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A group of men stand in front of an outdoor gate, smiling and pointing at the camera.

The Helsinki Effect

  Arthur Franck  |  Finland, Germany, Norway

Synopsis

Global peace is at risk. The borders of Western democracies and Communist Russia hang in the balance. Can diplomacy effectively conclude the Cold War? In this witty, clever, and insightful film about geopolitical gamesmanship, Finnish filmmaker Arthur Franck looks back at the 1973 Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), a seemingly banal meeting of international leaders in his native Helsinki that would have far-reaching consequences for the future of our current global politics.

Using hundreds of hours of archival footage and amusingly off-kilter TV broadcasts, declassified documents, and some help from cheeky AI-generated voices, Franck brings to life the conference and the central figures of this high-stakes chess match, from a cynical Henry Kissinger to a boisterous Leonid Brezhnev. Following up on the promise of his 2019 Festival selection The Hypnotist, Franck returns with an equally droll historical docudrama uncovering truths, both humorous and heady, about the surprising results that can come from world leaders talking to each other.

 English, Finnish, Russian with subtitles

 88 minutes

Screenings & Events

There are currently no upcoming screenings of this film.

Media

Film Credits

  •   Sandra Enkvist, Arthur Frank, Oskar Forstén, Stefan Kloos, Anja Dziersk, Thorvald Nilsen
  •   Arthur Franck
  •   Markus Leppälä, Arthur Franck
  •   Henry Kissinger, Leonid Breshnev, Gerald Ford
  •   Uno Helmersson, Patrik Andrén
  •   Polygraf Film, Kloos & Co, Indie Film Bergen
  •   https://polygraf.fi

Sponsors

Program Partner

Logo: WTTW (2019)

Program Patron

Cynthia Stone Raskin

With support from

Logo: German Film Office 141x125Logo: Goete Institut - 86x100

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