Film Archive

Filmstill A Life Like Any Other

A Life Like Any Other

Une vie comme une autre
Faustine Cros
International Competition 2022
Documentary Film
Belgium,
France
2022
68 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

Over many years, the director’s father filmed his family life almost obsessively. His daughter’s birth, his son’s first steps, and always Valérie, the young mother. An impressive fund of material which their now grown-up daughter Faustine appropriates to tell quite a different story: that of a woman who sees her role as a mother and its demands take away her freedom step by step.

In the here and now, the director observes her parents in the big empty house in the country: her hyperactive father who is constantly tinkering with something, and her chain-smoking mother who sits at the kitchen table and whose sharp mind can only be surmised from her eyes. What happened? What happened to the energetic and independent young make-up artist? The one who admires witches and wants to take a trip around the world. The one who could easily earn her own living but still gives up her job. “The gaze is important”, the now 60-year-old Valérie tells her daughter once while applying make-up. Yes, the gaze is important. And with her film, director Faustine Cros counters the gaze directed at her mother over all those years with a new narrative.
Marie Kloos

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Faustine Cros
Cinematographer
Faustine Cros, Jean-Louis Cros
Editor
Faustine Cros, Cédric Zoenen
Producer
Julie Freres, Camille Laemlé
Co-Producer
Sound Image Culture, Centre de l'Audiovisuel à Bruxelles (CBA), RTBF
Sound
Faustine Cros
Score
Ferdinand Cros
World Sales
Anna Berthollet
Winner of: Prize of the Interreligious Jury, Silver Dove (International Competition)
Filmstill L’mina

L’mina

L’mina
Randa Maroufi
International Competition Documentary Film 2025
Documentary Film
France,
Morocco,
Italy,
Qatar
2025
26 minutes
Arabic
Subtitles: 
English

The landscape presented by Randa Maroufi in the final part of her trilogy about Moroccan cities seems unreal. This is Jerada, where a coal mine once attracted numerous workers to the region. And even though the mine closed in 2001, mining is still going on – secretly and under dangerous conditions. Maroufi interweaves Super8 images of the miners and their families with 3D scans of the area. But the most impressive parts are her re-stagings of the processes and threats featuring the workers of Jerada themselves: In long shots, taken both above and below ground, hard work becomes visible: physical, persistent, carried out with the simplest of tools. Hands with shovels fill coal sacks and load them onto a converted motorbike, a few metres below men crawl through narrow shafts that can collapse any moment. In conjunction with a sophisticated sound backdrop, “L’mina” evokes an almost surreal place. At the same time, documentary images remind us that this mining area is not a walk-in diorama but reality. As Maroufi emphatically puts it in her dedication at the end: “For those who live in the shadows to enlighten us.”

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Randa Maroufi
Script
Randa Maroufi
Cinematographer
Luca Coassin CCS
Editor
Céline Perréard, Randa Maroufi
Producer
Randa Maroufi, Oumayma Zekri Ajarrai
Co-Producer
Oumayma Zekri Ajarrai
Sound
Sara Kaddouri, Toni Geitani, Randa Maroufi
World Sales
Wouter Jansen
Filmstill La Jetée, the Fifth Shot

La Jetée, the Fifth Shot

Le cinquième plan de La Jetée
Dominique Cabrera
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
France
2024
104 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

Many people probably know Chris Marker’s story of a time trip from a dystopian future back to the present, in which the hero experiences a traumatic event again, only through Terry Gilliam’s extroverted remake “12 Monkeys”. The original, Marker’s experimental science fiction classic “La Jetée”, however, was groundbreaking rather because of its minimalist narrative form: The 28-minute black and white photo novel with a single moving shot has made film history.
Dominique Cabrera now takes a very personal approach to putting the influential work in a historical context: The year of its creation, 1962, was also the year when Algeria gained independence from French colonial rule and hundreds of thousands of French people with roots in Algeria, the so-called Pieds-noirs, left their homeland to enter exile via Orly airport. In France, a new, uncertain existence awaited them – including Cabrera’s family. Six decades later, her cousin, who happened to be present on the pier of Paris-Orly when Marker took photos for his film, is convinced that he recognises himself in the fifth shot of “La Jetée”. This is the prelude to one of the most thrilling and at the same time loving time trips one can imagine – and the beginning of a detective and cinephile research with ever more astonishing twists.

Christoph Terhechte

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dominique Cabrera
Cinematographer
Karine Aulnette
Editor
Sophie Brunet, Dominique Barbier
Producer
Edmée Doroszlaï
Sound
François Waledisch, Nathalie Vidal, Elias Boughedir
Score
Béatrice Thiriet, Oscar Turbant, Élise Bertrand
Nominated for: Prize of the Interreligious Jury, FIPRESCI Prize
Winner of: Golden Dove (International Competition)
Filmstill La Perra

La Perra

La Perra
Carla Melo Gampert
International Competition Animated Film 2023
Animated Film
Colombia,
France
2023
14 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

Breasts lifted, bottom tight, feathers smoothed. She is ready for her date. But her daughter clings and refuses to let her go to this as yet incomprehensible, repulsive ritual of desire. Very soon the fully-fledged adolescent will indulge in sexual lust herself … and experience disappointments. In the conflicted world of the two women, men evade partnership and fatherhood. The faithful bitch offers the only support.

