The Night Cinema will bring documentaries and feature films to Ida-Viru County this autumn

The Ida-Viru Enterprise Centre, in cooperation with the Integration Foundation and with the support of the Swiss-Estonian cooperation programme, is opening the Night Cinema in Ida-Viru County. In autumn, the cinema will offer audiences in Jõhvi and Narva a diverse film programme, featuring the latest documentaries and feature films from Estonia and abroad. Several screenings will be preceded by special meetings with filmmakers, who will take viewers behind the scenes and bring them closer to the world of film.

Film programme:

8–9 October – documentary My Family and Other Clowns (2025). A story about an actor couple, Haide and Toomas, whose clown characters Piip and Tuut are beloved throughout Estonia, but whose family life is like juggling between work and home in search of balance. With English and Russian subtitles. Tickets: Special screening of Viru Film Fund : documentary My Family and Other Clowns and Special screening of Viru Film Fund : documentary My Family and Other Clowns . The films have Russian and English subtitles.

29–30 October – documentaries The Story of Estonian Skateboarding (2025) and Rebel with a Bow Tie (2024). The first of them recounts the fifty-year development of skateboarding culture in Estonia, while the second playfully reveals the end of President Toomas Hendrik Ilves’ term of office and his personal challenges. The films are subtitled so that the screenings are enjoyable for audiences who speak Estonian, Russian, or English. The films have English subtitles.

 

12–13 November – youth film Rolling Papers (2024), selected to represent Estonia in the Academy Awards competition. Interspersed with musical interludes, the film follows the life choices and dreams of young people. With Russian subtitles. The films have Russian subtitles.

3–4 December – feature films Aurora (2025) and The Swedish Torpedo (2025). The former intertwines the themes of love and family values, while the latter takes viewers to Sweden before World War II, telling the inspiring story of Sally Bauer, who fought for her dreams and her right to be a mother. The Swedish Torpedo was produced in cooperation between Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, and Finland, and some of the filming took place in Ida-Viru County. The film Aurora has English subtitles. The film The Swedish Torpedo is in Swedish with Estonian and English or Estonian and Russian subtitles.

The activities of the Night Cinema are supported by the Swiss-Estonian cooperation programme, which supports activities that help people of different nationalities and linguistic backgrounds to better integrate into Estonian society. The programme aims to foster a feeling of unity and provide opportunities for participating in cultural and educational activities. Support is provided, for example, for learning Estonian, getting to know Estonian culture, developing digital services and volunteering, and events that bring together people from different linguistic and cultural backgrounds. The activities of the programme help participants to better understand life in Estonia and find their place in society. The programme is implemented by the Ministry of Culture in cooperation with the Integration Foundation and other partners.