Malena.” “Semmelweis” marks Koltai’s first return to directing since “Evening” in 2007.
“Semmelweis” is a period biopic about a Hungarian doctor who became known as the “saviour of mothers” for introducing antiseptic procedures at a Vienna maternity clinic.
The film has attracted more than 280,000 moviegoers since its premiere on Nov. 30, and was among the top three movies for nine weeks. It has grossed more than $1.7 million.
Set in 19th century Vienna, the film tells the story of Ignac Semmelweis, the short-tempered but passionate doctor, who delivers babies and also carries out autopsies on a daily basis while looking for the cause of puerperal fever,...
- 2/7/2024
- by Leo Barraclough
- Variety Film + TV
It’s been more than 15 years since Oscar-nominated cinematographer and director Lajos Koltai helmed his last film, “Evening” (2007), a poignant meditation on mortality, regret and womanhood that featured a star-studded ensemble cast, including Vanessa Redgrave, Glenn Close, Eileen Atkins and Meryl Streep, and was released domestically by Focus Features.
For his return to the director’s chair, the Hungarian-born filmmaker also returns closer to home with “Semmelweis,” a period biopic drama about a Hungarian doctor who turns the medical establishment on its head in 19th-century Vienna. The film opens the 21st Hungarian Film Festival of Los Angeles, which runs Oct. 27 to Nov. 2 at the Laemmle Monica Film Center.
“Semmelweis” is set in 1847, as a mysterious epidemic is raging in a maternity clinic in Vienna. The film follows the Hungarian-born doctor Ignác Semmelweis, played by rising Hungarian actor Miklos H. Vecsei, in a race against the clock to solve the mystery...
For his return to the director’s chair, the Hungarian-born filmmaker also returns closer to home with “Semmelweis,” a period biopic drama about a Hungarian doctor who turns the medical establishment on its head in 19th-century Vienna. The film opens the 21st Hungarian Film Festival of Los Angeles, which runs Oct. 27 to Nov. 2 at the Laemmle Monica Film Center.
“Semmelweis” is set in 1847, as a mysterious epidemic is raging in a maternity clinic in Vienna. The film follows the Hungarian-born doctor Ignác Semmelweis, played by rising Hungarian actor Miklos H. Vecsei, in a race against the clock to solve the mystery...
- 10/22/2023
- by Christopher Vourlias
- Variety Film + TV
As a young boy growing up in Budapest, a town that would come to be known as “Hollywood on the Danube,” Béla Bunyik dreamed of being in the pictures. “I fell in love with movies in Hungary back in the ’50s,” Bunyik tells Variety. “When I was 12 years old, I started to work as an extra in a few movies…. In 1953, I spent a whole summer with a bunch of kids and some of the best Hungarian actors at the time.”
He recalls being picked up after school by talent scouts and cutting his teeth on the sets of films like Viktor Gertler’s 1954 adventure-comedy “Me and My Grandfather.” “Seeing how a movie was done was very exciting for me and I was sad when the summer ended, and the film was shut,” he says. But those formative years sparked a lifelong obsession. “I got hooked.”
Bunyik would later emigrate to the U.
He recalls being picked up after school by talent scouts and cutting his teeth on the sets of films like Viktor Gertler’s 1954 adventure-comedy “Me and My Grandfather.” “Seeing how a movie was done was very exciting for me and I was sad when the summer ended, and the film was shut,” he says. But those formative years sparked a lifelong obsession. “I got hooked.”
Bunyik would later emigrate to the U.
- 10/22/2023
- by Christopher Vourlias
- Variety Film + TV
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