
Within the confines of a small south London flat, the filmmaker decides to finally say goodbye to her already lacking confidence and her friends come together to help her see this task through. Structured as a succession of informal conversations and exchanges between friends, Bye Bye Confidence opens up a space for un-mastering and un-learning expected behaviours.
By putting a spell on cinema Mădălina Zaharia made a film whose protagonists remain unseen, but make themselves felt from outside the frame. One of these protagonists is the filmmaker herself, as Bye Bye Confidence is a nonconventional personal project — not a suffocatingly intimate one, but a film about the other, about communion, giving all the time and the screen to her friends. The other protagonist is the confidence, or rather self-confidence, to which she says goodbye through all sorts of rituals, serious and yet playful make-believes, some of which intellectual, like making the word itself disappear under a lost perfect synonym, and some magical, like incantations or exorcisms. Yet the real spell of these moments needs no magical word — by bringing these Londoners and friends together “to play”, Bye Bye Confidence emits a continuous incandescence, a human warmth rarely felt by the screen. (Călin Boto)

Mădălina Zaharia is a Romanian artist and filmmaker who lives and works in London. Her film TristxtOTL was screened at ICA London as part of the official selection for the 67th BFI London Film Festival and was the winner of the Best Experimental Award at both Close:Up Reykjavik Film Festival 2024 and San Francisco Short Film Festival 2024. She was also a 2023 fellow at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart. Past films include Public Figure – made in collaboration with poet and performer Ryan Ormonde, which subsequently won the Best Film in the National Competition prize at BIDFF Bucharest 2021 and was also part of the official selection for the Scottish Queer International Film Festival 2021 in Glasgow and GRRL HAUS CINEMA 2021 in Boston, MA.