Floria, a dedicated nurse, tirelessly serves in an understaffed hospital ward. However, today her shift becomes a tense and urgent race against the clock.Floria, a dedicated nurse, tirelessly serves in an understaffed hospital ward. However, today her shift becomes a tense and urgent race against the clock.Floria, a dedicated nurse, tirelessly serves in an understaffed hospital ward. However, today her shift becomes a tense and urgent race against the clock.
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As a nurse, I can confirm that there are many shifts on many wards just like this. A lot of the work happening between scenes was left out, and a few corners were definitely cut. I work in a different setting, and I have deep respect for every colleague who can handle that kind of work for more than just a few days. It could be such a beautiful profession - if it weren't being destroyed by greed, ignorance, and systemic violence. Sadly, many people still have no idea what it really takes to keep going.
Fewer and fewer people are even interested in learning this kind of work anymore.
Good luck trying to fix that with AI....
Fewer and fewer people are even interested in learning this kind of work anymore.
Good luck trying to fix that with AI....
A very realistic depiction of the everyday professional life of a nurse. The atmosphere in the film is excellent, so much anxiety, stress and lack of time, that it often causes a raw mixture of emotions in the viewer. From anger, tension, to sympathy with the main character and hope for people. An excellent choice of characters, where each, in their own way, shows a certain type of human character and each, in their own way, affects the main protagonist. The camera is exceptional and through the entire film fantastically portrays the events almost exclusively following the main character. Dialogues are short, very realistic and meaningful. Leonie Benesh, in the role of the nurse who carries the plot of the film, is fascinating. And the rest of the actors, in the roles of patients, are up to the task. Although, in several moments, I had to collect my thoughts, due to too many memories that certain scenes evoked, the film is really excellent. Perhaps it is not for those who carry too much trauma from the hospital, because there is too little fiction and too much reality.
This is an excellent movie that peeks the door to the challenging and often unseen world of medical workers.
It shattered me into a thousand little pieces, because this is what really happens.
I'm not a healthcare professional, but you don't have to be one to understand the incredible work doctors do every single day. The director managed to show us a glimpse of their daily reality with honesty and care.
Thanks to every doctor who chose this difficult path to be there when we need it most.
And the original title, Heldin - meaning heroine - fits the film much better. Because real heroes don't wear capes. They wear blue scrubs and a pair of worn white sneakers...
It shattered me into a thousand little pieces, because this is what really happens.
I'm not a healthcare professional, but you don't have to be one to understand the incredible work doctors do every single day. The director managed to show us a glimpse of their daily reality with honesty and care.
Thanks to every doctor who chose this difficult path to be there when we need it most.
And the original title, Heldin - meaning heroine - fits the film much better. Because real heroes don't wear capes. They wear blue scrubs and a pair of worn white sneakers...
From Switzerland comes Heldin, directed by Swiss Petra Biondina Volpe and starring the wonderful Leonie Benesch.
The film takes us through a chaotic shift at a hospital, playing the role of nurse Fiora. The film is an intense drama with thriller overtones, brilliantly directed and even better performed by its lead character.
It's a fast-paced film that unfolds with the frenzy of a chaotic day in an emergency room. The film is intense, captivating, heartbreaking, and empathetic. It explores a sensitive character overwhelmed by the chaos of a difficult and agonizing workday. Leonie Benesch is the pure substance of the film, and between its successes and its flaws, the actress carries the entire weight on her shoulders with a character who is simultaneously human, overwhelmed, and warm, creating a complete connection between the protagonist and the audience.
We become Fliora's shadow, and this journey is intelligently guided by the director, who doesn't skimp on delivering pure tension that's at times tiring and frenetic. Petra Volpe's direction is astute and uncompromising, taking you from one extreme to the other without pause, making you live and feel the same as the protagonist with well-executed and thoughtful direction. You set off on a path and it doesn't take long for you to climb into the rhythm, already on the cusp of its final climax.
A great film that deserves every moment we give it. It's true that it's not perfect and has moments where it seems to lose its way, but the result is undoubtedly satisfying. The film manages to rise from its lowest moments and further elevate the intensity of its plot with the cleverness of knowing where to insert the most tense moments, accompanied by a precise and complementary soundtrack.
