Film Archive

Kids DOK 2025
Filmstill Capybaras
Capybaras
Alfredo Soderguit
The capybara family try to hide from hunters in the chicken coop, but the rooster drives them away. When the capybara child and the chickletsbecome friends, a whole new world opens up.
Filmstill Capybaras

Capybaras

Los carpinchos
Alfredo Soderguit
Kids DOK 2025
Animated Film
France,
Chile,
Uruguay
2024
10 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

The capybara family live peacefully among the reed islands near a small farm when suddenly a shot rings out – hunting season is open. Alarmed and scared, they try to shelter in the chicken-coop, but the rooster is suspicious and drives the strange animals away. Still, the capybara child and the chicklet are curious about each other. Their friendship has unexpected consequences.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Alfredo Soderguit
Cinematographer
Alfredo Soderguit
Producer
Nicolas Schmerkin
Co-Producer
Lucianna Roude, Bernardita Ojeda
Animation
Eloise Rauzier, Alejo Schettini
Animation Perspectives 2021
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Ceuta’s Gate
Randa Maroufi
A performative reconstruction sketches and condenses daily life at the border between the Spanish exclave of Ceuta and Morocco, which is crossed illegally by all kinds of goods.
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Ceuta’s Gate

Bab Septa
Randa Maroufi
Animation Perspectives 2021
Documentary Film
France,
Morocco
2019
19 minutes
Spanish,
Arabic
Subtitles: 
English

Everything seems neat at first in Randa Maroufi’s performative reconstruction. Cars form orderly queues; market women tie up their baggage. On the monotonous grey background, the scenes appear schematic, like a blueprint where suddenly everything becomes graphically condensed. Everyday life at the border between the Spanish exclave of Ceuta and Morocco, which is crossed illegally by all kinds of goods.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Randa Maroufi
Script
Randa Maroufi
Cinematographer
Luca Coassin
Editor
Randa Maroufi, Ismael Joffroy Chandoutis
Producer
Saïd Hamich
Sound
Mohamed Bounouar, Léonore Mercier
Homage: Dominique Cabrera 2024
Filmstill Chronicle of an Ordinary Suburb
Chronicle of an Ordinary Suburb
Dominique Cabrera
A story about the demolition of tower blocks in a Parisian suburb, about the fond memories of former residents and the inexorable decline of a flawed utopia.
Filmstill Chronicle of an Ordinary Suburb

Chronicle of an Ordinary Suburb

Chronique d’une banlieue ordinaire
Dominique Cabrera
Homage: Dominique Cabrera 2024
Documentary Film
France
1992
56 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

In September 1992, four tower blocks in the town of Mantes-la-Jolie, not far from Paris, were demolished. They were part of the Val Fourré district, which was celebrated as a flagship social housing project in the 1960s, as archive footage reminds us at the beginning of the film. But filmmaker Dominique Cabrera, who grew up in a similar housing project herself, is not concerned with urban planning or architectural failures. Instead, she is interested in the residents’ memories: remembrances of the poor and the wealthy living together, of insidious but persistent decline, but above all of the beautiful things that make up a life, the variety, the emotions, the personal happiness.

Christoph Terhechte

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dominique Cabrera
Script
Edmée Doroszlaï
Editor
Dominique Greussay, Estelle Altman
Producer
Viviane Akili
Sound
Xavier Griette, Raoul Frühauf
Score
Jean-Jacques Birgé
International Competition 2022
Filmstill Ciné-Guerillas: Scenes from the Labudović Reels
Ciné-Guerrillas: Scenes from the Labudović Reels
Mila Turajlić
Yugoslav cinematographer Stevan Labudović travelled to Algeria in 1959. His footage provided valuable assistance to independence from French colonial rule.
Filmstill Ciné-Guerillas: Scenes from the Labudović Reels

Ciné-Guerrillas: Scenes from the Labudović Reels

Ciné-Guerrillas: Scenes from the Labudović Reels
Mila Turajlić
International Competition 2022
Documentary Film
Serbia,
France
2022
94 minutes
Serbian,
French,
Arabic,
English
Subtitles: 
English

What do the Algerian war of liberation and Yugoslavia have in common? Stevan Labudović. In 1959, Tito himself sent his favourite cinematographer to Algeria. The resistance against the French colonial rule needed the eyes of the world, and the experienced partisan Labudović helped open them: His images gave the lie to the propaganda of the occupiers and their Western allies. This is a portrait of the man, the mission and the age – as film, ideological and personal history.

