Film Archive

Jahr

Retrospective 2024
Filmstill [Opening speech for the retrospective “Cuban Documentary Film”] [excerpt]
[Opening speech for the retrospective “Cuban Documentary Film”] [excerpt]
Santiago Álvarez
Cuban documentarist Santiago Álvarez speaks to GDR cultural officials and the “fighting” youth of Leipzig: about documentary film as a weapon against imperialism and colonialism.
Filmstill [Opening speech for the retrospective “Cuban Documentary Film”] [excerpt]

[Opening speech for the retrospective “Cuban Documentary Film”] [excerpt]

[Eröffnungsrede zur Retrospektive „Kubanischer Dokumentarfilm“] [Ausschnitt]
Santiago Álvarez
Retrospective 2024
Acoustical Film
GDR
1974
15 minutes
German,
Spanish
Subtitles: 
German (Overvoice)

In 1974, the GDR and the Leipzig festival celebrated the 25th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution with the “Cuban Documentary Film” retrospective. Santiago Álvarez, vigorous propagandist of documentary film as an art of war against imperialist cinema entertainment, spoke at soporific length at the opening.
One wonders whether, in addition to the invited officials, the “fighting” youth of Leipzig addressed by Álvarez were present at the event. The speech has survived only as an audio document, the images must be imagined. The recording was commissioned by the State Film Documentation, a government agency that was to preserve GDR reality for the future. In 1974, no one in the room could have imagined that this future would one day take place without the GDR.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Santiago Álvarez
Producer
Staatliche Filmdokumentation
Matinee Saxon State Archive 2024
Filmstill [Sierra Leone]
[Sierra Leone]
unknown
Young people from the GDR and Sierra Leone meet away from well-rehearsed gestures and diplomatic protocols. The guests preserve their independence in both senses of the word.
Filmstill [Sierra Leone]

[Sierra Leone]

[Sierra Leone]
unknown
Matinee Saxon State Archive 2024
Documentary Film
GDR
1968
10 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

A mysterious film reel from the “Regional Film Studio Leipzig” holdings: labelled “Sierra Leone”, passed down without sound. After some official speeches, an ensemble from Sierra Leone perform a danced symbolic fight for their GDR hosts. Later, local and international couples sway on the dance floor to live music – non-protocol encounters with independent guests, in both senses of the word.

Konstantin Wiesinger

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
unknown
Retrospective 2024
Filmstill 15.000 Volt
15.000 Volt
Karlheinz Mund
On the overhead wire 15,000 volts, underneath everyday working life on an electric locomotive. On the soundtrack a passenger who the GDR will throw overboard in 1976: Wolf Biermann.
Filmstill 15.000 Volt

15.000 Volt

15.000 Volt
Karlheinz Mund
Retrospective 2024
Documentary Film
GDR
1963
18 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

This graduation film by future DEFA documentarian Karlheinz Mund presents a piece of GDR working worlds in the best poetic and earthy Babelsberg school tradition: the everyday life of railway workers – with two women in the electric locomotive driver’s cab.
In 1963, Leipzig audiences were able to get to know Mund’s study in the festival’s university film presentation. At the end, the “Spring Song of the Railwaywoman” can be heard off-screen, sung by Wolf Biermann. The GDR still tolerated the rebellious tormentor. Those who heard him in this film at the time probably only found out later that the authorities had long had him in their sights. In 1963, East Berlin’s Humboldt University refused to grant him a degree in philosophy despite passing his exams. Listening to Biermann’s song today, the words become charged: spring storm, great rain, a land waiting …

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Karlheinz Mund
Cinematographer
Hans-Jürgen Reinecke, Gerhard Gläser, Werner Kohlert, Eberhard Teich-Grüber
Editor
Gisela Hoffmann
Producer
Roland Paul
Sound
Günter Grossmann
Score
Gerhard Rosenfeld
Narrator
Dorothea Richter
Animation Perspectives 2024
Filmstill 4min15 in the Developer
4min15 in the Developer
Moïa Jobin-Paré
With pantomime gestures a woman moves her hands across the surfaces of a geometrical urban architecture, animating the wasteland with a glowing spray of sparks produced by drawing scratches on photographs.
Filmstill 4min15 in the Developer

4min15 in the Developer

4min15 au révélateur
Moïa Jobin-Paré
Animation Perspectives 2024
Animated Film
Canada
2015
5 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

