Film Archive

Filmstill While the Green Grass Grows

While the Green Grass Grows

While the Green Grass Grows
Peter Mettler
Hommage Peter Mettler 2023
Documentary Film
Canada,
Switzerland
2023
166 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
German

A film that teaches us mindfulness. In his audiovisual diary, award-winning Swiss-Canadian filmmaker Peter Mettler says farewell to his mother and father. But the film transcends his personal work of mourning. In an always dialogue-oriented search movement over the cycle of life, he reflects on this world and the next, on existence and time. It is an eternal circuit and flow – like the continuous passing of clouds and rivers.

Visually as well as intellectually, Peter Mettler draws upon personal conversations, philosophical and spiritual texts as well as his own film and sound archive. His approach is characterised by openness and humility towards life and nature. This attentive attitude characterises the director’s notion of “film-making” per se that has shaped all his works. “While the Green Grass Grows” comprises two parts of a larger epic diary project with the same title.

Annina Wettstein

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Peter Mettler
Script
Peter Mettler
Cinematographer
Peter Mettler
Editor
Jordan Kawai, Peter Mettler
Producer
Cornelia Seitler, Peter Mettler, Brigitte Hofer
Sound
Peter Mettler
Sound Design
Jordan Kawai
Winner of: Golden Dove Feature-Length Film (International Competition Documentary Film)
Media Name: fd687421-ce9f-4f01-9f3c-809bd2522279.jpg

Whistle Stop

Whistle Stop
Martin Arnold
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
Animated Film
Austria
2014
4 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

Daffy Duck is caught in an animation loop. Martin Arnold dissects the industrial animated film production with its extreme division of labour, where body parts of the characters are isolated on different cels and moved separately, in loops and outside their habitat, separated from the background. Daffy’s beak wiggles, his wing hands flutter in the black void. An artistic and psychological study.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Martin Arnold
Animation
Martin Arnold
Opening Film 2023
Filmstill White Angel – The End of Marinka
White Angel – The End of Marinka
Arndt Ginzel
Summer 2022 in eastern Ukraine: The police evacuate people from the war zone, bodycams record the dramatic events. In 2023, the film team talks to survivors.
Filmstill White Angel – The End of Marinka
Filmstill White Angel – The End of Marinka

White Angel – The End of Marinka

White Angel – Das Ende von Marinka
Arndt Ginzel
Opening Film 2023
Documentary Film
Germany
2023
103 minutes
Ukrainian,
Russian
Subtitles: 
German, English

The small town of Marinka lies in the Ukrainian Donetsk Oblast. Almost 10,000 people lived there, even though the town was under constant attack by pro-Russian separatists since 2014. When the war escalated in the spring of 2022, however, Marinka came under heavy artillery fire and practically all residents had to leave the town by September. The local police helped get them out. One of the policemen is Vasyl, the protagonist of this film. In a white van, soon christened the “white angel” by the population, he and his colleagues pull civilians out of the line of fire, recover the wounded and the dead. Vasyl’s helmet camera records the dramatic events of their missions: evacuating scared people from their cellars, first aid for the seriously injured, the hasty gathering of personal belongings, the painful and permanent partings.

Six months after the end of Marinka, the Leipzig-based investigative journalist Arndt Ginzel and his crew return to eastern Ukraine. They find the survivors, rescued persons and rescuers, and let them comment the action cam images. They speak of losses, of pain and grief, but also of hopes and dreams. “White Angel – The End of Marinka” is more than a film about war. It is a document of humanity and the longing for peace.

Christoph Terhechte

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Arndt Ginzel
Cinematographer
Gerald Gerber
Producer
Martin Kraushaar
-
Guntram Schuschke, Beatrix Grundt, Claudia Huber , Nicole Schuschke, Christina Susanne Marx, Annina Wolf
Nominated for: Goethe-Institut Documentary Film Prize, MDR Film Prize
Filmstill Why My Mum Loves Russell Crowe

Why My Mum Loves Russell Crowe

Why My Mum Loves Russell Crowe
Emma van den Berg
International Competition Short Film 2022
Documentary Film
UK,
Netherlands
2022
25 minutes
Dutch
Subtitles: 
English

“Sex does strange things to people!” This sentence reverberates from her childhood. What did her mother mean? What fears did she pass on to Emma? The budding filmmaker sets up the camera in her mother’s apartment, invites mum’s friends, creates an open atmosphere. Coby opens up more and more, talks about a repressed topic. At the same time, she gets to show a wholly different side of herself, performing song and dance numbers in front of her daughter’s lens.

Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Emma van den Berg
Cinematographer
Emma van den Berg
Editor
Emma van den Berg
Producer
Emma van den Berg
Co-Producer
Imoje Aikhoje
Sound
Jack Evans, Peter Sant
Score
Joel Whitaker
Funder
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds
Filmstill Will You Look at Me

Will You Look at Me

Dang wo wang xiang ni de shi hou
Shuli Huang
International Competition Short Film 2022
Documentary Film
China
2022
20 minutes
Chinese
Subtitles: 
English

The summer after graduation: Own life plans and expectations of the parents’ generation collide. While Shuli films his friends with a Super 8 camera, his mother wants nothing more than for him to get married. She resolutely refuses to speak about the fact that her son loves men and has been living with his boyfriend in Beijing for years. A deafening silence. Idyllic family pictures are overlaid by a long overdue confrontation.

Marie Kloos

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Shuli Huang
Cinematographer
Shuli Huang
Editor
Shuli Huang
Producer
Shuli Huang
Sound
Nicolas Verhaeghe, Jingxi Guo
World Sales
Flavio Armone
Winner of: Golden Dove Short Documentary (International Competition Short Film)
Media Name: 1069a62c-3aad-48f1-a8d2-a1b911e04b29.jpg

William Jefferson Wilderness

William Jefferson Wilderness
Ben Young
International Competition Short Film 2020
Documentary Film
UK,
USA
2020
6 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

An inventive examination of the legacy of the 1990s: In his experimental short film, Ben Young portrays the figure of the then U.S. president – whom he is said to have met once in person in Louisville, Kentucky – as a foil for the questionable political developments, the beginnings of a globalised world and a society marked by collective amnesia. The director’s intelligent, witty and very personal reckoning with Bill Clinton.

Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Ben Young
Script
Ben Young
Editor
Theo Watkins
Producer
Ben Young
Sound
Emily Wiles, Jack Eyres
Animation
Theo Watkins
International Programme 2014
Ein Weg aus Pflastersteinen zwischen zwei Reihen aus Wohncontainern.
Willkommen auf Deutsch Hauke Wendler, Carsten Rau

Two well-to-do northern German villages are to accommodate a group of asylum seekers. While some help the foreigners, others found citizens’ initiatives against them. A spooky provincial farce.

Ein Weg aus Pflastersteinen zwischen zwei Reihen aus Wohncontainern.

Willkommen auf Deutsch

Documentary Film
Germany
2014
89 minutes
Subtitles: 
German
English

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Producer
Hauke Wendler, Carsten Rau
Director
Hauke Wendler, Carsten Rau
Music
Sabine Worthmann
Cinematographer
Boris Mahlau
Editor
Stephan Haase
Script
Hauke Wendler, Carsten Rau
Sound
Torsten Reimers, Detlev Meyer
A “culture of welcome” could become the new euphemistic non-word of the year. It pervades this film which observes over an extended period of time what happens when two well-to-do Northern German villages are supposed to welcome a group of asylum seekers.
There are the citizens in their terrace houses who can’t let their daughters out into the streets if the end of the world as represented by 53 refugees (black if worst comes to worst) is near. They hastily form citizens’ initiatives to take legal action against this impending doom. There is the pub owner who in an apparently selfless gesture offers his empty guestrooms, which is presented as the “socially acceptable” option. There are the administrators who are desperately looking for housing, struggling for acceptance, at last set up a few containers and then give themselves a satisfied pat on the back. All of them can’t emphasize enough how welcome the foreigners are to them in principle (but not too many, not in our town). And there are the foreigners themselves, traumatised at the end of an odyssey and hoping for a new home.
Wendler and Rau show an everyday racism that does not come in combat boots but in the guise of charity and democracy – but also people who spend the night with a refugee’s children when the mother has to go to hospital. And at the end the pub owner frying up a schnitzel with the Albanians – in the heart of the German province.
Grit Lemke
Beyond Animation 2023
Filmstill Winchester Trilogy: 1906
Winchester Trilogy: 1906
Jeremy Blake
The centrepiece of Jeremy Blake’s moving triptych looks into the heart of the Winchester House. Hit hard by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, interior construction continued nonetheless. Only differently.
Filmstill Winchester Trilogy: 1906

Winchester Trilogy: 1906

Winchester Trilogy: 1906
Jeremy Blake
Beyond Animation 2023
Animated Film
USA
2003
21 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