For three years, until the Democratic Republic of Algeria was proclaimed, Labudović put himself and his camera at the service of the people fighting for independence. Mila Turajlić found the newsreel footage shot at the time in the Filmske Novosti archive in Belgrade, got in touch with the aged pensioner and followed his trail. From a wealth of archive material, diary entries by and interviews with Labudović, with contemporary witnesses from Yugoslavia, Algeria and New York, where the young Maghreb state, like many other former colonies, struggled for admission to the United Nations, she distils the promising origins of an alliance that stood at the beginning of the Non-Aligned Movement, which was to oppose the dichotomy of the superpowers. Thus the bow to her compatriot also gains global political topicality.
Christoph Terhechte

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Mila Turajlić
Cinematographer
Mila Turajlić
Editor
Sylvie Gadmer, Anne Renardet, Mila Turajlić
Producer
Carine Chichkowsky, Mila Turajlić
Sound
Aleksandar Protić
Score
Troy Herion
Nominated for: MDR Film Prize, Prize of the Interreligious Jury, FIPRESCI Prize
Audience Competition 2025
Filmstill Coexistence, My Ass!
Coexistence, My Ass!
Amber Fares
Noam Shuster-Eliassi grew up in a Jewish-Arab peace village in Israel, worked for the UN and is doing stand-up comedy on the Middle East conflict in English, Hebrew and Arabic.  
Filmstill Coexistence, My Ass!

Coexistence, My Ass!

Coexistence, My Ass!
Amber Fares
Audience Competition 2025
Documentary Film
USA,
France
2025
93 minutes
English,
Hebrew,
Arabic
Subtitles: 
English

The name of her village stands for a utopia that has shaped Noam Shuster Eliassi from childhood: Newe Shalom (Hebrew) or Wahat al-Salām (Arabic) roughly translates as “Oasis of Peace.” This small community of 300 people from Jewish and Arab families which was founded in 1969, located in Israel at the border with the West Bank, is a test of solidarity in practice. Thus, Noam, who is Jewish, and her Palestinian friend Ranin become ambassadors of mutual understanding even as children, for example when Hillary Clinton or Jane Fonda come to visit. They seem predestined for a career in the United Nations.
In her comedy show “Coexistence, My Ass!”, which director Amber Fares uses as a leitmotif, Shuster Eliassi strikes a harsher tone. Her career shift from diplomacy to political comedy – in English, Hebrew or Arabic, depending on the audience – shows her as a critic of the Netanyahu government, both before and after the Hamas terrorist attack on 7 October 2023. Her example also reflects the division in parts of the Israeli left: Shuster Eliassi’s deep pain of having lost loved ones herself is followed by anger about the Gaza war. What is humour able, what is it allowed to do in this situation? Perhaps help us mourn the suffering of two nations and, despite everything, not give up the utopia of peace.

Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Amber Fares
Cinematographer
Amber Fares, Philippe Bellaiche, Amit Chachamov
Editor
Rabab Haj Yahya
Producer
Amber Fares, Rachel Leah Jones, Valérie Montmartin
Sound
Rachel Leah Jones, Ibrahim Zaher, Sharon Luzon
World Sales
Stephanie Fuchs
Nominated for: Leipziger Ring
International Competition 2020
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Considering the Ends
Elsa Maury
Shepherdess Nathalie learns what it means to kill with one’s own hands. Her process of development turns out to be a holistic learning experience: about responsibility, care and knives.
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Considering the Ends

Nous la mangerons, c’est la moindre des choses
Elsa Maury
International Competition 2020
Documentary Film
Belgium,
France
2020
67 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English, German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing

The vultures are circling over the Cevennes, the south-eastern part of the French Massif Central. They are part of the holistic cycle of becoming and passing away which shepherdess Nathalie seeks to come closer to. Because the vultures are gnawing at the remains of her beloved animals. She considers herself responsible not only for their lives, but also for their death. Elsa Maury’s film is an unequivocal testimony to what it means to wield the fatal knife oneself.

