Film Archive

Land (Film Archive)

German Competition 2021
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A Sound of My Own
Rebecca Zehr
A visually and aurally outstanding film about the musician Marja Burchard, leader of the legendary band “Embryo”. An ode to hearing, experimentation and inspiration.
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A Sound of My Own

A Sound of My Own
Rebecca Zehr
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
52 minutes
English,
German
Subtitles: 
English

She first appeared on stage at the age of eleven with the legendary Krautrock band “Embryo”. Her father, Christian Burchard, founded the band in 1969 and led it until 2016. Today – in her mid-thirties – Marja Burchard is the bandleader in this project, which has become a kind of family for her. But what seems so simple and organic is far from self-evident in an extremely male-dominated sphere, as Rebecca Zehr shows in her precisely observed and designed film.

This strictly and yet lightly composed melange mixes archival footage, psychedelic animation sequences and everyday observations of the normal life of a female musician between organisation and inspiration. With the visual level restricted to black and white and thus deliberately restrained, all the more attention is focused at the sound. The – who wonders? – outstanding score never takes the music for granted but works robustly with our perception. It’s the lucid, calm images and the narrative that is always anchored in the here and now that let this film stay incredibly haptic despite its concentration on our sense of hearing. Rebecca Zehr is not interested in portraying a musical legend, but in showing us what it could look and feel like to not only make music but live in it.
Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Rebecca Zehr
Cinematographer
Felix Press
Editor
Melanie Jilg
Producer
Rebecca Zehr, Katharina Rabl, University of Television and Film Munich (HFF)
Sound
Rebecca Zehr
Score
Marja Burchard
World Sales
Tina Janker
Winner of: Golden Dove (German Competition)
German Competition 2021
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Everyman and I
Katharina Pethke
How close is too close? The attempt to produce the portrait of an actor turns into a struggle between closeness and distance and a balancing act between fiction and reality.
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Everyman and I

Jedermann und Ich
Katharina Pethke
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
65 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English, German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing

Is it possible to get close to someone who sees their sole task in life in losing themself in the parts they play? How can a film portrait be created when every image only contributes to further fictionalization? Who is facing each other when the line between fact and fiction becomes blurred? Katharina Pethke looks back to dissect the past and her contradictory feelings for the celebrated actor Philipp Hochmair, following the lines of her own artistic and personal doubts.

The magnificent black and white images guide the eye from the surfaces to the details, whose meaning the director probes and questions in her subjective, tentative voiceover. The film preserves the rawness of unfinished reflections without getting mired in vagueness. Step by step, the honest assessment of a desire is achieved; a desire which could function only in the delicate balance between attraction and repulsion and from which Katharina Pethke frees herself by adopting a position of artistic distance. Her sometimes self-mocking commentary is supported by dramatic guitar riffs (provided by Hochmair’s band project “Die Elektrohand Gottes”) and underpinned by filmic references, all of which revolve around the making of images and the relationship between reality and imagination.
Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Katharina Pethke
Cinematographer
Katharina Pethke
Editor
Katharina Pethke
Producer
Katharina Pethke
Co-Producer
Fünferfilm UG, Julia Cöllen, Frank Scheuffele, Karsten Krause
Sound
Clemens Endreß
Score
Die Elektrohand Gottes
German Competition 2021
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Head Fist Flag – Perspectives on the Thälmann Memorial
Betina Kuntzsch
Ten cinematic perspectives on a historical site: Ernst Thälmann Park in East Berlin. In 1986, an old gasworks made way for a housing estate – and a controversial monument.
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Head Fist Flag – Perspectives on the Thälmann Memorial

Kopf Faust Fahne – Perspektiven auf das Thälmanndenkmal
Betina Kuntzsch
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
47 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

For technical reasons – too massive! – this 50-ton bronze colossus was not demolished in 1993. Today it is listed as a historical monument, along with the associated housing estate. A relic from the old days: Today, the raised fist of the former German Communist Party leader and erstwhile GDR hero Ernst Thälmann in the Prenzlauer Berg park defies the collective forgetting of a not-so-long-ago past instead of heralding the victory of communism.

