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Everything Will Change Everything Will Change is a futuristic documentary fairytale about biodiversity, the beauty of nature, and how Ben, the student, saved the world. In the year 2051, people look back at the past. The film explores their memories of a bygone golden age: our own beautiful present. A world where millions of plants and animals live on a planet that is still relatively healthy. Home to a level of biodiversity that could still be saved if people weren’t primarily focused on themselves. Director: Marten Persiel Length: 90 min Production: Flare Film, coproduction with Windmill film Year: 2020 Premier: Zürich Film Festival – Focus Competition
Cast
Noah Saavedra
Jessamine-Bliss Bell
Paul G Raymond
Jacqueline Chan
Vibeke Hastrup

Zurich-Bound Dystopian Road Movie ‘Everything Will Change’ Debuts Trailer (EXCLUSIVE)

By Leo Barraclough

Marten Persiel’s dystopian road movie from the year 2054, “Everything Will Change,” has debuted its trailer ahead of its world premiere Friday at the 24th edition of the Zurich Film Festival, where it plays as part of the Focus Competition. TF1 Studio is handling global sales on the film.

The film is set in a dystopian 2054, following the extinction of all wildlife. Three young mavericks go on a journey to find traces of the lost beauty of nature, hoping to discover what happened to their planet. The answer they discover lies in a decade – the 2020s – when a bright future was still possible, but everything changed. “In this unusual road movie, fiction meets scientific fact to explore the most urgent issue of our time: the extinction of wildlife. The future is ours to choose,” according to a statement.

The cast includes Noah Saavedra (“Egon Schiele: Death and the Maiden,” “Freud” series), Jessamine-Bliss Bell (“Dragonheart,” “Trick or Treat”), Paul G. Raymond (“Black Mirror,” “The Educatoror”), Wim Wenders and Markus Imhoof. The screenplay is by Persiel and Aisha Prigann. The film is produced by Katharina Bergfeld and Martin Heisler at Flare Film in Berlin; Annemiek van der Hell at The Netherland’s Windmill Film is coproducing. Swiss distribution is being handled by Pathé Films.

Persiel previously directed “This Ain’t California,” which won best film in Berlinale’s Perspektive section in 2012.

Zurich’s Focus Competition section includes 12 films from Switzerland, Germany and Austria. All entries are either first, second or third directorial works. Zurich runs Sept. 23 to Oct. 3.