Film Archive

Jahr

Camera Lucida 2024
Filmstill Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty
Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty
Lukas Marxt, Vanja Smiljanić
The Salton Sea, a former nuclear testing ground on the brink of ecological collapse. The few people who still live here are campaigning to protect the abandoned area.
Filmstill Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty

Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty

Among the Palms the Bomb, Or: Looking for Reflections in the Toxic Field of Plenty
Lukas Marxt, Vanja Smiljanić
Camera Lucida 2024
Documentary Film
Austria,
Germany
2024
86 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

Where the sandy beach of the Salton Sea, the biggest lake in California, begins to crunch harder, it does not even consist of sand any more: Millions of dead fish, plants and insects pile up on the shore to form a highly toxic substance. This is how Derek explains it, a member of a Cahuilla tribe that managed to escape an attempted genocide in the 19th century to the Salton Sea and now sees itself as a protective force for the once flourishing but increasingly deserted area and its outcasts.
Derek is one of the many locals whose trails Lukas Marxt and Vanja Smiljanić calmly follow, gliding with them through the desolate landscapes. In the process, they pick up slivers of nuclear history time and again: During the Second World War, the area was a test site for the bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The experiments continued through the Cold War; the armed forces are still training here. The film finds its starting point and end two states away: The nuclear devices were sent on their way from Wendover, Utah. The local Airfield Museum pays tribute to their development. Once, the camera performs an almost weightless dance around a model of the Hiroshima bomb “Little Boy” on display there, to the sounds of the indestructible World War classic “We’ll Meet Again.”

Felix Mende

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Lukas Marxt, Vanja Smiljanić
Cinematographer
Lukas Marxt
Editor
Vanja Smiljanić, Lukas Marxt
Producer
Lukas Marxt
Co-Producer
Sonic Acts Biennial
Sound Design
Marcus Zilz
Score
Jung An Tagen
World Sales
Gerald Weber
Camera Lucida 2024
Filmstill Lapilli
Lapilli
Paula Ďurinová
After the death of her grandparents, the director finds an expression for her grief in surreal rock and landscape formations. An associative, free-floating tour of inspection.
Filmstill Lapilli

Lapilli

Lapilli
Paula Ďurinová
Camera Lucida 2024
Documentary Film
Slovakia,
Germany
2024
65 minutes
Slovak
Subtitles: 
English

Surreal formations, stalactites, rocks moulded by water and poisonous bubbling. The images that turn into an exploration of her own soul for Paula Ďurinová seem like a dream landscape. Grief plays a key role – Ďurinová’s grandparents both died during the Covid pandemic. She looks for them between the gases and fumes, dives through a body of water that has ceased to exist but in whose cool freshness her grandfather once bathed his feet and across which she used to swim with her grandmother.
“Lapilli” works in an associative and abstract way. At the same time, the minerals recovered by Ďurinová have something very concrete about them: compressed, buckled and broken, sharp-edged, corroded or gently polished. At one point, the director compares herself to a stone detached from its rock, questioning and without orientation, drifting around: “I don’t feel the ground anymore.” “Lapilli” leaves no doubt that feelings of pain and helplessness can harbour greater strength, but also a very special poetry and beauty. The interplay with an organic experimental soundscape opens up an intimate, almost universal experience.

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Paula Ďurinová
Script
Paula Ďurinová, Dane Komljen, Tamara Antonijević
Cinematographer
Paula Ďurinová
Editor
Paula Ďurinová, Deniz Şimşek
Producer
Matej Sotník, Viera Čákanyová
Co-Producer
Paula Ďurinová
Sound
Paula Ďurinová
Sound Design
Agnese Menguzzato, Paula Ďurinová
Score
Petra Hermanova
Nominated for: MDR Film Prize
Camera Lucida 2022
Filmstill Mamani in El Alto
Mamani in El Alto
Heinz Emigholz
The Neo-Andean architecture of Freddy Mamani Sylvestre, influenced by indigenous culture, adorns the Bolivian city of El Alto. A psychoactive inspection at 4,000 metres above sea level.
Filmstill Mamani in El Alto

Mamani in El Alto

Mamani in El Alto
Heinz Emigholz
Camera Lucida 2022
Documentary Film
Germany
2022
95 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

As a pioneer of Neo-Andean architecture, Freddy Mamani Silvestre attracts attention far beyond the borders of Bolivia. His non-conformist designs are influenced by the culture of the Aymara, the biggest ethnical group in the country, echoing their myths and patterns. Buildings constructed between 2008 and 2021 are circled, inspected and captured, in part 35 of the ongoing series “Photography and beyond”.