In 1986, an old municipal gasworks in East Berlin made way for a housing estate – and a monument that was controversial even then. Partly imagined, partly remembered and extensively researched throughout, Betina Kuntzsch assembles a complex narrative as part of her project “Vom Sockel Denken” about the Ernst-Thälmann-Memorial in Berlin: about a place full of history, viewed from ten different perspectives. In her omnibus film she skilfully uses various aesthetic and research tools. The successful combination of own footage, animation, archive material and oral history generates a kind of kaleidoscope, a gem of historiographic documentary-making and a parcours through a whole range of documentary film genres.
Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Betina Kuntzsch
Script
Betina Kuntzsch
Cinematographer
Sven Boeck, Martin Langner, Claire Roggan
Editor
Betina Kuntzsch
Producer
Maria Wischnewski
Sound
Michael Walz
Score
Joachim Gies
Animation
Betina Kuntzsch
German Competition 2021
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Los cuatro vientos
Anna-Sophia Richard
A region in the Dominican Republic lives on job migration, on money from afar. Impressions of estranged families in search of happiness – in dreamy images.
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Los cuatro vientos

Los cuatro vientos
Anna-Sophia Richard
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
98 minutes
English,
German,
Spanish
Subtitles: 
English

Almost every inhabitant of Fondo Negro has relatives abroad. Since the 1980s, job migration, meaning wages shared with the residents from afar, has been one of the most important sources of income in this region in the southwest of the Dominican Republic. Young women in particular go to Europe or the U.S. to support their families by unskilled labour. In her enchantingly beautiful film, director Anna-Sophia Richard shows how this affects the ones who stay behind.

When she set out on the journey to Europe, she didn’t know what to expect, says one of the seven people portrayed. It was as if she was going on a holiday: a holiday that’s now lasted more than thirty years. Others haven’t seen their families in over fifteen years, their only contact being by phone or video chat. The mayor of Fondo Negro, herself the first job migrant from the region, tries to keep the women in the village. But the pull of jobs elsewhere is powerful. What’s left are separated families, children who grow up without parents and couples who become estranged. Almost in passing, the director shows in colourful, dreamy images how provisional solutions manifest themselves and permanently shape the reality of people’s lives. Happiness is only an eight-hour flight away – and still unattainable.
Kim Busch

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Anna-Sophia Richard
Cinematographer
Jonas Schneider
Editor
Felix Schmerbeck, Anselm Koneffke, David Kuruc
Producer
Gerrit Klein, Adrian Goiginger
Co-Producer
Südwestrundfunk, Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg
Sound
Claudio Demel
Score
Berend Intelmann
Broadcaster
Marcus Vetter
German Competition 2021
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Nasim
Ole Jacobs, Arne Büttner
Sensitive and intimate portrait of an Afghan woman and her family in the Moria refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos – before and while the camp went up in flames.
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Nasim

Nasim
Ole Jacobs, Arne Büttner
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
120 minutes
Dari,
French,
Greek,
Persian (Farsi)
Subtitles: 
German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing, English

For eight months, Ole Jacobs’s and Arne Büttner’s film team followed the Afghan Nasim and her family in the Moria refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos, where at times 20,000 people had to live in a space designed for less than 3,000 people. This documentary observation shows with great empathy the daily life of the mother of two who time and again manages to deal impressively with the challenges of this unacceptable and extreme situation.

Nasim previously lived with her family in Iran, where she had already endured discrimination. Her marriage is broken; the camera gingerly captures the mute conflicts with her husband – glances tell everything. Nasim suffers from rheumatism and can hardly move her hands, but she finds loving words to explain this – to her own children and others from over the way. For a while, she even fills in for the school teacher who has left: “Today we will be painting …” She herself, however, is denied the understanding she always shows for others: Everyone around her thinks they know better what she needs. When the camp goes up in flames in September 2020, every hope of a better world seems lost. Nasim is left to fend for herself – but perhaps this new disaster is a chance in disguise.
Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Ole Jacobs, Arne Büttner
Cinematographer
Arne Büttner
Editor
Janina Herhoffer
Producer
Ray Peter Maletzki, Ayla Güney, Stephan Helmut Beier
Co-Producer
Ole Jacobs, Arne Büttner
Sound
Ole Jacobs, Azadeh Zandieh
Performer
Nasima Tajik
Winner of: DEFA Sponsoring Prize, ver.di Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness
German Competition 2021
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Dust of Modern Life
Franziska von Stenglin
Liem lives in one of the remote regions of Vietnam and belongs to the ethnic minority of the Sedang. Together with friends he sets out into the jungle, on the trail of his ancestors.
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Dust of Modern Life

Pa va hêng
Franziska von Stenglin
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
France,
Germany
2021
82 minutes
Sedang,
Vietnamese
Subtitles: 
English

Liem belongs to the ethnic minority of the Sedang and lives in a remote region of Vietnam. The observing camera succinctly sketches a daily routine that’s marked more by surviving than by living. With his friends, he prepares for an expedition into the jungle, where the young men want to take time out, continue the tradition of their ancestors, become hunters and gatherers. The more twisting their paths, the deeper the film seems to enter into a different sphere.

