Felix van Groeningen’s ‘Let Love In’ – Everything We Know So Far … Felix van Groeningen’s ‘Let Love In’

Date:

Gent, Belgium born filmmaker Felix van Groeningen has steadily offered cinema that explores intimate relationship dramas, family sagas, addiction narratives, and coming-of-age stories, and it all began back in 2004 with Steve + Sky. With an output that includes The Misfortunates (2009), The Broken Circle Breakdown (2012 – read review), Belgica (2016 – read ★★★ review), Beautiful Boy (2018) and 2022’s The Eight Mountains (Jury Prize at Cannes), for his eighth feature, the Belgium-Italy co-production returns to fragility and resilience of human relationships with the focus being reconnection after crisis.

IONCINEMA.com Everything We Know So Far...

Shot in Belgium back in August of last year, the five week shoot was filmed in
Antwerp, Ghent, and Ostend.

IONCINEMA.com Everything We Know So Far...

Written by Groeningen, Charlotte Vandermeersch and Anne Paulicevich, this is described as partially autobiographical, after a long-hidden affair is revealed, a couple’s life together begins to unravel. What initially appears to be a story of betrayal and relationship collapse gradually transforms into a journey toward honesty, intimacy, healing, and a renewed understanding of love.

IONCINEMA.com Everything We Know So Far...

In English, Italian, Dutch, and French lingo, returning players Charlotte Vandermeersch and Luca Marinelli will burn up and or burn down the frame.

IONCINEMA.com Everything We Know So Far...

The Eight Mountains folks in producer Hans Everaert and production designer Massimiliano Nocente return to the fold, and so does frequently used cinematographer Ruben Impens. Editor Jean-Christophe Bouzy joins for first time. Other producers include Lorenzo Gangarossa, Mario Gianani and Lorenzo Mieli.

IONCINEMA.com Everything We Know So Far...

With a late autumn shoot last year we were thinking that would rush a cut for the Cannes comp deadline, however with the Italian elements in this film perhaps a first time in Venice was pre-established. We’ll likely see this on the Lido. Mubi landed the rights to this.

Eric Lavallée
Eric Lavalléehttps://www.ericlavallee.com
Eric Lavallée is the founder, CEO, editor-in-chief, film journalist, and critic at IONCINEMA.com, established in 2000. A regular at Sundance, Cannes, and Venice, Eric holds a BFA in film studies from the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema. In 2013, he served on the narrative competition jury at the SXSW Film Festival. He was an associate producer on Mark Jackson’s "This Teacher" (2018 LA Film Festival, 2018 BFI London). He is a Golden Globes Voter, member of the ICS (International Cinephile Society), FIPRESCI and AQCC (Association québécoise des critiques de cinéma).

Share post:

NEWSLETTER SIGNUP

Popular

More like this
Related

La petite dernière (The Little Sister) | Review

The Lost Daughter: Herzi Passes Up Potency in Standard...

Interview: Marjane Satrapi & Vincent Paronnaud – Persepolis

The thrill of meeting Marjane Satrapi reminded me of being 6 years old at Disney Land when I met the living, breathing Cinderella. Except Cinderella was an actress with a blond wig and Marjane is the real woman behind her autobiographical graphic novel, turned movie, “Persepolis”. The distinctive mole on her nose and her dark sultry eyes rose off the page and appeared in front of me, smoking and speaking with a French accent.

Interview: Eivind Landsvik – Low Expectations | 2026 Cannes Film Festival

Exploring themes of mental health, emotional recovery, companionship, and...