The sounds made by a ewe when a lamb is born seem almost human. And when a little later the newborn turns out to be unwilling to live it seems as if one could detect pain in the mother’s eyes. The shepherdess Nathalie’s empathic look at her flock was transferred directly to the viewer. Each animal here has its own name, each has a biography that Nathalie knows by heart. And it’s ultimately up to her to finally decide when the end of a sheep is near. In diary-like sequences we learn about her feelings, take part in a difficult process of development which results in new self-confidence, perhaps even new wisdom. Elsa Maury shows a perennial school of killing and death. She leaves the events uncommented, but achieves an intensity through images and editing that stays with us for a long time.
Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Elsa Maury
Cinematographer
Christian Tessier, Martin Flament, Elsa Maury
Editor
Geoffroy Cernaix, Pauline Piris-Nury
Producer
Cyril Bibas
Co-Producer
Luc Reder, Olivier Burlet, Javier Packer-Comyn
Sound
Marc Siffert, Loïc Villiot, Galaad Germa, Willy Boutet, Elsa Maury
World Sales
Philippe Cotte
Narrator
Nathalie Savalois
Nominated for: Prize of the Interreligious Jury, FIPRESCI Prize
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Conversations with Siro

Conversations avec Siro
Dima El-Horr
International Competition 2021
Documentary Film
Lebanon,
France
2021
52 minutes
Arabic,
French
Subtitles: 
French, English

Lebanese filmmaker Dima El-Horr moved to Paris several years ago. Among the friends who stayed at home is the artist Sirvat Fazlian, whom she regularly visits in Beirut until the failed revolution of 2019, the COVID lockdown, the devastating port explosion and finally the dramatic economic crisis put a temporary end to their meetings. So the director decides to give her conversations with Siro a cinematic form.

Ever since the death of her husband, the well-known Armenian actor Berj Fazlian, Siro has lived alone in a flat filled with souvenirs and devoted most of her time to music and painting. In this film, footage from the years before 2019 blends with recorded phone calls between Siro and Dima and recent scenes from Paris, coming together in a densely woven portrait of life in exile. While snow falls in Paris, Siro talks about warm days on the Mediterranean coast and sings Armenian songs. She rails against the permanent crisis in Lebanon, but her nature is not affected. For one thing, Siro personifies the legendary Lebanese resilience. Yet for the filmmaker she represents that part of the heart that people in exile leave behind. So almost inevitably, “Conversations with Siro” becomes the director’s dialogue with herself.
Christoph Terhechte

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dima El-Horr
Cinematographer
Dima El-Horr
Editor
Catherine Zins
Producer
Paul Rognoni, Sabine Sidawi
Sound
Jean-Pierre Dussardier
Nominated for: FIPRESCI Prize, Prize of the Interreligious Jury
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
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Court-circuit n° 180 – Interview with Michèle Bokanowski
Lorenzo Recio
Michèle Bokanowski’s sounds have been a distinct part of Patrick Bokanowski’s film images since 1972. Between tape loops she talks about her work with material that’s often quite unlike music.
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Court-circuit n° 180 – Interview with Michèle Bokanowski

Court-circuit n° 180 – Interview de Michèle Bokanowski
Lorenzo Recio
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
Documentary Film
France
2004
10 minutes
French
Subtitles: 
English

Michèle Bokanowski’s sounds have been a distinct part of Patrick Bokanowski’s film images since 1972. The origin of her soundtracks often lies in noises that are quite unlike music. Thus, she uses the clacking of billiard balls to describe people working on a field in the distance. Between tape loops and electronic devices, the composer talks about her craft of shaping sonorous material.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Lorenzo Recio
Producer
ARTE France, MK2TV