Like giant jewels, the Cholets rise into the sky above the Bolivian city of El Alto, at 4,000 metres above sea level. Cholets, a neologism created from chalet and Cholo, the local term for indigenous people, are the creations of architect Freddy Mamani Silvestre, born in 1971. Several dozen buildings designed by him adorn the otherwise fairly unglamorous city otherwise mainly dominated by raw red brick. Mamani’s built fantasies, on the other hand, are striking, arrogant and bold. Snakes seem to be slithering up their facades, scattered diamonds cling to the glazing and occasionally the whole thing is crowned by a stand-alone residential building. But the Cholets are mainly used for festivities, because they house the so-called “salones de eventos”. Emigholz unlocks psychoactive places that evoke the interior of pinball machines and, in their confident splendour, triumph over the richer neighbouring city of La Paz.
Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Heinz Emigholz
Script
Heinz Emigholz
Cinematographer
Heinz Emigholz, Till Beckmann
Editor
Till Beckmann, Heinz Emigholz
Producer
Frieder Schlaich, Irene von Alberti
Sound
Ueli Etter, Christian Obermaier, Jochen Jezussek
Score
Andreas Reihse
World Sales
Frieder Schlaich
Camera Lucida 2022
Filmstill Salamone, Pampa
Salamone, Pampa
Heinz Emigholz
Concrete hubris looms over the Argentinean pampa around Buenos Aires. The buildings of Francisco Salamone (1897–1959) advertise a pitiless modern age.
Filmstill Salamone, Pampa

Salamone, Pampa

Salamone, Pampa
Heinz Emigholz
Camera Lucida 2022
Documentary Film
Germany
2022
62 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

Slaughterhouses with concrete blades on top, monumental cemetery gates in the plains: Architect Francisco Salamone (1897–1959) shaped the image of the Argentinean pampa around Buenos Aires. In part 34 of his “Photography and beyond” series, Heinz Emigholz once more probes architecture for biographical traces. Salamone, who immigrated from Sicily as a child, realised his ideas between 1936 and 1940, when Mussolini’s Italy re-discovered architecture as an ideological craft.

Axes seem to be buried in the façade of the Coronel Pringles city hall. Elsewhere, stone tree fungi grow. And in front of the Saldungaray cemetery, viewed from the rear, a giant pancake or satellite dish forms, while in front the head of a suffering Jesus protrudes from the concrete. Monumental designs, occasionally incorporating elements of Art Deco or Italian Futurism, towering in the sky and advertising importance. Francisco Salamone worked in the years of the “Década infame”, that infamous decade followed shortly afterwards by the presidency of Juan Perón. The buildings seem inhospitable and full of hubris. They are supposed to herald modernity and progress and yet loomed terrifyingly over the peasantry of the country. Heinz Emigholz documents these intimidating buildings from every conceivable angle.
Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Heinz Emigholz
Script
Heinz Emigholz
Cinematographer
Heinz Emigholz, Till Beckmann
Editor
Till Beckmann, Heinz Emigholz
Producer
Irene von Alberti, Frieder Schlaich
Sound
Esteban Bellotto, Christian Obermaier, Jochen Jezussek
World Sales
Frieder Schlaich
Camera Lucida 2024
Filmstill The Garden Cadences
The Garden Cadences
Dane Komljen
What will become of the Mollies’ trailer site? It is the last summer for the queer-feminist model of life at Berlin’s Ostkreuz before the site is due to be cleared.
Filmstill The Garden Cadences

The Garden Cadences

The Garden Cadences
Dane Komljen
Camera Lucida 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
2024
62 minutes
German,
English,
Finnish,
Serbian
Subtitles: 
English

Lazy and yet insistent, summer knocks on the doors of a Berlin trailer park. Right next to the busy Ostkreuz intersection, this settlement stands in the way of the hectic hustle and bustle of the capital. A green oasis. This summer, among the plants and trees in full bloom and fruit, wild shrubs and lovingly improvised dwellings, Aalo, Jone, Royce, Noah, Kï, Neo, Marlek and Steffen must begin to say goodbye to their cozy home. Liberated from the heteronormative conventions of society, the Mollies collective has for years lived a queer-feminist counter lifestyle here.
Dane Komljen manages with great calm to make this hard-won free space tangible, to capture it as a momentum pointing beyond its own duration – even though the eviction has been long in coming. Building cranes rise to the sky behind the green walls, sounds of demolition come closer, the rattling of trains, the sirens of ambulances mingle with the busy humming of the many insects. What lies in store for the inhabitants is left open. But autumn is bound to come and when the leaves fall, the site will fall victim to the city’s development plans. Another space of possibility for alternative lifestyles disappears.

Jana Kraft

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dane Komljen
Script
Dane Komljen
Cinematographer
Dane Komljen
Editor
Dane Komljen
Producer
Zsuzsanna Kiràly
Sound Design
Jakov Munižaba
German Distributor
Zsuzsanna Kiràly