Film Archive

Dancing in the Dark 2022
Filmstill FKA twigs: How’s That
FKA twigs: How’s That
Jesse Kanda
A naked body: Its skin envelope spreads and longs to be touched. The music asks what lust feels like and is answered by enchanting computer-generated images.
Filmstill FKA twigs: How’s That

FKA twigs: How’s That

FKA twigs: How’s That
Jesse Kanda
Dancing in the Dark 2022
Animated Film
UK
2013
4 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

A naked body liquifies and becomes weightless. What’s left is its skin envelope which expands endlessly, longing for the tiniest touch. The increasingly shapeless figure vibrates in colours, fragments flashing, until the video track fails. The sensual piece by FKA twigs asks in slow motion what lust feels like. Jesse Kanda answers with enchanting computer-generated images.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jesse Kanda
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Flammes

Flammes
Patrick Bokanowski
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
Experimental Film
France
1998
4 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

Dark percussive sounds call forth anthropomorphic creatures. They come to life in short dance etudes. Optically manipulated, they stretch into gaunt shapes, unfold in a thousand layers like exotic animals, dissolve into abstract paintings. They are pure creatures of light: fleeting, immaterial. The rhythmic sound motif colours their movements with sometimes pithy, sometimes breathy variations.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Patrick Bokanowski
Script
Patrick Bokanowski
Cinematographer
Daniel Borenstein
Editor
Eric Castera, Patrick Bokanowski
Producer
Patrick Bokanowski
Score
Michèle Bokanowski
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Flee

Flugt
Jonas Poher Rasmussen
Competition for the Audience Award 2021
Documentary Film
Denmark,
France,
Sweden,
Norway
2021
86 minutes
Danish,
Dari,
Russian,
English
Subtitles: 
English

For many years, Amin was unable to speak about the experience of his flight. It is only now that he finds the courage to open up to his schoolmate, filmmaker Jonas Poher Rasmussen. From earliest childhood Amin’s life was marked by political unrest in his native country of Afghanistan and soon by growing up without a permanent home. His painful memories are visualized in haunting animations, interwoven with documentary footage.

It’s a well-known fact that flight does not lead from point A to point B and then simply ends. Amin’s story, though, shows how rocky and tortuous it can really be, leading from Afghanistan via Russia, Estonia and a few other stations to Denmark. Only when his life is on a safe track with an upcoming wedding and a good career does he find the strength to talk about what he had to go through to be where he is today. In an almost psychoanalytical setting, the protagonist – lying down – talks about his past. The narrative moves in a spiral between then and now, allowing for frequent respites between the traumatic impressions that the poignant animation makes almost physically tangible. It’s no coincidence that “Flee” has already won multiple awards and is considered an “instant classic” even now.
Kim Busch

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jonas Poher Rasmussen
Script
Jonas Poher Rasmussen, Amin
Editor
Janus Billeskov Jansen
Producer
Monica Hellström, Charlotte De La Gournerie, Signe Byrge Sørensen
Score
Uno Helmerson
Animation
Kenneth Ladekjær
World Sales
Shoshi Korman
Dancing in the Dark 2022
Filmstill Floralia II
Floralia II
Sabrina Ratté
From the pictorial concept of the floral still life to a 3D archive for extinct plants: Floral sculptures add a new dimension to representation. But life? Stays still.
Filmstill Floralia II

Floralia II

Floralia II
Sabrina Ratté
Dancing in the Dark 2022
Experimental Film
Canada
2021
4 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

Ratté develops the pictorial concept of the floral still life into a new kind of illusionary space. The fragmented floral sculptures, created by 3D scans, design a speculative future in which extinct plants are preserved in a weightless archive. The representation gains a dimension but does not become more than a surface mould with no informative value about the living core.

Robert Seidel

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Sabrina Ratté
Producer
Sabrina Ratté
Sound Design
Andrea-Jane Cornell
Score
Sabrina Ratté
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Floralia III

Floralia III
Sabrina Ratté
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
Experimental Film
Canada
2021
4 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

A piece of soil with plants displayed in a cabinet – three-dimensional and yet only a digital image. The sound suggests a sterile exhibition space. As forest sounds start to play, the stems, leaves and blossoms dissolve in particles and layers. As if awakening from a coma, an organic rebellion flares up, a brief revolt against the technically perfect simulation of nature.

