Film Archive

Jahr

Media Name: 1baa59f8-b351-4f7c-ab5e-429c951253b3.jpg

Father

Ye ye he fu qin
Wei Deng
International Competition 2021
Documentary Film
China
2020
97 minutes
Chinese
Subtitles: 
English

“After I die, show your film at my funeral!” Zuogui, the director’s grandfather, is 86 years old and has been blind since childhood. Becoming a fortune teller was a way out of poverty for him. People are still coming to him for advice, including his son Donggu, a developer: “Dad, how is my fortune next year?” In his portrait of generations about his father and grandfather, Wei Deng depicts tradition and change, violence and alienation in Chinese society.

Pale greys and dim lights create an atmosphere that seems to correspond to the dark memories of famine, dead siblings and the violently enforced one-child policy. The camera stays close to the grandfather as he feels his way along the walls of his flat. Orienting himself in his own environment has become harder since Donggu had the old house torn down and a new one built. Zuogui has little use for the modern China that claims to stand for economic boom and prosperity. Only when another of his son’s developments, which the fortune teller had warned against, threatens to fail does affection between the two seem possible again.
Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Wei Deng
Cinematographer
Wei Deng
Editor
Wei Deng
Producer
Wei Deng
Nominated for: FIPRESCI Prize, Prize of the Interreligious Jury
Winner of: Golden Dove (International Competition)
Filmstill Under the Sun

Under the Sun

Documentary Film
Germany,
North Korea,
Russia,
Czech Republic
2015
110 minutes
Subtitles: 
English

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Producer
Natalya Manskaya, Simone Baumann, Filip Remunda
Director
Vitaly Mansky
Music
Kārlis Auzāns
Cinematographer
Alexandra Ivanova, Mikhail Gorobchuk
Editor
Andrej Paperny
Script
Vitaly Mansky
Sound
Evgeniya Lachina, Anrijs Krenbergs
North Korea wants to be the best of all possible worlds. Everything and everyone is taken care off. Pyongyang is a clean, modern metropolis. 8-year-old Zin-mi, who is at the centre of this film, takes us through the stations of a happy childhood: becoming a member of the pioneer organisation, brisk flag ceremonies, enough food and always a song in praise of the Great Leader Kim Jong-un on her lips.

Russian-Ukrainian director Vitaly Mansky got the official permission to document the ordinary life of the city and country for one year. He knows that he is being instrumentalised and simply turns the tables by exposing how the presentations and arrangements are fabricated. His official minder proves to be a real “co-director”. So it’s the apparent details and minor matters Mansky asks us to discover. They offer insights into a well-trained and dulled society. Though we feel like we’re in “1984”, Mansky has come neither as a voyeur nor as a cynic. His camera is looking for the human element behind the mask of the official bulletins: a yawn or a moment of insecurity in this land of the ever-rising sun.

Cornelia Klauß