Der Heimatlose (Trial of Hein). 2026. Germany. Directed by Kai Stänicke. North American premiere. In German; English subtitles. 122 min.
After 14 years away, a wary Heinrich (Paul Boche) returns to his hometown, a gray and windblown fishing village on an isolated island (perhaps one of the Frisian Islands off the North Sea coast of Germany, though the geography is pointedly undefined). Its people are self-reliant and closed-off to the world, and hardly welcome Hein home with open arms: So suspicious are they of the outsider that they hold a trial to determine his identity. Hein is challenged to recall incidents from his childhood, which he seems to remember quite differently from his community—especially from his childhood best friend (Philip Froissant), whose once-close bond with Hein may have occasioned his departure from their oppressive hometown. A classic folk-legend melodrama in the vein of The Return of Martin Guerre, Kai Stänicke’s feature debut is directed daringly, with a restricted color palette similar to Sound of Falling and a rustic production design that resists easy historicizing. The location is constructed like a stage set, with only one or two walls enclosing each cottage—a Brechtian device in the tradition of Dogville, apt for this grand allegory of memory, identity, community, and belonging. Winner of the Teddy Jury Award in the Perspectives section at the 2026 Berlinale. Travel support generously provided by the German Film Office.