Film Archive

Doc Alliance Award 2023
Filmstill 07:15 – Blackbird
07:15 – Blackbird
Judith Auffray
In a cabin in the forest, Jean and Mana listen to various animal species and catalogue voice recordings. When they hear unfamiliar sounds, their curiosity to uncover a secret is aroused.
Filmstill 07:15 – Blackbird

07:15 – Blackbird

7h15 – merle noir
Judith Auffray
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Documentary Film
France
2021
30 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

The setting and cast of characters seem like the prelude to an unusual fairy-tale. An elderly man, a hermit living in a remote cabin, is visited by a young woman, almost a girl, who can understand and imitate the language of birds. Deep in the forest, Jean and Mana record and catalogue the calls of the different species day by day, night by night. But then they hear the voice of an unknown animal and set out to find it.

The focus is on birdcalls and their classification. But instead of making the meticulous analysis of sound events look like a quirky hobby, the film inspires us to listen closely. The two scientists’ unperturbed curiosity is catching, and as we watch, we are gradually infected not just with their enthusiasm for their object of research but also with their childlike desire to discover a secret.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Judith Auffray
Script
Judith Auffray
Cinematographer
Mario Valero, Raimon Gaffier
Editor
Judith Auffray
Producer
François Bonenfant, Luc-Jérôme Bailleul
Co-Producer
Gaël Teicher
Sound
Stéphane Debien, Kilian Fanget
-
Joséphine Auffray, Victor Auffray
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Filmstill Adjusting
Adjusting
Dejan Petrović
An animal shelter in Serbia, a trainer working with the mixed-breed mutt Vanja. This study about the training of an endearing dog transcends itself and asks: What is freedom?
Filmstill Adjusting

Adjusting

Prilagođeni
Dejan Petrović
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Documentary Film
Serbia
2021
19 minutes
Serbian
Subtitles: 
English

An overcrowded dog shelter in Serbia. It’s hard to see how many animals are kept here behind wire mesh in desolate kennels. They are cared for and trained by prison inmates who are shown doing their job without further comment or explanation. However, the camera never focuses on the men’s faces. Observations take place at eye-level with the dogs. Especially shaggy Vanja and his training progress are at the centre of Dejan Petrović’s short study of freedom. The uniform, concentrated shots leave plenty of space for questions, above all whether this (dog’s) life is really unfree or whether the desire for freedom must take a backseat under these circumstances, since there is a roof over one’s head and a task that fills the day. While we are still thinking about this, Vanja with his alert eyes and engaging nature has already found a place – not just in the heart of his initially rather dismissive trainer.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dejan Petrović
Script
Dejan Petrović
Cinematographer
Dragan Vildović
Editor
Aleksandar Uhrin, Aleksandar Popović
Producer
Dejan Petrović
Co-Producer
Ivica Vidanović
Sound
Nikola Cvijanović
Sound Design
Nikola Cvijanović
Score
Vojin Ristivojević
World Sales
Wouter Jansen
Filmstill Disturbed Earth

Disturbed Earth

Disturbed Earth
Kumjana Novakova, Guillermo Carreras-Candi
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Documentary Film
Spain,
Bosnia & Herzegovina,
North Macedonia
2021
71 minutes
Bosnian,
English
Subtitles: 
English

Trucks crawl along the road, decorated with garlands of flowers, loaded with the mortal remains of people who were murdered at the Srebrenica massacre. The bereaved receive the coffins to bury the only recently exhumed and identified dead in the sprawling cemetery of the city which also doubles as a memorial. This is the overwhelming opening of a film that goes on to concentrate on three of the few survivors of this mass murder which claimed the lives of thousands, mainly men and boys, within a few days in that small town in Bosnia and Herzegovina in July 1995.

Srećko returned and now lives in the woods on a hill above the town. Mirza escaped by wandering through the mountains for days and now resides again with his wife in their old house. Mejra has lost her husband and sons and, aged 85 now, still supports herself only from her field. Their quietly observed everyday activities alternate with poignant archive material which shows the inconceivable events in minute detail. Shaky and blurry videos contrast with clear images of fieldwork and an enchantingly innocent nature. The past still weighs heavily, but the tenacity of the human spirit in bearing up under the most horrific circumstances emerges.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Kumjana Novakova, Guillermo Carreras-Candi
Cinematographer
Kumjana Novakova, Guillermo Carreras-Candi
Editor
Jelena Maksimović
Producer
Guillermo Carreras-Candi, Kumjana Novakova
Sound Design
Oriol Gallart
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Filmstill Kristina
Kristina
Nikola Spasić
Transwoman Kristina earns her living as a sex worker. She arranges her life serenely and well-ordered, independent of the peculiarities of her profession. A semi-fictional documentary.
Filmstill Kristina

Kristina

Kristina
Nikola Spasić
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Documentary Film
Serbia
2022
90 minutes
Serbian
Subtitles: 
English

Director Nikola Spasić explains in an interview that in this film he was interested in the fluid boundaries between documentary and fiction, and that he found the perfect protagonist in Kristina: someone with an interesting personal story who can also act. And so she plays herself, Kristina, a transsexual sex worker in Serbia. She lives alone with her cat in a beautiful old house, collects antiques and practices ikebana on the terrace of her garden. She meets friends, visits a cloister, lives her religion, arranges a crucifix.

