Original-Cin by Liz Braun
The women's stories are devastating. And familiar.
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An enchanting documentary exploring Estonia's 800-year-old smoke sauna tradition as practiced by the Voro community. The film follows local women as they undergo the purification process and transcendent rituals, while reflecting on various aspects of womanhood. Set in a rustic forest sauna cabin, the film offers a poetic celebration of identity and sisterhood.
Original-Cin by Liz Braun
The women's stories are devastating. And familiar.
RogerEbert.com by Nell Minow
What makes a space feel safe? The small miracle of the Estonian film “Smoke Sauna Sisterhood” is that it does more than show us a blissfully safe space; it invites us inside.
Film Threat by Alexandra Conwell
The thematic equilibrium within Smoke Sauna Sisterhood does not negate the male gaze. Rather, it asserts the feminine. Through confession and testimony, women become embodied. Witnesses, irrespective of gender, fortify their truth.
The New York Times by Beatrice Loayza
Hints, whose grandmother introduced her to the smoke-sauna ritual, uses the documentary to speak volumes about what it means to be a woman, even as the focus remains fixed on a single location: a cramped sauna-cabin located in a forest.
The Observer (UK) by Wendy Ide
It’s an intense watch; at times infectiously hilarious, at others wrenchingly sad. For the film’s brief running time, there’s an emotional osmosis at play, in both sauna and cinema alike.
Paste Magazine by Jacob Oller
With its traditions captured in delicate, sweaty vignettes by filmmaker Anna Hints, Smoke Sauna Sisterhood’s anecdotes fill your lungs and engulf you, until its women’s secrets drip down your body.
Little White Lies by Saskia Lloyd Gaiger
Smoke Sauna Sisterhood is a window into an enviable cultural practice of solidarity, as the safe communal space provides a place for gossip and laughter as well as the expression of pain.
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