Film Archive

Filmstill Johnny & Me

Johnny & Me

Johnny & Me
Katrin Rothe
International Competition Animated Film 2023
Animated Film
Germany,
Switzerland,
Austria
2023
100 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

As she visits an exhibition, a graphic designer is mesmerised by the photocollages of the anti-fascist John Heartfield, who became known as the “montage dada.” Stefanie falls through a vortex of paper and photo snippets into an old-fashioned looking studio. A pair of scissors – an analogue tool she herself hardly uses – attracts her attention. She begins to cut a figure out of cardboard, a miniature version of the artist who at once addresses her and explores his life and works with her. The studio turns out to be a living archive that ceaselessly produces documents and information about Johnny. The research gives Stefanie, stressed and disappointed by her job, new motivation, and the courage to choose a different path as a designer.

Both protagonists have the same profession and find themselves facing the same questions about the significance and recognition of their work. Both are struggling in their own way with frustration and fears, caused by the different social and political circumstances of their generations. The different elements of this animated documentary come together in a dialogic collage that reflects on the mission of art, its educative and critical power, and its potential to bring about changes in our society.

Franka Sachse

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Katrin Rothe
Script
Katrin Rothe
Cinematographer
Thomas Eirich-Schneider, Richard Marx, Manon Pichón
Editor
Hannes Starz
Producer
Gunter Hanfgarn, Andrea Ufer, Ralph Wieser, Sereina Gabathuler, Werner Schweizer
Co-Producer
Rolf Bergmann, Carolin Mayer, Gabriela Bloch Steinmann
Sound
Stephanie Stremler, Manuel Harder, Michael Hatzius, Dorothee Carls
Sound Design
Lukas Brandes
Score
Micha Kaplan, Thomas Mävers
Animation
Lydia Günther, Caroline Hamann, Tonina Matamalas, Anne-Sophie Raemy, Benjamin Swiczinsky
World Sales
Elina Kewitz
German Distributor
Joachim Kühn
Artistic Design
Amelie Couchet, Malte Stein, Lisa Neubauer, Wolf Matzl, Birgit Scholin, Rosanne Janssens, Jonatan Schwenk, Kerstin Zemp, Werner Kernebeck, Gyula Szabó, Cornelia Freche, Lisa Sinram, Theresa Grysczok, Mandy Müller, Melanie Hauff, Edoardo Pasquini, Cornelia Diomis
Filmstill Loving in Between

Loving in Between

Loving in Between
Jyoti Mistry
International Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Austria,
South Africa
2023
18 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

“Folks, I’m telling you, birthing is hard and dying is mean – so get yourself a little loving in between.” This advice of the African-American civil rights activist and jazz poet Langston Hughes precedes Jyoti Mistry’s found footage storm of images and runs like a guiding line through the archive material, a panopticon of revelries: parties, boxing matches, visits to the beach and above all, time and again, testimonies of lived queer sexuality. Sometimes clandestine, sometimes quite public.

Mistry mirrors the uninhibitedness of her sources in the way she arranges them – not neatly staggered but boldly mixed. The associative editing often virtually leaps into the images, linking them with purple colour explosions and three-dimensional animations of shoals of fish. On the soundtrack, a spoken word performance joins multi-channel dubbed noises and countless variations of the jazz standard “Diga Diga Doo.” This is how the film wrests its testimonies from the past and returns them to their inherent liveliness and transgressive explosive power.

Felix Mende

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jyoti Mistry
Script
Jyoti Mistry, Napo Masheane, Kgafela oa Magogodi
Editor
Nikki Comninos
Producer
Florian Schattauer
Sound Design
Peter Cornell
Score
Nishlyn Ramanna
Animation
The Kinetic
World Sales
Gerald Weber
Filmstill The Standstill

The Standstill

Stillstand
Nikolaus Geyrhalter
International Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Austria
2023
137 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

The film opens with the image of an elderly individual in a hospital, hooked to a machine: assistance is needed to slowly breathe in and out. This existential moment of physical precariousness is followed by Nikolaus Geyrhalter’s typical long shots, though in this case they do not document work processes but look like a prequel to his fantastic science fiction documentary “Homo Sapiens” (2016): deserted airports, swimming pools, playgrounds.

The filmmaker sets out with his identifiable aesthetic tools to tackle the documentation of the first three waves of the Covid-19 pandemic, from March 2020 to December 2021. In Vienna, a major city with a relatively well-functioning health system, he looks at institutions that are in a “flexible learning mode”: intensive care units, emergency shelters, schools, cinemas. Time and again he visits a flower shop that is not system-relevant but, by its own definition, sells food. Lockdown followed by eased restrictions followed by lockdown. The camera registers how paralysis in the face of a natural disaster is superseded in some people by anger at the restrictions. Meanwhile, cases of Long Covid are being treated in the hospitals. Topical, only a little later, these images cut across the repression of what has been experienced.

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Nikolaus Geyrhalter
Cinematographer
Nikolaus Geyrhalter
Editor
Gernot Grassl
Producer
Nikolaus Geyrhalter, Michael Kitzberger, Wolfgang Widerhofer, Markus Glaser
Sound
Sergey Martynyuk, Lenka Mikulova
Sound Design
Nora Czamler, Manuel Meichsner
World Sales
Andrea Hock
Nominated for: FIPRESCI Prize, Prize of the Interreligious Jury
Audience Competition 2023
Filmstill Vista Mare
Vista Mare
Florian Kofler, Julia Gutweniger
Surrealist observations at the Italian Adriatic, where seasonal workers toil for the holidaymakers. An unvarnished look behind the façade of the “carefree” beach holiday.
Filmstill Vista Mare

Vista Mare

Vista Mare
Florian Kofler, Julia Gutweniger
Audience Competition 2023
Documentary Film
Austria,
Italy
2023
80 minutes
Italian
Subtitles: 
German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing, English

Over the course of a season, the film follows the many manual operations behind the façade of a “carefree” beach holiday. A seaside resort, artificially constructed on Italy’s Adriatic coast, is the setting of this stoically surrealist observation. In the hotels’ canteen kitchens, meals are prepared without pause; sun loungers and umbrellas are put up in endless rows on the beach, illuminated letters polished to perfection. The holiday production workers are busy around the clock, tirelessly working in the name of the ultimate diversion. The goal: The guests are to regenerate in the best possible way and waste no thought on the conditions behind the scenes.

Even if everything here seems to revolve around the best time of the year, there is an obvious contradiction at the centre of the film. We see people whose job it is to amuse those who in turn are trying to recover from their jobs. An absurd undertaking, sure. The images of a demonstration for better working conditions disturb the perfect machinery only briefly. Rather, the march of this nameless army of employees looks like a staged and well-controlled break from a never-ending cycle. For if they do not do it, dozens of others are already standing by to secure a meagre income in the giant business of tourism.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Florian Kofler, Julia Gutweniger
Script
Julia Gutweniger, Florian Kofler
Cinematographer
Julia Gutweniger
Editor
Florian Kofler, Julia Gutweniger
Producer
Bernhard Holzhammer, Victor Kössl
Co-Producer
Debora Nischler, Wilfried Gufler
Sound
Florian Kofler
Sound Design
Florian Kofler
Score
Gabriela Gordillo
World Sales
Michaela Čajková
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