This idyll is regularly interrupted by the obtrusive ringtone of her work mobile. But the meeting with the client who appears at her door a short while later is well-orchestrated and no contradiction to Kristina’s elegant, graceful and serene existence, which she shapes according to her own ideas. All in all, these flawlessly framed and composed tableaus have an element of transcendence. But with his aesthetic directing, Spasić emphasises the incontrovertible freedom of this modern woman whom he captures in a portrait that is both intimate and daring.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Nikola Spasić
Script
Milanka Gvoic
Cinematographer
Igor Lazić
Editor
Nikola Spasić
Producer
Nikola Spasić, Milanka Gvoic
Co-Producer
Igor Lazić
Sound
Đorđe Stevanović
Sound Design
Đorđe Stevanović
Score
Đorđe Stevanović
Animation
Milanka Gvoic
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Filmstill Silent Sun of Russia
Silent Sun of Russia
Sybilla Tuxen
The film follows three young Russian women after the attack on Ukraine. Stay or leave? A haunting look at a generation in today’s Russia and their lives on the go.
Filmstill Silent Sun of Russia

Silent Sun of Russia

Vi er Rusland
Sybilla Tuxen
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Documentary Film
Denmark
2023
71 minutes
Russian,
Georgian,
Spanish,
English
Subtitles: 
English

Alyona, Alik and Katya belong to a generation of young Russian women who demand what they are not allowed. They are part of a global youth that dreams of self-determination and freedom. Sybilla Tuxen followed her protagonists between 2018 and 2022, up to the time of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, when the three young women find themselves in a new reality. Now more than ever, they are rebelling against Putin’s state and have since lived life on the go.

One of them has made it to Georgia, another goes to Spain, while the third stays at home. They keep in touch by smartphone and social media. One hears from their conversations that they, like many others, don’t believe that political engagement can change anything. Their resistance rather consists in leading modern and western lives in which gender, sexuality, pop music and identity issues play important roles. Tuxen’s darkly poetic debut film is set in nocturnal cars, flats and backyards. The transit in which the three find themselves becomes physically tangible. Their stories allow us rare glimpses into an almost invisible side of today’s Russia and the complexity of lived contradiction.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Sybilla Tuxen
Cinematographer
Sybilla Tuxen
Editor
Enis Saraçi
Producer
Rikke Tambo Andersen, Maria Møller Christoffersen
Sound Design
Mathias Dehn Middelhart
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Filmstill waking up in silence
waking up in silence
Mila Zhluktenko, Daniel Asadi Faezi
Once German barracks, now accommodation for refugees: Ukrainian children practice a new language, explore strange rooms. A shimmering summer moment between leaving and arriving.
Filmstill waking up in silence

waking up in silence

waking up in silence
Mila Zhluktenko, Daniel Asadi Faezi
Doc Alliance Award 2023
Documentary Film
Germany,
Ukraine
2023
17 minutes
Ukrainian,
English,
Russian
Subtitles: 
English

The calls of the swifts fill the air. A sound that is the epitome of summer. The sun shines down on a chunky building. Surrounded by this shimmering and seemingly carefree atmosphere, children practice German vocabulary, explore empty rooms, and draw with chalk on the ground in front of the house. But not playground designs like hopscotch. Again and again, they write on the curb: “Putin, stop killing people.”

A former Wehrmacht barracks, later used by the U.S. army, this bright yellow complex now serves as accommodation for refugees from Ukraine. The directing duo’s poetic film captures an instant in the lives of these youngsters: a short and yet decisive moment between two worlds, one of them already left behind, not quite arrived yet in the other and a vague future in sight.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Mila Zhluktenko, Daniel Asadi Faezi
Script
Mila Zhluktenko, Daniel Asadi Faezi
Cinematographer
Tobias Blickle
Editor
Mila Zhluktenko, Daniel Asadi Faezi
Producer
Mila Zhluktenko, Daniel Asadi Faezi
Co-Producer
Andrii Kotliar
Sound
Kristina Kilian
Sound Design
Daniel Asadi Faezi, Andrew Mottl
Score
Anton Baibakov
World Sales
Wouter Jansen