Pantomime movements of a woman’s silhouette: Her hands and fingers move across the surfaces of a geometrical urban architecture, almost as if they wanted to remeasure the buildings. She weaves an irregular network of lines into the rectangular, rigid structure and the documentary image, animating the wasteland with a glowing spray of sparks produced by drawing scratches on photographs.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Moïa Jobin-Paré
Sound
Simon Elmaleh
Filmstill A Move

A Move

Khune
Elahe Esmaili
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Iran,
UK
2024
27 minutes
Persian (Farsi)
Subtitles: 
English

Filmmaker Elahe returns to her hometown of Mashhad in Iran to help her parents move house. Boxes must be packed, old stuff must be rummaged through together. Meanwhile everyone involved discusses what Elahe should wear at the upcoming big party, because Mr. Hossein, the respected and devout patriarch of the extended family, has invited his relatives to his garden.
Elahe will not wear a headscarf, nor a hat, not even a borrowed baseball cap for this occasion. On previous visits, she was willing to make a lot of compromises in order not to shame anybody at home. But those days are over. The “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement encourages her to force a change. In Hossein’s garden the director has intimate and moving conversations with sisters and cousins. They have all had similar experiences with hijab and chador but found different ways of dealing with it. Elahe boldly confronts her family’s fears and wishes and films the honest discussions.

Seggen Mikael

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Elahe Esmaili
Script
Elahe Esmaili
Cinematographer
Mehdi Azadi
Editor
Delaram Shemirani
Producer
Hossein Behboudi Rad
Sound
Anonymous
Sound Design
Ensieh Leyla Maleki
Score
Afshin Azizi
World Sales
Wouter Jansen
Nominated for: Silver Dove
Filmstill A Year in the Life of the Country

A Year in the Life of the Country

Rok z życia kraju
Tomasz Wolski
Panorama: Central and Eastern Europe 2024
Documentary Film
Poland
2024
85 minutes
Polish,
English
Subtitles: 
English

In the early 1980s, Poland is in a state of emergency. The country’s democracy movement, represented by the free Solidarność trade union, is to be suppressed. To this end, President Wojciech Jaruzelski declares martial law on 13 December 1981. In collusion with the Soviet Union a threatening scenario is staged to justify the “stan wojenny”. As a result, Western nations like Great Britain and the USA impose economic sanctions on the Eastern Bloc state. This produces a complex field of tension in which the Polish population are confronted with existential shortages on the one hand but continue their struggle underground on the other – despite curfews, telephone surveillance and a media system controlled by the military.
In his found footage film, Tomasz Wolski brings the explosive, the everyday and the iconic together to provide an insight into a situation that is as absurd as it is dangerous. The extremely dynamic (and musical) montage illustrates the rapid and convoluted succession of events while at the same time intervening through comments, quite often with a notable sense of humour, for example, when Wolski helps a British news correspondent not always on top of events to a bit of retroactive glory: “Most fundamental is the … Hang on, sorry, sorry, could you … Photography and filming will be widely controlled …”

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Tomasz Wolski
Script
Tomasz Wolski
Cinematographer
Tomasz Wolski
Editor
Tomasz Wolski
Producer
Anna Gawlita
Sound
Marcin Lenarczyk
Score
Jerzy Rogiewicz
Nominated for: Leipziger Ring, MDR Film Prize
Filmstill A Year of Endless Days

A Year of Endless Days

Godina prođe, dan nikako
Renata Lučić
Panorama: Central and Eastern Europe 2024
Documentary Film
Croatia,
Qatar
2024
70 minutes
Croatian
Subtitles: 
English

Renata Lučić, both director and protagonist, returns to her hometown to visit her father in a small village in the Croatian part of Slavonia, near the Bosnian border. She has always hated the rural area on the banks of the river Sava, “those endless meadows and gardens,” as she reveals right in the opening sequence. Even as a child she knew that she would leave. Like her older brother, like her mother. And like 124,667 other women who “went West” after the war, usually to Germany or Austria, to work – and never to return.
She now hangs out in the almost abandoned and womanless village with her estranged father Tomislav and his best friend Joso. The men follow their routines, working in the forest or eating river fish they caught themselves. Emotional closeness and intimacy gradually form in at first seemingly trivial conversations and despite initial misunderstandings and distinctly different world views. The film project, which started as the story of an emigration, gradually turns into a sensitive study of loneliness, human relationships, friendship and love; about the beauty of the little things that leads to larger insights – not just for Renata.

Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Renata Lučić
Script
Renata Lučić
Cinematographer
Marinko Marinkić
Editor
Karla Folnović
Producer
Tamara Babun Zovko, Matija Drniković
Sound Design
Ivan Zelić, Nina Ugrinović
Score
Mislav Lešić
Nominated for: MDR Film Prize
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Filmstill Accidental Animals
Accidental Animals
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Animals caught by chance by Google Maps car cameras disrupt the claim of capturing the world accurately. Their appearance in the image creates – involuntarily – funny situations.
Filmstill Accidental Animals

Accidental Animals

Accidental Animals
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
10 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
German

We have probably all thought about the influence of digital logic and algorithms on our perception of the world at some point. This equally humorous and profound short film takes the interactive online tour service “Google Street View” as a starting point for an investigation of where the reality mapped by fifteen automatic cameras and the one perceived by human senses drift apart – and what the consequences are.
The “Accidental Animals” that happened to come across the lenses of Google cars defy the claim that every area, however remote, is reproduced as realistically as possible. Instead, their appearance in the frame produces unintentionally funny situations. Like glitches in the matrix, they remind us that we are watching only a patchy series of snapshots. Before we “drop” into a random place on the map, before we arrive to look around, the animals are already there. The fact that Google’s technology blurs many of those bird, dog and pig faces – like ours – to protect personality rights furnishes the directors with the perfect excuse for a provocative question: How is it that in this respect the algorithm acts more ethically than the humans who programmed it?

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Script
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Editor
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Producer
Leila Fatima Keita, Felix Klee
Co-Producer
Ina Mikkat
Sound
Jana Baldovino
Sound Design
Gerhard Auer
Score
Timotheus Bachinger
Animation
Felix Klee
Animation Perspectives 2024
Filmstill Achill
Achill
Gudrun Krebitz
A woman in love ventures out of her cocoon to go out into the mundane world of “dead language.” Two universes meet in raw, intimate drawings, shimmering stones and overpainted video sequences.
Filmstill Achill

Achill

Achill
Gudrun Krebitz
Animation Perspectives 2024
Animated Film
Austria,
Germany
2012
9 minutes
German,
English
Subtitles: 
None

The truth is hidden behind blurs, but the allure of secrecy fades as the clarity increases. A woman in love ventures out of her cocoon to go out into the mundane world of “dead language.” Accompanied by a restless musical motif by Marian Mentrup, “Achill” boldly balances on the thin line between two universes – with raw, intimate drawings, shimmering stones and overpainted video sequences.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Gudrun Krebitz
Cinematographer
Moana Vonstadl
Producer
HFF München
Sound Design
Marian Mentrup
Narrator
Nicolette Krebitz, Lola C. Bohle, Sean Uyehara
Kids DOK 2024
Filmstill Mind the Puddle!
Mind the Puddle!
Sebastian Stoer, Alice von Gwinner
Despite the rain, the friends from the shoe rack go to the playground. But Torf, the rubber boot, would rather go to the garden, because the big puddle just looks too scary.
Filmstill Mind the Puddle!

Mind the Puddle!

Achtung Pfütze!
Sebastian Stoer, Alice von Gwinner
Kids DOK 2024
Animated Film
Germany
2023
4 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

Every day the shoes from the shoe rack have new adventures. Today, the rubber boots Buddel and Torf tell the other shoes about their experience on a rainy day with a huge dark puddle in the playground, and what trick the unicorn rubber boots Chunk and Tuva used to take away their fear of getting thoroughly dirty … Episode three of the popular KiKA series.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Sebastian Stoer, Alice von Gwinner
Script
Sebastian Stoer, Alice von Gwinner
Cinematographer
Sebastian Stoer, Alice von Gwinner
Editor
Sebastian Stoer, Elena Scharwächter
Producer
Robert Schröder
Sound Design
Patrick Becker
Score
Jérôme Navet-Cintract
Animation
Alexandra Räbner, Paul Bender
Broadcaster
NDR Norddeutscher Rundfunk, MDR Fernsehen, RBB Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg
Filmstill Aferrado