How much do staircases and doors leading nowhere in the Californian Winchester House reveal about the owner’s superstitions and how much about the years of converting and rebuilding after the 1906 earthquake? In the centrepiece of his trilogy, Jeremy Blake fills the labyrinthine interiors of this architectural rarity with unreal light and colour apparitions of impressive beauty and oppressive impact.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jeremy Blake
Beyond Animation 2023
Filmstill Winchester Trilogy: Century 21
Winchester Trilogy: Century 21
Jeremy Blake
In 1964, the dreamy Winchester House was given a spacey counterpart to go on dreaming: the “Century 21” cinema. The stylistic punchline of Jeremy Blake’s architectural trilogy.
Filmstill Winchester Trilogy: Century 21

Winchester Trilogy: Century 21

Winchester Trilogy: Century 21
Jeremy Blake
Beyond Animation 2023
Animated Film
USA
2004
12 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

In the third part of this study of the Winchester mansion in San Jose the eye wanders to the “Century 21” cinema built opposite the street in 1964. Jeremy Blake makes the dream houses correspond visually by means of overpainting in time-based painting technique and visual mass media quotes. The film house contributed to the myth that at the frontier a home for the American Dream was built by gun violence.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jeremy Blake
Beyond Animation 2023
Filmstill Winchester Trilogy: Winchester
Winchester Trilogy: Winchester
Jeremy Blake
Jeremy Blake’s three-part study of the residence of the widow Winchester, which grew from eight to 500 rooms over a period of 38 years, begins with a soul-searching in coloured folded images.
Filmstill Winchester Trilogy: Winchester

Winchester Trilogy: Winchester

Winchester Trilogy: Winchester
Jeremy Blake
Beyond Animation 2023
Animated Film
USA
2002
18 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

From 1884 to 1922, the widow of arms manufacturer Winchester transformed a modest manor in San Jose into a residence of temporarily more than 500 rooms. Rumour has it that it was to protect herself from the ghosts of those shot dead at the frontier. Jeremy Blake starts his Winchester trilogy with a diagnosis of the state of mind of the eccentric building in a Rorschach test of fantastic folded images.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jeremy Blake
Matinee Saxon State Archive 2022
Filmstill Wir und unsere Umwelt
We and Our Environment
Hanna Emuth
Environmental protection was firmly anchored in the legislation of the industrial state of the GDR. The tension between exploitation and preservation of nature, however, seemed unresolvable.
Filmstill Wir und unsere Umwelt

We and Our Environment

Wir und unsere Umwelt
Hanna Emuth
Matinee Sächsisches Staatsarchiv 2022
Documentary Film
GDR
1971
27 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

On the occasion of the GDR Landeskulturgesetz (Law on the Conservation and Protection of the Environment), passed in 1970, the speaker explains the various aspects of environmental protection through vivid, visually pointed examples. The film repeatedly refers to the fundamental contradiction between exploitation and preservation of nature in a developed industrial state but is unable to resolve it.

Konstantin Wiesinger

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Hanna Emuth
Script
Jürgen Hartmann, Herbert Mosch
Cinematographer
Manfred Heim
Editor
Monika Schäfer
Producer
DEFA-Studio für Kurzfilme
Score
Wolfgang Pietsch
German Competition 2020
Media Name: 097623ed-183d-48d7-9e88-766da1c08354.jpg
We Wanted to Kill All Nasty Ones
Bettina Ellerkamp, Jörg Heitmann
A real-life satire about the incredible acquisition and impossible sale of a bunker mountain – a mixture of serious documentary and bone-dry humorous science fiction.
Media Name: 097623ed-183d-48d7-9e88-766da1c08354.jpg

We Wanted to Kill All Nasty Ones

Wir wollten alle Fiesen killen
Bettina Ellerkamp, Jörg Heitmann
German Competition 2020
Documentary Film
Germany
2020
91 minutes
English,
German
Subtitles: 
English

A jumble of emerging history is contrasted with the present efforts to optimise profit through ventures and ominous business ideas. In the midst of this labyrinth is a duo of artists who only want to make films. Their misfortune: the German film funding system allows only those who work in an artistic-documentary style to realise science fiction films. Cause enough to find true science fiction material on real German soil instead of looking for a fiction.