As in her previous film, Carla Melo Gampert transfers her impressive but uncompromising analysis of family relationships to the lives of wading birds. Human traits show through in the anatomy, but the bird’s bodies including their feathers and sounds lend themselves perfectly to the apt exaggeration of emotions. Delicate strokes turn into cuttingly sharp movement lines of the animal characters, both in their erotically crude acts of love and their “hands-on” disputes. Soft splashes of watercolour glow incandescently in the heat of lust and warningly in the hopeless fury.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Carla Melo Gampert
Editor
Juan Sebastián Quebrada
Producer
Julie Billy, Naomi Denamur, Franco Lolli, Capucine Mahé
Sound
Juanma López, Daniel Giraldo
Animation
Carla Melo Gampert, Andrea Muñoz Álvarez
World Sales
Elise Notseck
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award
Filmstill Lada, Ivan’s Sister

Lada, Ivan’s Sister

Lada, sestra Ivana
Olesya Shchukina
Competition for the Audience Award Short Film 2022
Animated Film
France,
Russia
2021
7 minutes
Russian
Subtitles: 
English

With childlike ease, entertaining and touching, this colourful animation shows the transition of a woman who was born in the “wrong body”. With her family’s support and understanding, Ivan becomes Lada – a happy, content person. Based on a true individual story, this film is also a parable on the ingenuity of the transgender community who sometimes have to take unusual paths to establish a life worth living in an ignorant environment.

Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Olesya Shchukina
Script
Anastasia Patlay
Editor
Olesya Shchukina
Producer
Pavel Loparev, Irina Khodyreva
Sound
Andrey Guryanov
Animation
Iulia Voitova, Arman Avdalyan
Winner of: Silver Dove (Competition for the Audience Award Short Film)
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Lamentations of Judas

Les lamentations de Judas
Boris Gerrets
Camera Lucida – Out of Competition 2020
Documentary Film
Netherlands,
France
2020
94 minutes
English,
Portuguese (Portugal)
Subtitles: 
English

A group of old men in an abandoned asbestos mining town on the edge of the Kalahari Desert resist evacuation. They have no place to go because they were once notorious as soldiers of the infamous South African Battalion 32, also known as “The Terrible Ones”. Both perpetrators and victims of history, they become actors in the biblical story of Judas Iscariot in Boris Gerrets’ equally disturbing and fascinating cinematic legacy.

The spectacle under a blazing sun confronts the men, who live in abject poverty, with their unresolved past. Many of them had been forcibly recruited by the FNLA and UNITA resistance movements in the Angolan War of Independence against Portugal. After the communist MPLA took power, they found themselves as mercenaries fighting alongside white South Africans against their own people and finally defending the Apartheid regime in the colonial struggle in Namibia and the South African townships. On the fringes of the surreal film location between the decaying buildings of the old mining town, they speak for the first time about their life stories, talk about betrayal, guilt and remorse. Having been steamrolled by global politics, turned into undesirables, exiles, forgotten, suppressed and broken men, they finally become visible again as human beings in front of the camera.
Christoph Terhechte

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Boris Gerrets
Cinematographer
Nic Hofmeyr
Editor
Boris Gerrets
Producer
Iris Lammertsma, Boudewijn Koole
Co-Producer
Eric Velthuis, Serge Lalou, Camille Laemle
Sound
President Kapa, Dominique Vieillard
Score
Thuthuka Sibisi
Audience Competition 2025
Filmstill Life After Siham
Life After Siham
Namir Abdel Messeeh
In a montage of home videos, family memories and scenes from Egyptian film classics, the director finds a visual language for mourning his deceased mother.
Filmstill Life After Siham

Life After Siham

La vie après Siham
Namir Abdel Messeeh
Audience Competition 2025
Documentary Film
France,
Egypt
2025
80 minutes
French,
Arabic
Subtitles: 
English

For Namir, the realisation that his beloved mother is not immortal is painful. He had actually intended to make a film with Siham. Now he is mourning in the church with his father Waguih and his children, who seem too young to understand death – and allowing himself to be filmed. “As always, I’m counting on cinema to help me.” He is convinced that cinema can turn tragedy into comedy – and preserve memories that would otherwise fade away.
Namir Abdel Messeeh has already worked through his family’s biography between Egypt and France, their Christian faith and love of cinema in “The Virgin, the Copts and Me” (2011). But it was Siham’s wish that her son finally realise a film with acting stars rather than his own relatives. Instead, Namir Abdel Messeeh recounts his mother’s love, her longing, and her mysteries using the power of cinema. A montage of home videos, family memories and Egyptian film classics by Youssef Chahine makes Siham appear almost “larger than life”.

Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Namir Abdel Messeeh
Script
Namir Abdel Messeeh
Cinematographer
Nicolas Duchêne
Editor
Benoît Alavoine, Emmanuel Manzano
Producer
Camille Laemlé
Sound Design
Roman Dymny
Score
Clovis Schneider
World Sales
Marcella Jelić
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Looking for Horses

Looking for Horses
Stefan Pavlović
Doc Alliance Selection 2021
Documentary Film
Netherlands,
Bosnia & Herzegovina,
France
2021
88 minutes
Bosnian,
English
Subtitles: 
English

Two men by themselves: Zdravko, a war veteran with a hearing impairment who lives as a fisherman in the wilderness, and Stefan, a director with Bosnian roots who has forgotten his mother tongue. The unlikely friendship develops against a both sparse and mysterious background. For while Stefan superimposes his thoughts in text form on the shots, Zdravko sends sounds into the depth with a wooden stick. They are meant to attract catfish that make their rounds in a lake. In the process, the two men summon each other, so to speak, bring to light what was buried, fraternize, overcome inner barriers.

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Stefan Pavlović
Cinematographer
Stefan Pavlović
Editor
Sabine Groenewegen, Stefan Pavlović
Producer
Koštana Banović
Co-Producer
Eyal Sivan
Sound
Stefan Pavlović
Score
Karsten Fundal
World Sales
Anna Berthollet
Kids DOK 2021
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Louis’ Shoes
Théo Jamin, Kayu Leung, Marion Philippe, Jean-Géraud Blanc
Louis, a boy with autism, introduces himself to his new class and tells them about his peculiarities. But the other children don’t seem to have a problem with it.
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Louis’ Shoes

Les chaussures de Louis
Théo Jamin, Kayu Leung, Marion Philippe, Jean-Géraud Blanc
Kids DOK 2021
Animated Film
France
2020
5 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

Louis, eight years old, has autism and is starting at a new school. He steps in front of the class to introduce himself and his peculiarities, which can occasionally lead to misunderstandings. And anyway, sometimes things are really complicated in Louis’ mind. But it seems that his new class doesn’t have a problem with this at all.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Théo Jamin, Kayu Leung, Marion Philippe, Jean-Géraud Blanc
Producer
Anne Brotot Brotot
Score
Lolita del Pino
World Sales
François Heiser
Filmstill Love

Love

Love
Réka Bucsi
Animation Perspectives 2025
Animated Film
France,
Hungary
2016
14 minutes
without dialogue,
English captions
Subtitles: 
None

A meteorite covered in green growth lands on a planet inhabited by strange creatures and sparks light, colour, fertility, and intimacy. Plants begin to glow, animals find mates or become one in different ways. A tale in three chapters about longing, love and solitude, unfolding in wondrously surreal snapshots.

Irina Rubina

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Réka Bucsi
Script
Réka Bucsi
Producer
Marc Bodin-Joyeux, Gábor Osváth
Co-Producer
Boddah
Sound Design
Péter Benjámin Lukács
Animation
Cyrille Chauvin, Thibaut Petitpas, Nicole Stafford, Réka Bucsi
Filmstill Love Is Not an Orange

Love Is Not an Orange

Love Is Not an Orange
Otilia Babara
Panorama Middle and Eastern Europe 2022
Documentary Film
Belgium,
Moldova,
Netherlands,
France
2022
73 minutes
Romanian
Subtitles: 
English

“Imagine this camera is your mother”, a father tells his daughter. In the 1990s, scores of families from the Republic of Moldova began a ritualised mail exchange between the mothers, who had emigrated for economic reasons, and their relatives back home. The former sent money and goods; the latter sent videotapes. These amateur recordings are the material of this film. They testify to the painful gaps the absent persons left in the lives of those who stayed behind.

Migration is a big factor in post-socialist states buffeted by recession and inflation after the end of the Soviet Union – and in this case, also by the civil war over Transnistria. According to data from 2011/2012, about a third of Moldovan children had one parent abroad. In this small country between Romania and the Ukraine, too, a higher percentage of fathers choose work migration. Otilia Babara, however, is specifically interested in the consequences of long absent mothers, who work for nursing services in Italy, for example, to earn their family’s livelihood, and who express their love through care packages. The loss of connection to their mother – all of whom stay out of the frame –, which affects girls in particular, emerges in the cracks of the staged home videos, when wandering glances reveal that the children no longer believe in their return.
Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Otilia Babara
Script
Otilia Babara
Editor
Pierpaolo Filomeno
Producer
Hanne Phlypo
Co-Producer
Christine Camdessus, Simone van den Broek, Otilia Babara
Sound
Mark Glynne
Sound Design
Olmo van Straalen
Nominated for: MDR Film Prize