Aferrado

Aferrado
Esteban Azuela
International Competition Animated Film 2024
Animated Film
Mexico
2024
18 minutes
Spanish
Subtitles: 
English

At some point years ago, Joel’s life took a wrong turn. He let himself be drawn in by the energy of unscrupulous gangsters to run criminal errands for a pittance. He has known his way around envelops and guns ever since. But now the day has come when he wants to leave the sinister night shifts behind and follow his actual destiny: repairing motors, keeping his car repair shop in Mexico City afloat and getting people moving. But the gang boss chooses the birthday of Joel’s beloved nephew of all days to direct him to a last job. Joel must debate this with himself and, above all, make a decision.
Director Esteban Azuela stages this debate in a space of passage between this world and the next, where decisions can no longer be revised, only relived. With an intricately composed mix of memory fragments, car body parts and existential junk he adequately brings his protagonist’s breathless existence to the big screen. Jagged 3D scans animated in single-frame captures as well as camera angles and plotlines from the early days of ego shooter games stylishly evoke the urban Mexico of the 1990s: heated, threatening, refusing to stand still.

Andreas Körner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Esteban Azuela
Script
Esteban Azuela
Editor
Pedro G. Garcia
Producer
Daniel Cabrera Guzmán Belmont, Esteban Azuela
Sound Design
José Miguel Enríquez
Score
Héctor Ruiz, Raúl Topete Torre, María Bonita, Álvaro Lamadrid Isoar
Animation
Esteban Azuela, Carlos Davila
World Sales
Luce Grosjean
-
Daniel Leon
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award
Filmstill Afterlives

Afterlives

Tunggang langgang
Timoteus Anggawan Kusno
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Indonesia
2024
22 minutes
Indonesian
Subtitles: 
English

The powerful interventions of the Indonesian artist, cultural studies scholar and filmmaker Timoteus Anggawan Kusno are internationally renowned. What distinguishes them are the empowering attitude and the breathtaking aesthetics he employs to re-interpret in different media the cultural traditions passed on in his homeland. With “Afterlives”, he delivers another unequivocal reckoning with the representations of history shaped by colonial annexation.
The opening sequence is already a declaration: On the soundtrack we hear screaming, in which both pain and its liberating relief are manifest and united. On screen we see an explosion of colours: Jathilan, a ritual Javanese war game, is being performed. Men are dancing on horses made of plaited bamboo until they fall into a trance or the evil spirits are driven away. The impressive precision of the editing to tribal trance music by Setabuhan makes the colonialist archive images expose themselves – and fade. Those of (dance) performances in which the Javan tiger, killed multiple times in historic rituals, is symbolically reanimated come to the fore. In the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, it now guards – in the shape of a re-interpreted colonial sculpture – the empty frames that once gave (representative) power to the governors-general of the Dutch East Indies.

Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Timoteus Anggawan Kusno
Script
Timoteus Anggawan Kusno
Cinematographer
Aditya Kresna, Krisna E. Putranto, Timoteus Anggawan Kusno
Editor
Timoteus Anggawan Kusno
Producer
Timoteus Anggawan Kusno
Sound
Hengga Tiyasa
Score
YesNoWave Music
Retrospective 2024
Filmstill Aida
Aida
Marwan Salamah
Marwan Salamah was delegated by the Palestine Liberation Organization to study in Babelsberg. As a one-man team, he realised this portrait of a young educator in a PLO orphanage in Tunis.
Filmstill Aida

Aida

Aida
Marwan Salamah
Retrospective 2024
Documentary Film
GDR
1985
22 minutes
Arabic
Subtitles: 
German (Overvoice)

Words of the poet Mahmoud Darwish float through this film: “Tell me. Perhaps I will remember my home whose perfume is only on my lips.” A 17-year-old Palestinian introduces herself: Aida, the returning one. When her father was killed in battle, her mother was already dead, killed by a bomb. When she was eight, she was sent to a PLO orphanage in Beirut, then to an orphanage in Damascus, then to an orphanage in Tunis. Here she takes care of new orphans. The portrait of a girl expands: countless children who will forget their homeland and origin. There is nothing but war left in their drawings. The PLO had assigned its collaborator Marwan Salamah to study cinematography at Babelsberg. Here, he is also the director. In 1985, “Aida” won the Prize of the World Federation of Democratic Youth in Leipzig.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Marwan Salamah
Script
Marwan Salamah, Elke Schieber
Editor
Karin Geiß
Producer
Hochschule für Film und Fernsehen der DDR
Hommage: Isabel Herguera 2024
Filmstill Ámár
Ámár
Isabel Herguera
Having packed her sketch book, a Spanish woman travels to India to visit her mentally ill friend. Intense images and colours visualize their presumably last meeting.
Filmstill Ámár

