The FFF tours Europe with a selection of this season's best freeride films. Welcome to the FFF 2025!
The Freeride Film Festival 2025 presents six extraordinary films that focus on playing with the limit - in the mountains, in nature and in life itself. Between arthouse poetry, documentary authenticity and big mountain action, the festival opens up new perspectives on life in the mountains.
Between Days
Nine snowboarders, four nations, one storm in the Japanese Alps. Hip-deep powder, philosophy and silent solidarity combine to create a black-and-white epic on 16mm, produced by Robyn van Gyn and Shin Campus - and blessed with the most incredible deep snow imaginable.
Fathom
A whisper in the white. A reckoning in silence. Where the mountain speaks - and you listen. With Fathom, the Weger Brothers share an intimate reflection on fear, forgiveness and life's quiet answers.
Into Altai
Three adventurers, five sacred peaks, two weeks in a yurt. Director Yannick Boissenot accompanies Camille Armand, Pierre Hourticq and Victor Daviet into the Mongolian Altai Mountains. A visual testimony of landscape, legends and the search for what really moves us in the mountains.
Flipbook
In his first personal project, Parkin Costain shows why he is one of the most extraordinary athletes of his generation. As producer, director and editor, he stages epic conditions in his homeland, supported by the Teton Gravity Research team - and redefines skiing in the process.
Evanescent
A skier on melting ice - caught between movement and transience. The glacier becomes the stage for a visual-poetic decay that makes the climate crisis tangible in shimmering splinters. An art film that shakes things up and breaks new ground in the ski film genre.
Dear Superhero
Freeride icon Janina Kuzma becomes a mother - and heads deep into the Southern Alps of New Zealand with Leanne Pelosi and Evelina Nilsson. Director Corinna Marie Halloran paints a touching portrait of motherhood in professional sport - a story that needs to be told.