Ildikó Enyedi’s Silent Friend premiered in competition at the 82nd Venice Film Festival to a warm reception, with applause running just over five minutes, as the cast and crew acknowledged the crowd inside the Sala Grande. The ovation, clocked at approximately 5 minutes and 22 seconds, positions the film as a late-festival talking point on the Lido.
Set around a venerable ginkgo tree, the film traces three stories across 1908, 1972, and 2020, linking generations of researchers, students, and visitors who orbit a university botanical garden. Festival materials list a 145-minute running time and credit Enyedi as writer-director, with a cast led by Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Léa Seydoux, Luna Wedler, and Enzo Brumm. The production spans Germany, France, and Hungary, with dialogue in German and English.
Early reactions highlight the film’s meditative structure and its interest in how people try to “read” plant life through science, ritual, and personal longing. Leung’s participation marks a milestone: the Hong Kong star’s first role in a European production, a point of curiosity for festivalgoers familiar with his collaborations in Asia and Hollywood.
In interviews during the festival, Enyedi described the project as an attempt to counter “plant blindness” and to reflect on human attempts to communicate with the living world we often overlook. “Our film does not aim to speak instead of the plants… it is about this wish and longing for communication, and the different clumsy attempts of humans to connect with them,” she said, articulating the film’s guiding idea without assigning consciousness to the tree at its center.
Beyond the response in the room, festival notes confirm the competition berth for the Golden Lion, while trade coverage recorded the ovation length and documented audience enthusiasm. With its cross-border financing and sales activity already in motion before Venice, Silent Friend now enters the fall season with a visible art-house profile and a cast that can translate the film’s theme for both European and international audiences.





















































