Ich muss dir was sagen
completed
I Want to Tell You Something
Mischief Films
Director | Martin Nguyen |
Script | Martin Nguyen |
Camera | Martin Nguyen |
Sound | Nils Kirchhoff, Elisabeth Tarinkulu, Wolfgang Mohaupt |
Editor | Rosana Saavedra Santis |
Producer | Georg Misch, Ralph Wieser |
Production management | Peter Janecek |
In Cooperation with | ORF Film/Fernsehabkommen |
Additional camera | TimTom |
Sound editing | Nils Kirchhoff |
Supported by | BKA - Federal Chancellary, Vienna Culture, BMUKK - Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture |
World Sales | Autlook Filmsales |
Languages | German, Sign Language |
Subtitles | German,German for Hearing Impaired, English |
Press Reviews
Synopsis
Four-year-old twins Oskar and Leo are growing up in a house with a rambling yard which is situated on the edge of Vienna. The film begins in this familiar, familial environment where the children and their parents live, and where the filmmaker starts accompanying his protagonists for over a year. The result is a document of what and how Oskar and Leo learn and discover.
Director Martin Nguyen can sign, which made communication with the children without third parties possible. This direct contact and fluent exchange is tangible and an important element in the film, which also encouraged establishment of a close relationship with the children and both parents.
The film also looks at what deafness has meant to the hearing parents, Sandra and Stefan. A cochlear implant, which could make Oskar hear, had been discussed since he was born. They finally decide to learn sign language themselves and raise their children with this mode of communication, which is still foreign to them. Leo will grow up bilingual, with sign language and spoken language. For Oskar, sign language represents an essential means of expression – his first language.
Presskit
Ich_muss_dir_was_sagen_Presskit_de.pdf