Conceived as a kaleidoscopic mosaic, the film follows the imprint Franz Kafka left on the world from his birth in 19th-century Prague to his death in post-WW1 Vienna.

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Release Date: Sep 25, 2025
Genres: ,
Production Company: Marlene Film Production, X Filme Creative Pool, Metro Films, Telewizja Polska, Česká televize, CANAL+ Polska, Barrandov Studio, Czech Anglo Pictures, NeoSynCon, Bac Films, ZDF, ARTE
Production Countries: Czech Republic, Poland, Germany, France
Casts: Idan Weiss, Peter Kurth, Katharina Stark, Sebastian Schwarz, Carol Schuler, Jenovéfa Boková, Ivan Trojan, Sandra Korzeniak, Aaron Friesz, Daniel Dongres, Josef Trojan
Status: Released
Budget: $6500000
Revenue: 721048
Franz
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Franz is a restless, jagged attempt to film Kafka from the inside out, and it only half succeeds. Agnieszka Holland rejects the safe, linear biopic for a collage of timelines, direct-to-camera addresses, and crash zooms that oscillate between inspired and self-indulgent. Idan Weiss gives a sharply nervy Kafka, twitching between embarrassment, curiosity, and dread, and the film shines whenever it simply watches him navigate family, lovers, and the suffocating bureaucracy he'd later weaponize on the page. Franz is a restless, jagged attempt to film Kafka from the inside out, and it only half succeeds. Agnieszka Holland rejects the safe, linear biopic for a collage of timelines, direct‑to‑camera addresses, and crash zooms that oscillate between inspired and self‑indulgent. Idan Weiss gives a sharply nervy Kafka, twitching between embarrassment, curiosity, and dread, and the film shines whenever it simply watches him navigate family, lovers, and the suffocating bureaucracy he'd later weaponize on the page. The problem is volume: so many stylistic ideas compete that the whole thing starts to feel like a museum installation about Kafka rather than a lived experience of the man. Some viewers will find this "punk Gen Z Kafka" energy exhilarating; others will see only visual noise and strained profundity. Franz isn't the definitive Kafka film, but it is a provocative one: messy, uneven, occasionally brilliant, and more interested in how we consume Kafka today than in telling us who he "really" was.