Film Archive

Filmstill Death Does Not Exist

Death Does Not Exist

La mort n’existe pas
Félix Dufour-Laperrière
International Competition Animated Film 2025
Animated Film
Canada,
France
2025
72 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

When Marc confesses his love to his girlfriend Hélène, all she answers is “Later!” The timing of his confession could not be worse, as there is a whole other dimension to Hélène’s reply. Both belong to a group of activists who have just burned their mobile phones and tackled the ultimate important questions in the forest. Questions of fear, power, courage, loyalty, and doubts. Following this, they attack a rich and influential retired couple in their posh mansion, representing those guilty of the dilemma of this world in their eyes. The armed attack ends in a bloodbath. In the midst of the shootout, though, Hélène is struck with a strange kind of paralysis and soon afterwards sucked into the surrealistic maelstrom of a fatal second chance.
Canadian director and writer Félix Dufour-Laperrière says, he writes “with colours in mind, with transformations, dreamlike sequences, mental images that take shape on screen.” Hand-drawn templates unfold in a powerful symbolic 2D animation of flowing figures and silhouettes that neither shrinks from aggressively formulated messages nor from the exuberant magic of the format.

Andreas Körner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Félix Dufour-Laperrière
Producer
Nicolas Dufour-Laperrière
Animation
Félix Dufour-Laperrière
Filmstill God Is Shy

God Is Shy

Dieu est timide
Jocelyn Charles
International Competition Animated Film 2025
Animated Film
France
2025
15 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

The train ride is deadly boring. The landscape rushes past as a buzzing surrealist kaleidoscope of colours and Ariel and Paul pass the time by drawing their worst nightmares for each other. For Paul it is his mother swimming towards him on the open sea to drag him underwater, for Ariel it is the confrontation with a psychotic woman in the bathtub. What starts out as a game turns uncanny when fellow traveller Gilda joins them – and begins to tell them that the eeriest thing ever happened to her. She hypnotised her demented husband in his sleep. The one who answered her had been none other than God. An indignant God, a disgruntled God and finally a downright angry God, for she had absolutely refused to stop asking her sleeping husband: “Why do we exist?”
With an incredibly precise sense for the moment when the profane suddenly develops the potential for horror, Jocelyn Charles takes us on a magnificent psycho-trip. The director leaves it to the audience to determine whether to watch the 2D animation as spot-on genre entertainment or whether to take in the undertones: the hubris of humans who constantly play God and want to solve every mystery, for example. A hubris that does not remain without consequences.

Marie Ketzscher

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jocelyn Charles
Script
Jocelyn Charles
Producer
Joséphine Mancini
Animation
Tamerlan Bekmurzayev, Jocelyn Charles, Hugues Valin
World Sales
Anaïs Colpin
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award