We get to know Liem doing everyday activities. Carrying the baby in a sling, he cooks, hangs out the laundry, goes to the field. The giant loudspeakers fixed to the streetlights fill his village with official news and advertising. In his stilt house, Liem prefers to listen to Vietnamese pop music. Soon we feel the rhythm, the unique beat of this life. When Liem and his friends set out in rubber sandals and carrying backpacks, the camera follows close behind, takes their perspective. Shot on Super 16, the film captures the green tones of the Vietnamese Central Highlands, the images develop a mesmerizing depth. The rustling of leaves, the buzzing of insects, birdsong and permanent rain come together in a melodious soundscape. Suddenly time seems to stand still, the separation between screen and auditorium is lifted.
Anke Leweke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Franziska von Stenglin
Cinematographer
Lucie Baudinaud
Editor
Zuniel Kim, Marylou Vergez
Producer
Lucas Tothe, Franziska von Stenglin
Co-Producer
Cinegrell, Umlaut Films
Sound
Christian Wittmoser, Nguyen Ngoc Tân
Score
Thomas Höhl
German Competition 2021
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Reality Must Be Addressed
Johanna Seggelke
When you meet your twin soul at the other end of the world but the fascination does not survive the transfer to everyday life … An intoxicatingly raw coming-of-age story.
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Reality Must Be Addressed

Reality Must Be Addressed
Johanna Seggelke
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
53 minutes
English,
German
Subtitles: 
English

“I have found out that there ain’t no surer way to find out whether you like people or hate them than to travel with them.” Even though Sky and Johanna definitely did not have this quote by Mark Twain in mind, it’s written in the stars of the two young women’s journey through South Africa. A chance acquaintance turns into a relationship that shimmers in all the colours of love. Between Marmite toasts, joints, selfies and music they explore each other inside out. But what happens when the journey ends?

In this deeply personal piece, filmmaker Johanna Seggelke chooses a very different approach to its predecessor, “Bibi Must Go” from 2020. She questions herself, her feelings and memories and almost casually unfolds an enchanting coming-of-age story about a love that emerges and fades in the seemingly endless summer. With a light hand, the film maintains the delicate balance between shimmering beauty and incidentality and manages to make the complicated dialectics of intimacy and strangeness palpable. The outstanding montage interweaves feathery holiday videos with an extraordinary score and the director’s sometimes wonderfully quirky, sometimes wise reflections. A delightfully direct film which preserves the rough edges of the moment and at the same time tries to outwit the undeceivability of one’s own emotions – at least for the time it takes to smoke a cigarette.
Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Johanna Seggelke
Cinematographer
Vi R. Spengler, Johanna Seggelke
Editor
Marie Zrenner
Producer
Johanna Seggelke, Kerstin Zachau, University of Television and Film Munich (HFF)
Sound
Cornelia Böhm
Score
Silvius Sonvilla
Winner of: Young Eyes Film Award
German Competition 2021
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Time Before Land
Juliane Henrich
The director – or more precisely, her alter ego – sets out in search of traces of her family history in Silesia. What she finds are dinosaurs. Including a few made of plastic.
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Time Before Land

Vor Zeit
Juliane Henrich
German Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
80 minutes
German,
Polish
Subtitles: 
German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing, English

Silesia: a contested region marked by migrations. Animosities between the peoples have a long tradition here, not only since the Second World War. But the National Socialist tyranny left clear lesions behind. The director’s grandfather comes from this region, was the organist in a church in Krasiejów – a place which was once also called Krascheow and, for a while, Schönhorst.

The filmmaker Juliane Henrich – or more precisely, her alter ego, the writer Nannina Matz – sets out in search of her family history. What she finds are bizarre ways of representing the history of humanity – and the history of earth. She comes across all kinds of traces of dinosaurs. Some may only be made of plastic, but others are not: A certain species of this genus, whose fossils were found in Silesia, was christened “Silesaurus opolensis” by the Polish palaeontologist Jerzy Dzik. That’s why there is a Dinosaur Park in Krasiejów. And a local museum, of course. But also many people with different individual memories. They do not necessarily lead to ground-breaking discoveries regarding the looked-for family past, but they broaden the view: of the complex history of this region and the way it is thought together, represented and codified.
Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Juliane Henrich
Script
Juliane Henrich
Cinematographer
Juliane Henrich
Editor
Juliane Henrich
Producer
Juliane Henrich, Thomas Kaske
Sound
Tom Schön, Kate Tessa Lee
Score
Benedikt Schiefer
World Sales
Angelika Ramlow
Funder
BKM
Performer
Nannina Matz