Film Archive

Filmstill Eat Bitter

Eat Bitter

Eat Bitter
Pascale Appora-Gnekindy, Ningyi Sun
Audience Competition 2023
Documentary Film
Central African Republic,
China
2023
93 minutes
Chinese,
French
Subtitles: 
German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing, English

A man on a river at dawn. He prays, dives into the water, and comes back up with a bucket of sand. The single father Thomas Boa toils away as a sand diver in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic. The sand eventually ends up at the construction site of Jianmin Luan, a Chinese construction manager who went to Africa to further his career. Luan pays a price for this opportunity: He lives very simply, plagued by power failures and fears of malaria, typhoid, and civil war. After years abroad, he has become estranged from his family in China; his wife is mentally unwell.

Directors Ningyi Sun and Pascale Appora-Gnekindy tell a story of globalisation, poverty, and labour, asking how life can be lived with dignity. Instead of perpetuating clichés they introduce us to two men (and their families) who are tiny cogs in the gears of a global competition machine. There is a lot of inequality in this system and next to no winners. But there are also moments when it all seems worthwhile: when Luan’s wife visits Africa and intimacy is suddenly rekindled, or when Thomas cultivates a field and is finally able to look ahead. A visually powerful, enthralling and horizon-expanding film that skilfully evades stereotypes.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Pascale Appora-Gnekindy, Ningyi Sun
Script
Mathieu Faure, Ningyi Sun, Pascale Appora-Gnekindy
Cinematographer
Orphée Zaza Emmanuel Bamoy
Editor
Hannah Choe, Mathieu Faure
Producer
Mathieu Faure
Co-Producer
Ningyi Sun, Pascale Appora-Gnekindy, Orphée Zaza Emmanuel Bamoy
Sound
Aaron Koyassoukpengo
Sound Design
Hollis Smith
Score
Cal Freundlich Moore
Animation
Michael Kosciesza
Executive Producer
Mathieu Faure, Steve Dorst
Retrospective 2023
Filmstill One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?
One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?
Lutz Lehmann
Workers’ revolt or popular uprising? Or an attempted Western coup after all? 20 years after 17 June 1953, a television report looks for answers. The interpretations remain open.
Filmstill One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?

One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?

Ein Mittwoch im Juni – Vor 20 Jahren: Volksaufstand, Arbeiterrevolte oder Agentenputsch?
Lutz Lehmann
Retrospective 2023
Documentary Film
FRG
1973
60 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

What happened in the GDR on 17 June 1953? Using a lot of original footage, Norddeutscher Rundfunk looks back on the events in a detailed report marking their 20th anniversary and shows different interpretations and explanations. Agent coup? Workers’ revolt? Popular uprising? The interpretations were controversial, even among contemporary witnesses and Western historians.

Katharina Franck, Andreas Kötzing

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Lutz Lehmann
Cinematographer
Hans Jacob
Editor
Elke Düring
Producer
NDR Norddeutscher Rundfunk / German TV ARD Network
Sound
Jürgen Jannsen, Norbert Kinsky
Filmstill One Hundred Four

One Hundred Four

Einhundertvier
Jonathan Schörnig
German Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Germany
2023
93 minutes
English,
German
Subtitles: 
English

The deadliest refugee route in the world claims thousands of lives every year. In the first half of 2023 alone, almost 2,000 people died in the Mediterranean because the European Union’s border policy systematically violates existing laws. Instead of helping shipwrecked persons, Frontex practices illegal pushbacks, finances the violent operations of the Libyan coast guard and takes massive action against private sea rescue missions that act where the EU fails. All this has been documented in the media and yet remains incomprehensible to all who were never forced to live through this situation themselves: How can one deny assistance to hundreds of people in peril of life, even threaten and criminalise the civilian helpers?

Jonathan Schörnig was concerned with this dilemma of lack of perception and decided to bring a sea rescue to the screen as a real time documentary to show how agonisingly long it takes to rescue 104 persons from a sinking rubber boat. One by one, step by step, the film follows the action with several parallel cameras. When the Libyan coast guard turn up, the situation comes to a head. The rescued persons and the crew are stuck on the high seas for days because no Mediterranean country gives them permission to dock. It is only after a heavy storm that one port takes pity on them. What sounds like a bad script is actually – daily – reality.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jonathan Schörnig
Cinematographer
Jonathan Schörnig, Johannes Filous
Editor
Jonathan Schörnig, Moritz Petzold
Producer
Uwe Nitschke
Co-Producer
Adrian Then
Winner of: Goethe-Institut Documentary Film Prize, Golden Dove Feature-Length Film (German Competition), Film Prize Leipziger Ring, ver.di Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness
Filmstill El Shatt – A Blueprint for Utopia

El Shatt – A Blueprint for Utopia

El Shatt – nacrt za utopiju
Ivan Ramljak
International Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Croatia,
Serbia
2023
96 minutes
Croatian,
Arabic
Subtitles: 
English

El Shatt in Egypt, in the middle of the desert, was both a haven and a projection. This is where in 1944, based on a deal between the Yugoslavian partisans led by Tito and the British allies, not only a refugee camp for the families of anti-fascist fighters from Dalmatia was built. This is where a model was created for the future Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia – a state that was to build its founding narrative on the people’s liberation fight against fascism and declare collectively organised self-administration its social ideal.

