A 9-to-5 satire, I Worry About My Teeth follows passive office worker Shona, whose monotonous routine takes a turn when one morning she notices something unsettling about her teeth.
Yolanda Chow is a Hong Kong-born, Montreal-based filmmaker and visual artist whose work explores themes of identity, memory, and the anxieties of modern life through a lens of dark humor and surreal intimacy. She gained international recognition with her short film I Worry About My Teeth (2023), a poignant yet absurdist meditation on bodily decay and existential dread that premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival before winning the Golden Leopard for Best Short Film at Locarno Film Festival. A graduate of City University of Hong Kong's School of Creative Media, Chow's distinctive style blends documentary realism with dreamlike symbolism, drawing comparisons to filmmakers like Roy Andersson and early Yorgos Lanthimos. Her previous short The Way You Breathe (2021) screened at Visions du Réel and was praised by Cinema Scope for its "uncanny ability to transform mundane rituals into profound cinematic poetry." Chow's work has been supported by the Hong Kong Arts Development Council and featured in exhibitions at Para Site Art Space and Tai Kwun Contemporary. She is currently developing her debut feature All My Teeth Are Falling Out, an expansion of her signature themes funded through the Berlinale Talents Project Market. With I Worry About My Teeth, Chow has established herself as one of Asia's most original emerging voices - a filmmaker who can make audiences both laugh uncomfortably and confront their deepest insecurities through her singular cinematic language.