ºÚÁÏÍø

News

Emilia Hernesniemi's Goodbye Tornio won Jussi Award for Best Short Film

The Jussi Award was awarded for the first time to a student film. Among the winners were also several staff and alumni from the Aalto University’s Department of Film ELO.
Emilia Hernesniemi's documentary film Goodbye Tornio tells about Vilma, 18 years old high school graduate

The best films of 2021 were celebrated and awarded on Friday 6 May. The film winning the most awards was Compartment No. 6, directed by Juho Kuosmanen and produced by Jussi Rantamäki. The film is an international success and won altogether eight awards: best film, best director, best actress, best screenplay, best cinematography, best editing, best set design and best make-up design.

Guled & Nasra and The Blind Man Who Didn't Want to See Titanic both won two Jussi Awards. Other award-winning films included director Hanna-Leena Hauru’s Fucking with Nobody, 70 is just a number and Invisible Demons - Signs of Destruction, which won Best Documentary.

Exceptionally, the Best Short Film award went to student Emilia Hernesniemi's debut film Goodbye Tornio (Hei hei Tornio), which is her BA film for the Aalto University Department of Film. Hernesniemi is studying documentary film directing.

‘All of us want to belong to something, anything. And it takes time to find that place’, Hernesniemi said in her acceptance speech.

Goodbye Tornio is a beautiful short documentary about being young, leaving home and figuring it out on your own. The film follows the life of an 18-year-old Vilma on her last weekend in her hometown Tornio, a small place in Northern Finland. Vilma graduates from school, parties with her parents, siblings and friends and receives unwanted advice from emotional adults. All while she mentally prepares herself for the next step. Her dream is to move to Helsinki, a 10-hour drive away from her hometown. Goodbye Tornio is a vivid depiction of these rare moments in life when everything is just about to change for good.

‘Thank you Aalto University for giving me the freedom to make a film that felt good in my soul. Without confidence, it would be difficult to make something like that’, said Hernesniemi.

Script for the film is by Emilia Hernesniemi, and it is produced by Eveliina Mauno, filmed by Iiris Sjöblad, edited by Maija Karhula, sound by Saku Anttila and composed by Rolf Gustavson. The film is the BA work of all the artistically responsible students at the Department of Film ELO at Aalto University.

The film also won the Main Prize as well as the New Wave Award at the Love & Anarchy film festival in Helsinki, Finland last September.

Congratulations and good luck to all! 

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Kaksi ihmistä seisoo portaikon yläpäässä keskittyneenä katsomaan jotain toisen henkilön matkapuhelimesta.
Cooperation, Studies, University Published:

FITech Network University’s ICT project ends in summer 2026 – collaboration within the network continues in other FITech projects

As FITech Network University's ICT project ends in July, there will be changes to FITech’s course offering.
#53 ranking of most international universities by Times Higher Education 2026.
University Published:

Aalto University ranks 53rd globally for international outlook

Aalto is the most international university in Finland and ranks second in the Nordic countries
Two persons holding doctor's hats
Cooperation, Studies, University Published:

Thinking of doing a doctorate? Join us on 21 April

Join us on 21 April 2026 to hear firsthand experiences from researchers across Europe and explore what a career in research at Aalto could look like.


Two people making a presentation in front of school pupils. A screen shows investment strategies with piggy bank images.
Cooperation, University Published:

Aalto University Junior brings lessons on saving and investing to schools with the support of OP Uusimaa

With the support of donations from OP Uusimaa, Aalto University Junior has developed the Juniorpörssi learning platform, which is used in Invest in Your Future workshops delivered to lower secondary and upper secondary schools. The activities have now also been expanded to include Money Moments workshops organised in primary schools.