'Egg Cake'

Willem Dafoe has signed up to star in "The Souffleur", an English-language dark comedy directed by Argentine director Gastón Solnicki. Ablify has already made global sales before the Cannes Film Market (excluding Austria). type Has received exclusive access to the movie currently being produced (pictured below).

"The Souffleur" sees Dafoe plays the Lifetime Hotel at InterContinental Vienna. He launched a personal vendetta against the new owners after learning that his cherished hotel is about to be sold to an Argentine developer who plans to completely demolish and rebuild the landmark. "His deep negligence began, his deep dispersion began to manifest in the surroundings - the hotel's pipelines were blocked, the clocks became hay, and his trademark Soufflés refused to rise," Systopsis said. The film was filmed at the InterContinental Hotel Vienna.

Duff will be made in "soffleurie".

Dafoe starred alongside Solnicki, newcomers Lilly Senn, Stephanie Argerich and Claus Philipp. The strong key staff included RuiPoças, a photographer at Miguel Gomes' "Grand Tour", who played at the Cannes Film Festival last year and won the Best Director Award.

Austrian work "souffleur" was produced by Gabriele Kranzelbinder and Paolo Calamita ("Museum Hours"), used in Vienna's Little Magnet Film and KGP Filmproduktion, Eugenio Fernández Abrilfor Primo (Perter Hujar's Day's Day's Day" and Solnicki for Filmaiki for Milma for Millnicki for forniki for forniki for hunki for hunki.

"'The Souffleur' ​​is a creatively entertaining film that includes a lively character led by Willem Dafoe, who himself plays Souffleur." "The story combines humor with timely social and class structures, change and modernity, resulting in an original work of comedy that is both charming and pleasing. This marks Solnicki's most ambitious film to date, a rich layered work that pushes his story to a bold new territory."

Solnicki's first narrative book, Kékeszakállú, premiered at the Venice Film Festival, where he won the Fipresci Best Film Award. The film centers on the adulthood of a group of teenage girls in Argentina typeScott Tobias is the "expert narrative of ecstasy" that shows the director's "rare talent."

Solnicki's second work, "All'scuro", also premiered in Venice, and his last film, "A Little Love Package," premiered in "Encounter". His films have also been screened at festivals such as New York, Rotterdam, Venar, Toronto, Vancouver, Karlovy Vary and Jeonju. He was invited to the official jury in Venice, Karlovy Change and Wroclaw.

Speech type He first proposed “The Souffleur” there last summer before the Venice gap financing market, where Solnicki explained how the idea for the film stemmed from the “curious, failed experience” of a restaurant in Buenos Aires, when soufflé “forced me in a very sad way.”

Director-Learn at a young age and trained in what he described as a “very military French tradition”, he worked hard to hide his disappointment with his signature baked dishes. "It's not that you just follow the recipe, it's happening," he said. "It's really an act of love and an act of faith."

With the help of the surreal and comedic elements of Luis Buñuel’s work, “Souffleur” found that Solnicki plays the literal collapse of the idea – “a building that is about to become (demolished) and a dessert that is no longer (can rise)” – with the dissolution of a man, and caused by dafoe.

Solnicki described his collaboration with the actor as “one of the most creative and collaborative experiences of my career”, adding: “Wilm and I dragged each other onto the dirt. We thrived after fertile wrestling, and our world complemented each other in unexpected and exciting ways. Together, we made a film that was both personal and profoundly alive.”

Dafoe was replaced by WME and Circle Management+ production. He is in the production of Jennifer Peedom's "Tenzing" and recently made production in Kent Jones' "Last Name." He is currently the Art Director of the Theatre Department of La Biennale Di Venezia, Dinesia, which includes overseeing its 53rdroad Drama Festival. Upcoming projects include Nadia Latif’s “My Basement Man,” Miguel Angel Jimenéz’s “Birthday Party” and Patricia Arquette’s “Ghostbuster Girl.”

Magnify's strong lineup also includes "The Countess of Blood" starring Isabelle Huppert. Rafael Manuel's first collaboration with Movie 4, "Filipinana" was produced by the first time; and the Berlin-based champion "Bodoctor", directed by newcomer Ji Yi.