Director Ivan Ramljak offers us multifaceted insights into this long-forgotten piece of primordial communist history spelled out in reality. After painstaking research, he combines hundreds of historical photographs and some (few) film recordings of interviews with contemporary witnesses. The lively voices of those who were children back then and are over 80 today tell their stories offscreen: of the struggle for survival, solidarity and lived ideology, in short, of a daily life that included self-organised schools, workshops, canteen kitchens, even a newspaper. Ramljak, tongue firmly in cheek, takes up the thread of history and juxtaposes his skilfully arranged archive material with staged scenes played by the ensemble of a theatre that was founded in El Shatt at the time.

Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Ivan Ramljak
Script
Ivan Ramljak
Cinematographer
Boris Poljak
Editor
Jelena Maksimović
Producer
Tibor Keser
Co-Producer
Iva Plemić Divjak, Mladen Kovačević, Sunčica Fradelić
Sound
Miloš Drndarević
Sound Design
Vladimir Živković
World Sales
Marcella Jelić
Nominated for: Prize of the Interreligious Jury, FIPRESCI Prize, MDR Film Prize
Extended Reality 2023
Filmstill Elele
Elele
Sjoerd van Acker
We let Max Cooper’s music take over our hands. They get to dance on a virtual, hypnotic stage: intuitively, playfully, gracefully. Anything goes.
Filmstill Elele

Elele

Elele
Sjoerd van Acker
Extended Reality 2023
XR
Netherlands
2022
7 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

In the midst of a blue-violet tinted mountain range are the remains of a lonely pavilion. Accompanied by the music of Max Cooper, this setting becomes the stage of a dance performance – in which our hands play the leading roles. Intuitively we let the rhythm take them over, move them playfully, form graceful gestures. At this hypnotic place everything is possible for the dancers.

Lars Rummel

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Producer
Firat Sezgin, Ecegül Bayram
Production Company
Institute of Time
Artistic Design
Tolga Tarhan, Gamze Yavuz
Score
Max Cooper
Director
Sjoerd van Acker
Retrospective 2023
Filmstill Exit
Exit
Małgorzata Bieńkowska-Buehlmann
Refugees from the GDR in Warsaw, shortly before the fall of the Wall. Emotional fates, unfiltered. The interviews were forgotten and only re-discovered 20 years later.
Filmstill Exit

Exit

Wyjście
Małgorzata Bieńkowska-Buehlmann
Retrospective 2023
Documentary Film
Poland
1991
29 minutes
Polish,
German

Shortly before the fall of the Wall, tens of thousands of GDR citizens fled to the West, most of them via Hungary. Many ended up stranded in the West German embassies in Prague and Warsaw. Refugees from the GDR were interviewed in Poland, speaking openly and emotionally of their fates. The footage was forgotten and only re-discovered 20 years later.

Katharina Franck, Andreas Kötzing

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Małgorzata Bieńkowska-Buehlmann
Cinematographer
Andrzej Adamczak
Editor
Katarzyna Rudnik
Producer
Wytwórnia Filmów Dokumentalnych
Sound
Ryszard Krupa
Filmstill Extended Presences

Extended Presences

Cinzas e nuvens
Margaux Dauby
International Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Portugal,
Belgium
2023
12 minutes
Portuguese (Portugal)
Subtitles: 
English, German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing

The gaze is firmly fixed on the horizon and distant tree lines, distinguishing natural from smoke clouds. Seasonal work for Portuguese women who observe the landscape from behind the glass panes of fire lookout towers, radio always in reach to report wildfires immediately upon discovery. While the boundary of the visible blurs in the grain of the analogue film stock, Dina, Adriana, Ana Paula, Helena, Luisa, Cristina, Dulce, Lídia, Inês, Fátima, Francisca and Vera emerge as agents of anticipation, modern-day seers whose gentle but persistent peering reaches beyond the burning world. Meanwhile, their male colleagues monitor the situation on computer screens. Poetical textures of waiting and wokeness. The female vision is sharpened and has expectations from the not yet visible future.

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Margaux Dauby
Cinematographer
Margaux Dauby, Afonso Marmelo
Editor
Raul Domingues
Producer
Margaux Dauby
Co-Producer
Roxanne Gaucherand
Sound
Margaux Dauby
Sound Design
Margaux Dauby, Paulo Lima, Selia Çakir