Film Archive

Retrospective 2023
Filmstill Birth of Solidarity
Birth of Solidarity
Bohdan Kosiński
The authorities decide on the future of Solidarność, the masses protest in the streets. A general strike is in the air. For a moment, political change seems possible.
Filmstill Birth of Solidarity

Birth of Solidarity

Narodziny Solidarności
Bohdan Kosiński
Retrospective 2023
Documentary Film
Poland
1981
29 minutes
Polish
Subtitles: 
English

While the communist authorities decide the conditions for an official registration of the Solidarność movement inside, the masses demonstrate in front of the court outside. A contemporary document of the moment when the power of the people seemed to make a lasting cultural opening no longer just a promise but a possibility. At the time, “undesirable” at the Leipzig festival.

Katharina Franck, Andreas Kötzing

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Bohdan Kosiński
Script
Bohdan Kosiński
Cinematographer
Michał Bukojemski
Editor
Lidia Zonn
Producer
Wytwórnia Filmów Dokumentalnych
Sound
Małgorzata Rok, Jan Kalisz
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Bless You!

Zdrastvuyte!
Tatiana Chistova
Competition for the Audience Award Short Film 2020
Documentary Film
Poland
2020
30 minutes
Russian
Subtitles: 
English

Against the backdrop of Saint Petersburg’s back courtyards during the Corona lockdown, Tatyana Chistova fuses recordings of the almost empty city and calls to a municipal hotline tasked with offering help and advice, but topics range from the banal to existential questions. Elderly people in particular are affected by poverty, hunger and loneliness. Chistova highlights that in a system that neglects its weakest members, the virus is not the only threat.

Kim Busch

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Tatiana Chistova
Script
Maciek Hamela
Cinematographer
Marina Levashova
Editor
Tatiana Chistova
Producer
Maciek Hamela
Score
Patryk Zakrocki
World Sales
Georg Gruber
Filmstill Blue

Blue

Jestem błękitem
Weronika Szyma
Panorama: Central and Eastern Europe 2023
Animated Film
Poland
2023
7 minutes
Polish
Subtitles: 
English

The sea on whose shore Weronika Szyma has set her film is a dense, pulsating blue. The beach and the family who are staying there, meanwhile, are limited to delicate black and white line drawings. Their minimalism makes the blue stand out all the more enchantingly: Sometimes represented as a horizontal strip that promises freedom but also fuels insecurity. Sometimes sloshing diagonally across the screen, swallowing up the image completely for a brief moment and marking a caesura. And there are quite a number of caesuras, because the seven film minutes span the story of several generations.

At one point the father disappears and the mother and her almost grown-up daughter are left to fend for themselves. They learn to comprehend the loss, support each other, turn gestures of distance into gestures of affection. Until the confidence grows to start all over again. The only thing that does not change here is the blue of the sea.

Felix Mende

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Weronika Szyma
Script
Weronika Szyma
Editor
Filip Dziuba
Producer
Piotr Furmankiewicz, Mateusz Michalak
Co-Producer
Weronika Szyma
Sound
Tomasz Sierpiński
Animation
Weronika Szyma
International Competition 2021
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Bucolic
Karol Pałka
Country life as presented by Karol Pałka is not exactly romantic: two women, a ramshackle house, the ground wet, the clothes dirty. An unconventional visit to a wasteland.
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Bucolic

Bukolika
Karol Pałka
International Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Poland
2021
70 minutes
Polish
Subtitles: 
German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing, English

Danusia and Basia are a mother and daughter, sharing a life presented by director Karol Pałka as supremely secluded. Far removed from any comfort, the seasons pass, a priest comes to visit, the women wade through mud and cultivate their habits. But, unnoticed by Danusia, Basia moves on a few back roads of her own that lead in other directions.

The nearest town seems light years away. Danusia and her daughter Basia lead a reclusive life in a ramshackle house in the country. The rooms are decorated with flower arrangements, scattered with devotional objects. Mother and daughter cultivate their connection to the supernatural, either in the shape of a strict Catholicism or as small rituals in nature. In one scene Basia dances around a fire like a witch. She is also the one who repeatedly seeks contact with the outside world. We see her with a mobile phone then, but the person at the other end remains intangible, unable or unwilling to break the spell around the mother-and-daughter team. It is a dense, almost deserted world which Karol Pałka in his debut film renders in gloomy, shadowed images that grow brighter only when spring comes. But even then, the dramatic opening piece “Specially for You” by the Ukrainian band DakhaBrakha still resonates.
Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Karol Pałka
Script
Karol Pałka
Cinematographer
Karol Pałka
Editor
Katarzyna Boniecka
Producer
Karolina Mróz, Wojciech Marczewski
Co-Producer
National Film Archive – Audiovisual Institute
Sound
Piotr Knop, Anna Rok
World Sales
Marcella Jelic
Winner of: Silver Dove (International Competition)
German Competition 2020
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Borderland
Andreas Voigt
Along the river Oder: Virulent questions about homeland and community, everyday life and politics, asked with confident casualness, provide an account of the present.
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Borderland

Grenzland
Andreas Voigt
German Competition 2020
Documentary Film
Germany,
Poland
2020
100 minutes
English,
German,
Polish
Subtitles: 
German

The river Oder: A historical and cultural landscape churned again and again by the tide of events of the past century. A tale told in concentric circles about a region which was and still is the scene of the beginning, end and open middle of voluntary and involuntary migrations. Virulent issues of daily life and politics that, asked with confident casualness, provide a robust account of the present.

Movements and stories in the border region between Poland and Germany – Andreas Voigt’s new film takes up the themes of his 1992 work “Borderland – A Journey”. The charged term “homeland” stirs up (trouble in) the minds and hearts of the people: What it once was and what has become of it! Sure, that’s not the top priority in their daily agenda. But how people appropriate this term and how that in turn structures their attitudes also determines how they figure out the taste of life in the here and now of Europe. The search for closeness is confronted with the insistence on distance. Communication about belonging becomes flimsy because the body language says something different than the spoken word. As a film that’s not about administering a politically correct separation diet, “Borderland” provokes experiences and enables encounters.
Ralph Eue

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Andreas Voigt
Cinematographer
Marcus Lenz, Maurice Wilkerling
Editor
Ina Tangermann
Producer
Barbara Etz, Kazimierz Beer, Klaus Schmutzer
Co-Producer
MDR Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk, RBB Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg
Sound
Gerhard Ziegler, Peter Carstens, METRIX
Commissioning Editor
Thomas Beyer, Rolf Bergmann
Funder
Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg GmbH, PISF, Poland Polish-German Film Fonds, Filmbüro MV, Nordmedia, Mitteldeutsche Medienförderung GmbH, BKM