André Eckardt

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Director
Sabrina Ratté
Producer
Sabrina Ratté
Sound
Andrea-Jane Cornell
Score
Sabrina Ratté
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Fluid Life

Život na vodě
Zora Čápová
Competition for the Audience Award Short Film 2021
Documentary Film
Czech Republic
2020
6 minutes
Czech
Subtitles: 
English

Everything splashes in this poetic portrait sketch: the rain on the roof, the dog in the puddle, the grandchildren in the kiddie pool and the protagonist in the river Vltava. A middle-aged woman has lovingly converted a freighter into a house boat. The film captures her daily life in impressionistic, analogue aesthetics, from morning coffee in her bathrobe to the last cigarette on deck at dusk. She seems to have fulfilled a wish – a life by and in the river.

Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

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Director
Zora Čápová
Cinematographer
Tomáš Šťastný, Anna Petruželová
Editor
Ondřej Nuslauer
Producer
Ondřej Šejnoha
Sound
Jáchym Vanc
Score
Daniel Habart
Soul-Things 2022
Filmstill Flood
Flood
Malte Stein
While an adolescent boy follows his clique to a shits and giggles party, his mother floods their sparse home with separation anxiety. A mysterious tale of cutting the cord.
Filmstill Flood

Flood

Flut
Malte Stein
Soul-Things 2022
Animated Film
Germany
2018
10 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

Sigmund Freud’s dream symbolism relates birth to water that one – or so he says – either dives into or rises out of. While an adolescent boy gets mysterious phone calls and shyly follows his clique to a shits and giggles party, his mother floods the ever-sparser home with separation anxiety and absurd scenes, mocked by the pompously wall paper pattern with all its curlicues.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Malte Stein
Script
Malte Stein
Editor
Malte Stein
Producer
Malte Stein
Sound
Malte Stein
Score
Malte Stein, Mauro Marzo
Animation
Malte Stein
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Flying Low

Volando bajo
Diego Piñeros García, Elkin Calderón Guevara
International Competition Short Film 2020
Documentary Film
Colombia
2020
24 minutes
English captions
Subtitles: 
None

In the global North, the DC-3 is regarded as a vintage plane and tourist attraction. In Colombia, however, it is still used as an airliner and serves as the only link to the outside world for remote villages in the Amazon region. The history of the former “Raisin Bomber” reflects economic and hegemonic conditions. Now the DC-3 raises its voice in an entranced cinematic journey through time and space to talk of dangers, sensual experiences – and a mystic passenger.

Annina Wettstein

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Diego Piñeros García, Elkin Calderón Guevara
Cinematographer
Calderón & Piñeros
Editor
Calderón & Piñeros
Producer
Calderón & Piñeros
Sound
Eduardo Cote
Score
Juan Carlos Arrechea
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For a Fistful of Fries

Poulet frites
Jean Libon, Yves Hinant
Competition for the Audience Award 2021
Documentary Film
France,
Belgium
2021
100 minutes
French,
Urdu,
Bengali,
English
Subtitles: 
English

In Belgium and France, the documentary series “Strip-Tease” is real cult viewing. The creators of the TV production have now used more than twenty-year-old material to make a crime documentary in dirty black and white. The Brussels CID are investigating a murder case: A casual prostitute was killed in her flat. The discovery of a few French fries enables them to track down the perpetrator. True Crime.

The dead woman’s name was Kalima Sissou. Very quickly, the investigation focuses on her former boyfriend Alain, and so, in authentic, raw images, we watch Inspector Lemoine and his colleagues at work: at the crime scene, interrogating witnesses and, naturally, cross-examining the main suspect. Despite the serious character of the events, Jean Libon and Yves Hinant’s offbeat mixture of dark thriller and absurd reality comedy does not lack (black) humour. Shot in a simple cinéma-vérité style, the film does not embellish on what it shows. The creative and conceptual model is, of course, the series “Strip-Tease”, co-developed by Libon in 1985 and widely known for the unconventional, blunt and politically incorrect manner in which it tackled even delicate subjects. “For a Fistful of Fries” continues in this vein and takes us very close to the often incredibly profane action.
Lina Dinkla

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Director
Jean Libon, Yves Hinant
Editor
Anouk Zivy
Producer
Bertrand Faivre, François Clerc
World Sales
Clémentine Hugot
Kids DOK 2020
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For Real
Maria Claudia Blanco
Mady and Merouane live in the same neighbourhood and spend most of their time together. They are best friends. The stupid talk of the others won’t change this.
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For Real

Pour de vrai
Maria Claudia Blanco
Kids DOK 2020
Documentary Film
France
2020
21 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
German

Mady and Merouane are two eleven-year-olds who grow up as best friends in the north-east of Paris. They live right next door to each other and that’s more important to them than anything else. And anyway, they feel so at home in their neighbourhood that they can’t think of a more perfect place to practice adulthood. When some other boys turn up, their friendship is briefly put to the test …

