Natalia Sinelnikova

Natalia Sinelnikova Trailers

We Might As Well Be Dead TrailerDie unsichtbare Frau TrailerTrauerweiden Trailer

Natalia Sinelnikova is a writer and director based in Berlin. She emigrated from St. Petersburg to Germany in 1996 as a Jewish quota refugee. The political circumstances and antisemitism forced the family to leave the country. She studied Culture Studies in Hildesheim, focusing on theatre and photography, and film directing at Babelsberg Film University in Potsdam. Her short film Weeping Willows was screened at various international festivals. In 2016, she was a member of the Debut Film Jury of the Festival of East European Cinema Cottbus and in 2021 was part of the ZFF Academy at Zurich Film Festival. Natalia is a member of the Jewish artists' network "Dagesh". Her debut feature film We Might As Well Be Dead premiered at the Berlinale Film Festival in 2022 will have its international premiere at Tribeca Film Festival 2022.

Most Popular Natalia Sinelnikova Trailers

Total trailers found: 6

Trauerweiden Trailer (2017)

23 May 2017

A therapist dies under mysterious circumstances. No one knows how or why. At the Russian-Jewish funeral service, his daughter, relatives and former patients gather to come to terms with the loss together.

Die unsichtbare Frau Trailer (2019)

01 January 2019

A woman in a restaurant resorts to drastic measures in order to be seen.

Beautiful Day Trailer (2014)

01 January 2014

We Might As Well Be Dead Trailer (2022)

29 September 2022

The high-rise building block near the forest is famous for its carefully curated community. As a dog disappears and her daughter refuses to leave the bathroom, security officer Anna faces an absurd battle against the fear, that slowly spreads among the residents and shakes the utopia with a view.

Flow Trailer (2015)

01 January 2015

Subjects of the Revolution Trailer (1988)

13 June 1988

It is dedicated to the memory of Heinrich Zveinek, the first commissar of the Inzen Division, who died during the defense of Lugansk and was buried on Red Square.