Rothenstein, south of Jena. A mountain, hollowed out and built on. Labyrinthine corridors cast in concrete spread over a distance of more than five kilometres. The film precisely constructs – stone by stone, image by image – a story which, composed as a mirror of German history, touches on archaeological finds from twelve thousand years ago and at the same time projects into the uncertainties of the future. Bizarre energy fields, myths and tales of dragons, plans of U.S. preppers fleeing from the end of the world meet facticities of National-Socialist exploitation and forced labour, stories of flight from the 1930s, and the military history of the GDR.
Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Bettina Ellerkamp, Jörg Heitmann
Cinematographer
Stephan Helmut Beier
Editor
Ginan Seidl, Bettina Ellerkamp
Producer
Jörg Heitmann
Sound
Ray Peter Maletzki
Production Company
silent green Kulturproduktionen GmbH + Co KG, home productions GmbH
Matinee Saxon State Archive 2022
Filmstill Wirbel um Arkadi
Turmoil Around Arkady
Liselotte Schließer
A Soviet dance instructor is expected to ensure the authenticity of the choreography of a children’s and youth dance ensemble’s Eastern European and Central Asian folk dances.
Filmstill Wirbel um Arkadi

Turmoil Around Arkady

Wirbel um Arkadi
Liselotte Schließer
Matinee Sächsisches Staatsarchiv 2022
Documentary Film
GDR
1967
11 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

With no introduction, the audience find themselves in the middle of the film’s subject. Soviet ballet master Arkady Sakharov instructs the children’s and youth dance ensemble of the Radebeul district’s arts centre with an insistent voice. Belarussian, Ukrainian, Uzbek and Russian folk dances are rehearsed under his strict guidance and performed at the packed local arts centre.

Konstantin Wiesinger

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Liselotte Schließer
Cinematographer
Liselotte Schließer
Filmstill Where I Live
Filmstill Where I Live
Filmstill Where I Live

Where I Live

Wo ich wohne
Susi Jirkuff
International Competition Animated Film 2023
Animated Film
Austria
2022
11 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

“I don’t want to say it out loud, but my flat’s lower down,” the narrator remarks. The camera at first follows her legs climbing up the stairs of the hallway. That is all we see of her. Very soon, her gaze determines our perspective in this unsettling story. At first it all sounds like a mistake, but at some point, the tenant gets used to the fact that in some inexplicable way and completely unceremoniously she is pulled down from the fourth floor to the coal cellar, floor by floor. A decline that the neighbourhood lets happen in deafening silence.

The “falling” protagonist’s irritated soliloquy, sometimes resigned, often full of calculated optimism, is accompanied by charcoal drawings. Their clarity and architectural detail – down to the curlicued decorations of the upper-class mansion – gradually fade over the course of events. The spatial representation becomes more and more vague and is reduced to a few strokes, only to dissolve into soft areas of charcoal dust in the end. In this nightmarish story, reality no longer offers any support, only one’s own ego. Susi Jirkuff has adapted Ilse Aichinger’s eponymous, multilayered story, which was first published in the mid-1950s, with a remarkable urgency that demonstrates the topicality of Aichinger’s text and writing.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Susi Jirkuff
Script
Susi Jirkuff
Cinematographer
Diego Mosca
Producer
Susi Jirkuff
Sound Design
Michael Schreiber
Animation
Susi Jirkuff
World Sales
Gerald Weber
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award
Media Name: c94f99f0-6b10-428b-a59b-0d4012f54b4a.jpg

Words of Negroes

Paroles de nègres
Sylvaine Dampierre
International Competition 2021
Documentary Film
France
2020
78 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English, German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing

On Guadeloupe, an archipelago in the Caribbean, the past speaks up. Sylvaine Dampierre has the workers of an old sugar refinery read passages from the transcripts of an 1842 court case, while the machines roar and groan in the background. The testimonies of the slaves from back then in the rusty halls of today give rise to a polyphony both explosive and poetic in nature.

The “Grande Anse” sugar refinery is a monster from a distant past: Flames like long tongues spew from the furnaces, piles resembling bones everywhere. The workers cut them with machetes in the plantations of Marie-Galante, a tiny island that belongs to the archipelago of Guadeloupe. The long bones, the sugar cane, are the scaffold that keeps everything together here. Sylvaine Dampierre is in the thick of it, shows the pulsating factory and the hard labour that goes on inside. Seasonal workers come and go; the men organize themselves. They are free. There are occasional flashes of the peculiar bond with France, of which this overseas territory is an integral part, but Dampierre foregrounds the transcripts of a court case from almost two hundred years ago, in which slaves testified against their violent master. An act of self-empowerment, whose gestus the director brings into dialogue with the present.
Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Sylvaine Dampierre
Cinematographer
Renaud Personnaz
Editor
Sophie Reiter
Producer
Sophie Salbot
Winner of: FIPRESCI Prize