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Director
Maria Claudia Blanco
Cinematographer
Juliana Brousse
Producer
Antoine Devulder
Sound
Ondine Novaresse, Théo Cancelli
Score
Danny Guttridge
Filmstill For the Time Being

For the Time Being

For the Time Being
Nele Dehnenkamp
DOK im Knast 2023
Documentary Film
Germany
2023
90 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
German

At the beginning Michelle Bastien-Archer shows and comments on photos of her wedding. The African-American and her childhood friend Jermaine were married in the unhospitable visitors’ hall of Sing Sing in 2007. He had been sentenced to 22 years to life for voluntary manslaughter in 1998. Ever since, she has been fighting tirelessly to prove his innocence. Now new documents have turned up that reinforce doubts about the trial’s decisive witness statement. Michelle becomes more confident. She presses even more determinedly ahead with her efforts to get Jermaine released. The camera is with her as if live, for almost a decade.

It feels like a thriller whose script was written by life and the U.S. American justice system. Daily life under exceptional circumstances, scenes from an unusual marriage. Timed phone calls from prison, countless visits to the lawyer, appearances at solidarity events for wrongly convicted African Americans. Michelle works as a house painter for the City of New York, raising her two children alone. We learn in passing that their biological father was the victim of a brutal crime. The portrait of a confident woman who shares her fears and hopes with us emerges.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Nele Dehnenkamp
Cinematographer
Nele Dehnenkamp
Editor
Nele Dehnenkamp
Producer
Nele Dehnenkamp, Christine Duttlinger
Winner of: Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
Camera Lucida 2022
Filmstill Foragers
Foragers
Jumana Manna
The battle of the herbs: Collecting edible plants is a political issue in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with economical, ecological and cultural implications.
Filmstill Foragers

Foragers

Al-yad al-khadra
Jumana Manna
Camera Lucida 2022
Documentary Film
2022
63 minutes
Arabic,
Hebrew
Subtitles: 
English

The herb dispute, in this case about ’Akkoub (gundelia) and Za’atar (wild thyme) is one of the more bizarre aspects of the Middle East conflict. These plants are much sought-after ingredients of Palestinian cuisine and have been collected for generations; for reasons of nature conservation, however, this is forbidden in the West Bank. Israeli park rangers thus find themselves in hot pursuit of their collectors for a fistful of greens. Jumana Manna humorously presents the poaching as civil disobedience.

The Berlin-based Palestinian artist combines documentary and scripted material with pop references. Once, when archival footage illustrates the hype surrounding the illegal herbs, we hear Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” and Morricone’s harmonica melody from “For a Few Dollars More”. The ban also has an economic side, since Israeli companies are selling Za’atar as a spice mix. Drone and panoramic shots suggest the absurd manhunt for elderly people picking for their own needs. One of them says: “I’ll also be caught in 2050 with my children and grandchildren.” Manna wrote the court hearings based on real cases with lawyer Rabea Eghbarieh. Not mentioned in the film is the political success the attorney of the Adalah NGO contributed to in 2019: According to the new directive of the Ministry of the Environment five kilogrammes of the plants may be picked.
Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jumana Manna
Script
Jumana Manna, Rabea Eghbarieh
Cinematographer
Marte Vold, Ashraf Dowani, Yaniv Linton
Editor
Katrin Ebersohn, Jumana Manna
Producer
Jumana Manna
Co-Producer
Eyal Vexler
Sound
Montaser Abu 'Alul
Score
Rashad Becker
Nominated for: Film Prize Leipziger Ring
Audience Award Competition 2020
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Forgotten Lands
Amélie Cabocel
This moving portrait of the filmmaker’s grandmother is also an intelligent reflection of the unique ability of photography to record and pass on echoes of a life lived.
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Forgotten Lands

Les Blanches Terres
Amélie Cabocel
Competition for the Audience Award 2020
Documentary Film
France
2019
93 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English, German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing

Michelle, 86 years old, is an equally obstinate and touching widow and filmmaker Amélie Cabocel’s grandmother. Michelle lives alone in a big house in a lonely area of Lorraine and is probably completely unaware that with every fibre of her existence she bears witness to a vanishing age. But when Amélie tries to persuade her to take part in a photographic and exhibition project, she resolutely makes it her own.