Ámár

Ámár
Isabel Herguera
Hommage: Isabel Herguera 2024
Animated Film
Spain
2010
8 minutes
Spanish
Subtitles: 
English

Carrying her sketchbook, the Spaniard Inés travels to India to visit her mentally ill friend Ámár. Their reunion is harmonious and touching, but the mood turns. The city where Ámár lives, the house and his room become mirrors of Inés’s inner experience and tell of an unbearable state between affection and disgust in intense colours and textures.

Franka Sachse

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Isabel Herguera
Script
Isabel Herguera
Cinematographer
Eduardo Elosegui
Editor
Eduardo Elosegui
Producer
Isabel Herguera
Animation
Isabel Herguera, Rajiv Eipe
Camera Lucida 2024
Filmstill Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty
Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty
Lukas Marxt, Vanja Smiljanić
The Salton Sea, a former nuclear testing ground on the brink of ecological collapse. The few people who still live here are campaigning to protect the abandoned area.
Filmstill Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty

Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty

Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty
Lukas Marxt, Vanja Smiljanić
Camera Lucida 2024
Documentary Film
Austria,
Germany
2024
86 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

Where the sandy beach of the Salton Sea, the biggest lake in California, begins to crunch harder, it does not even consist of sand any more: Millions of dead fish, plants and insects pile up on the shore to form a highly toxic substance. This is how Derek explains it, a member of a Cahuilla tribe that managed to escape an attempted genocide in the 19th century to the Salton Sea and now sees itself as a protective force for the once flourishing but increasingly deserted area and its outcasts.
Derek is one of the many locals whose trails Lukas Marxt and Vanja Smiljanić calmly follow, gliding with them through the desolate landscapes. In the process, they pick up slivers of nuclear history time and again: During the Second World War, the area was a test site for the bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The experiments continued through the Cold War; the armed forces are still training here. The film finds its starting point and end two states away: The nuclear devices were sent on their way from Wendover, Utah. The local Airfield Museum pays tribute to their development. Once, the camera performs an almost weightless dance around a model of the Hiroshima bomb “Little Boy” on display there, to the sounds of the indestructible World War classic “We’ll Meet Again.”

Felix Mende

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Lukas Marxt, Vanja Smiljanić
Cinematographer
Lukas Marxt
Editor
Vanja Smiljanić, Lukas Marxt
Producer
Lukas Marxt
Co-Producer
Sonic Acts Biennial
Sound Design
Marcus Zilz
Score
Jung An Tagen
World Sales
Gerald Weber
Filmstill Animalia Paradoxa

Animalia Paradoxa

Animalia Paradoxa
Niles Atallah
International Competition Animated Film 2024
Animated Film
Chile
2024
82 minutes
Spanish
Subtitles: 
English

A slight body, wrapped in dusty rags. The gas mask on the face reveals only a tired pair of eyes with almost extinguished pupils. The figure slowly winds its way through a grey landscape of crumbling concrete and rusty iron parts. The human-amphibian hybrid contorts itself so bizarrely in this post-apocalyptic world that the laws of physics seem suspended. It is unclear what is up and down, almost impossible to determine on which planet the action is taking place. Observed by other fantastic chimeras, the creature sneaks out of its hiding place again and again to find water for a modest bath.
This avant-garde balancing act between documentary remnants of civilisations, found footage, dance, performance, puppetry and pantomime finds fascinating ways to push familiar definitions of animation to the limit – and beyond. With superbly staged movement choreographies, clever visual ideas and outstanding audio design, Niles Atallah makes a different kind of tale shine brightly.

Franka Sachse

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Niles Atallah
Script
Niles Atallah
Cinematographer
Matías Illanes
Editor
Mayra Morán, Niles Atallah
Producer
Catalina Vergara
Sound
Claudio Vargas
Sound Design
Claudio Vargas
Score
Sebastián Jatz Rawicz
Animation
Niles Atallah
World Sales
Paulina Portela