With a warm smile and positive attitude, Floria (Leonie Benesch, The Teachers’ Lounge) arrives at the surgical ward of the Swiss hospital where she works as a nurse on the overnight shift. With one colleague out sick and no replacement on deck, just two nurses and a nervous trainee will have to cover more than two dozen patients. The doctors to whom the nurses are supposed to defer are nowhere to be found. Floria juggles endless tasks: administering medication, updating charts, soothing patients, answering phones, and managing complaints. Surrounded by fluorescent lights, the steady beeping of monitors, and echoing footsteps, Floria struggles to fight off exhaustion and maintain her professional demeanor. Every second counts, and every interruption could mean the difference between life and death.
Director Petra Volpe (The Divine Order) skillfully uses real-time tension to examine the emotional cost of frontline care work and the quiet, unglamorous triumph of keeping people alive in a pitiless system. Late Shift is a portrait of everyday courage, both an homage to nurses and a rousing call to address the global staffing shortage in the industry.
Presented with the support of the Swiss Federal Office of Culture and SWISS FILMS
Official Selection
Berlin International Film Festival 2025
“A taut and sensitive tribute to working-class heroes... Floria is a full-blooded and beautifully etched character and, yes, a heroine."
Sheri Linden
The Hollywood Reporter
“A confident, arresting commentary on the importance of medical workers in a society that doesn’t value them nearly enough.”
Jack Walters
Next Best Picture
“Benesch’s beautifully controlled performance — a balancing act of anxious, fidgety physicality and poker-faced concentration — shows us the difficulty of honoring each patient’s humanity when workplace conditions demand efficiency over empathy.”
Beatrice Loayza
The New York Times
"A character study paced somewhere between observant and Safdie-level panic attack... an intimate look at the fraying of nerves that happens when dealing with the fragility of the human body on a daily basis, a portrait of the caretaker as a soldier in the trenches."
David Fear
Rolling Stone