It's a film that won't bore you and will make you feel the message that the film doesn't hide about the shortcomings of the healthcare system and, in turn, about the resilience of its true protagonists.
The film takes us through a chaotic shift at a hospital, playing the role of nurse Fiora. The film is an intense drama with thriller overtones, brilliantly directed and even better performed by its lead character.
It's a fast-paced film that unfolds with the frenzy of a chaotic day in an emergency room. The film is intense, captivating, heartbreaking, and empathetic. It explores a sensitive character overwhelmed by the chaos of a difficult and agonizing workday. Leonie Benesch is the pure substance of the film, and between its successes and its flaws, the actress carries the entire weight on her shoulders with a character who is simultaneously human, overwhelmed, and warm, creating a complete connection between the protagonist and the audience.
We become Fliora's shadow, and this journey is intelligently guided by the director, who doesn't skimp on delivering pure tension that's at times tiring and frenetic. Petra Volpe's direction is astute and uncompromising, taking you from one extreme to the other without pause, making you live and feel the same as the protagonist with well-executed and thoughtful direction. You set off on a path and it doesn't take long for you to climb into the rhythm, already on the cusp of its final climax.
A great film that deserves every moment we give it. It's true that it's not perfect and has moments where it seems to lose its way, but the result is undoubtedly satisfying. The film manages to rise from its lowest moments and further elevate the intensity of its plot with the cleverness of knowing where to insert the most tense moments, accompanied by a precise and complementary soundtrack.
It's a film that won't bore you and will make you feel the message that the film doesn't hide about the shortcomings of the healthcare system and, in turn, about the resilience of its true protagonists.
10mumukuh
This film hit me deeply - not just as a viewer, but as someone who has seen parts of this world up close, though never from the inside. It's a quietly devastating portrait of a healthcare system where staff are constantly overwhelmed, and patients often reduced to numbers. The film is restrained in its tone but unflinching in its realism.
For medical professionals, especially those who have worked in underfunded hospitals, this might feel less like cinema and more like déjà vu. A person close to me worked in multiple hospitals over the years and immediately recognized the emotional detachment that can become necessary when death is a regular occurrence - not because you stop caring, but because the system gives you no room to act otherwise. For them, the film was not emotional but eerily accurate - a reflection of shifts they'd rather forget.
But for viewers like me - those who've only seen the burnout and emotional toll secondhand - the film was powerful, even overwhelming at times. I found myself on the verge of tears multiple times, not only out of empathy for the patients but also out of frustration and deep respect for the caregivers who navigate this impossible environment.
The acting is superbly naturalistic, with a rawness that serves the film's themes perfectly. The sound design and score are minimal but poignant, never pushing emotion but allowing it to surface organically. This is not a feel-good film - far from it - but it's an essential one. It asks not only how we treat the sick and dying, but how we treat those who care for them.
If you're looking for comfort, look elsewhere. But if you're ready to see what "broken system" truly means, this film will stay with you.
For medical professionals, especially those who have worked in underfunded hospitals, this might feel less like cinema and more like déjà vu. A person close to me worked in multiple hospitals over the years and immediately recognized the emotional detachment that can become necessary when death is a regular occurrence - not because you stop caring, but because the system gives you no room to act otherwise. For them, the film was not emotional but eerily accurate - a reflection of shifts they'd rather forget.
But for viewers like me - those who've only seen the burnout and emotional toll secondhand - the film was powerful, even overwhelming at times. I found myself on the verge of tears multiple times, not only out of empathy for the patients but also out of frustration and deep respect for the caregivers who navigate this impossible environment.
The acting is superbly naturalistic, with a rawness that serves the film's themes perfectly. The sound design and score are minimal but poignant, never pushing emotion but allowing it to surface organically. This is not a feel-good film - far from it - but it's an essential one. It asks not only how we treat the sick and dying, but how we treat those who care for them.
If you're looking for comfort, look elsewhere. But if you're ready to see what "broken system" truly means, this film will stay with you.
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- CHF 3,700,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $2,270,399
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1
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