Michelle spends her leisurely days reading the obituaries in the local weekly regularly and with great concentration, making long phone calls to the few surviving “cousins” and leafing patiently through the carefully guarded photo albums in which her memories are preserved. Beyond her private life, these albums and folders are also an eloquent fund of an everyday culture about to disappear. When Michelle’s granddaughter wants to produce a film and an exhibition based on this material, the old lady catches the bug and, with her headstrong personality, adds fuel to an already challenging enterprise. “Forgotten Lands” is the moving portrait of a grandmother from the familiar perspective of her granddaughter, but also an intelligent reflection on the unique ability of photography to record echoes of a life lived.
Ralph Eue

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Amélie Cabocel
Cinematographer
Gautier Gumpper
Editor
Gautier Gumpper
Producer
Milana Christitch
Sound
Grégory Pernet, Nicolas Rhode, Vivien Roche, Martin Sadoux, Jérémy Vernerey
Score
Pascal Doumange
Filmstill Fragile Memory

Fragile Memory

Krykhka pam’yat
Igor Ivanko
Panorama Middle and Eastern Europe 2022
Documentary Film
Ukraine,
Slovakia
2022
85 minutes
Ukrainian,
Russian,
Polish
Subtitles: 
English

In the 1960s, the Soviet cinematographer Leonid Burlaka worked on films that went around the world for the Odesskaya kinostudiya in his native city of Odesa in the former Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Today he is eighty years old and diagnosed with Alzheimer’s; his memory is visibly fading. Filmmaker Igor Ivanko follows the traces left by his grandfather and discovers an archive of immense value in the garage.

Dozens of rolls of photo film, albeit almost decayed, are found between gardening and other tools. The grandson scans the material and shows it to his grandparents. Burlaka’s face brightens when he recognises familiar faces, but he can’t remember much. Ivanko realises that he has a treasure of historical dimensions in his hands. Leonid Burlaka began his career when many Soviet creative artists were struggling with censorship. When state repression eased in the mid-1960s, he had long established himself in his profession. The political change, however, was reflected in his works. Ivanko’s attempt to record his grandfather’s memories before they disappear forever comes too late. But he succeeds at making a film that looks back on fifty years of cinema and life in the USSR: a stirring portrait of the times and the family between emotion and information.
Lina Dinkla

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Director
Igor Ivanko
Cinematographer
Igor Ivanko, Illia Yehorov
Editor
Igor Kosenko
Producer
Mariia Ponomarova, Alexandra Bratyshchenko, Igor Ivanko, Peter Kerekes
Sound
Karina Rezhevska
Score
Marek Piaček
World Sales
Clementine Engler
Nominated for: MDR Film Prize
Filmstill Fragments from Heaven

Fragments from Heaven

Fragments from Heaven
Adnane Baraka
Competition for the Audience Award 2022
Documentary Film
Morocco,
France
2022
84 minutes
Arabic,
French
Subtitles: 
English

In the midst of the Moroccan desert, characterised by rocks, scrubs and immeasurable expanse, two men are looking for celestial bodies. Pacing out this weathered ground is a downright gargantuan task. Both have great hopes tied to the meteorite fragments: While one of them is looking for knowledge, the other longs for a better life. Adnane Baraka’s impressive directing debut traces existential questions in powerful images.

The barren landscapes of south-eastern Morocco are known for frequent meteorite impacts. Mohamed, a nomad who lives with his family in a tent in the desert, decides to start searching. Like the other men who scour the terrain with him he hopes to find a valuable rock from space that would mean his escape from poverty. On the other side of the country, scientist Abderrahmane analyses meteorites for enclaves of long-dead celestial bodies. To reach the origin of our life, we have to look at the stars.
Marie Kloos

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Adnane Baraka
Cinematographer
Adnane Baraka
Editor
Karine Germain, Adnane Baraka
Producer
Adnane Baraka, Jean-Pierre Lagrange
Sound
Adnane Baraka, Lama Sawaya, Sara Kaddouri
World Sales
Michaela Čajková
Re-Visions 2020
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Frankly Caroline
Frank Mouris, Caroline Mouris
Frank is Caroline’s husband. The successful director wants to help her with her autobiography but of course have a say in it, too. Caroline isn’t exactly enthusiastic.
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Frankly Caroline

Frankly Caroline
Frank Mouris, Caroline Mouris
Re-Visions 2020
Animated Film
USA
1999
9 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

A couple of filmmakers – she produces, he directs – are trying hard to assemble the autobiography of the woman, Caroline. A long time ago the man, Frank, won an Oscar for the adaptation of his own life on film. Now he just wants to help Caroline a little, but of course have a say in things, too. Caroline isn’t exactly enthusiastic.

Ralph Eue

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Frank Mouris, Caroline Mouris
Script
Caroline Mouris
Cinematographer
Frank Mouris
Editor
Caroline Mouris
Producer
Caroline Mouris
Animation
Frank Mouris
Production Company
Mouris Squared