Before It Gets Loud started with a feeling I couldn’t ignore.
The feeling of constantly moving, constantly trying to keep up,
and still feeling like you are always one step behind.
Living in a city like Berlin, everything moves fast.
Trains, people, expectations, opportunities.
You are surrounded by movement all the time, and at some point
you stop asking yourself where you are actually going.




This film is not about a dramatic event or a specific story.
It is about a state of mind.
About pressure that doesn’t always come from the outside, but often from ourselves.
About the quiet moments when everything becomes too loud inside your head.
I wanted to create a film that feels like a thought rather than a narrative.
A film that allows space. Space to breathe, to pause, to reflect.
The character in the film is not just one person.
She represents a feeling that many people know but rarely talk about,
the feeling of being overwhelmed, of losing yourself in routines, expectations and time.
Nature plays an important role in the film. It represents the opposite of the city:
stillness, space, air. It is not an escape, but a reminder.
A reminder that we are allowed to slow down.
For me, the film is about one simple idea:
Taking care of yourself is not weakness.
Stopping is not failure.
Sometimes, stopping is the bravest thing you can do.























