Film Archive

Filmstill A Move

A Move

Khune
Elahe Esmaili
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Iran,
UK
2024
27 minutes
Subtitles: 
English

Filmmaker Elahe returns to her hometown of Mashhad in Iran to help her parents move house. Boxes must be packed, old stuff must be rummaged through together. Meanwhile everyone involved discusses what Elahe should wear at the upcoming big party, because Mr. Hossein, the respected and devout patriarch of the extended family, has invited his relatives to his garden.
Elahe will not wear a headscarf, nor a hat, not even a borrowed baseball cap for this occasion. On previous visits, she was willing to make a lot of compromises in order not to shame anybody at home. But those days are over. The “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement encourages her to force a change. In Hossein’s garden the director has intimate and moving conversations with sisters and cousins. They have all had similar experiences with hijab and chador but found different ways of dealing with it. Elahe boldly confronts her family’s fears and wishes and films the honest discussions.

Seggen Mikael

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Elahe Esmaili
Script
Elahe Esmaili
Cinematographer
Mehdi Azadi
Editor
Delaram Shemirani
Producer
Hossein Behboudi Rad
Sound
Anonymous
Sound Design
Ensieh Leyla Maleki
Score
Afshin Azizi
World Sales
Wouter Jansen
Nominated for: Silver Dove
Retrospective 2024
Filmstill Associations
Associations
John Smith
Nail polish, a general, a mule. John Smith recites from a text by the linguist Herbert H. Clark. The words evoke appropriate images, but mean something different.
Filmstill Associations

Associations

Associations
John Smith
Retrospective 2024
Documentary Film
UK
1975
7 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

It was only long after the end of the GDR that the Leipzig audiences had an opportunity to get to know the work of John Smith, the British master of the trenchant, short artist film that continues to expand enormously in the mind. The ideas of conceptual art and structural minimalism prevalent in the 1970s have influenced his works, which he sees as documentary films according to John Grierson’s definition, as “creative treatment of actuality.” In his view of the world details are highlighted which then cease to be taken for granted. In “Associations”, he recites a text by the linguist Herbert H. Clark. Words conjure up matching images, but mean something different. An experience that could also be had in the “actually existing socialism” of the GDR.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
John Smith
Filmstill Being John Smith

Being John Smith

Being John Smith
John Smith
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
UK
2024
27 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” The Bard’s canonical quote looms large over British experimental filmmaker John Smith’s latest short; one of the film’s opening gags even has Smith assert that one of his schoolmates, a certain William Shakespeare Smith, was allegedly bullied as much as he was. Saddled with one of the most generic monikers in the English language, the director talks about how this has affected his life and career over the last seven decades, pairing his deadpan voiceover with photographs, documents, snippets from his films and other pertinent images to often hilarious effect. His wry cataloguing of name-related humiliations also takes great pleasure in the tangential, as class, the state of the world today and mortality come to the fore again and again, with the intertitles providing an extra layer of self-deprecation that pushes the whole endeavour towards autofiction. Political, bracingly witty and quietly moving, “Being John Smith” ultimately suggests that humour combined with rigour and intelligence can transcend even the most fixed of categories; what could be sweeter than that?

James Lattimer

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
John Smith
Script
John Smith
Cinematographer
John Smith
Editor
John Smith
Producer
John Smith
Sound Design
John Smith
Filmstill Bunnyhood

Bunnyhood

Bunnyhood
Mansi Maheshwari
International Competition Animated Film 2024
Animated Film
UK
2024
9 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

Bobby’s stomach is upset. She is ravenous. Normally, dinner should be on the table by now. But today everything is different. Mum lures her teenage daughter out of the house with a lie and takes her to hospital, where her relatives are already waiting. All dressed in black, with tears in their eyes, expressing their sympathy. But sympathy for what? Before Bobby realises what is going on, she is dragged into the endless corridors of the clinic by rude nurses, undressed and prepared for an operation she knew nothing about and never consented to.
Behind the scenes of this nocturnal horror trip, a disturbing tale about the relationship of trust between parents and children is revealed. Mansi Maheshwari’s genre mix of thriller, scary vision and educational satire is fascinating. Its dynamic design, dramatic animation and mesmerising soundtrack send us deep into a terrifyingly exquisite nightmare that lingers on.

Franka Sachse

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Mansi Maheshwari
Script
Anna Moore, James Davis
Cinematographer
Adam Pietkiewicz
Editor
Kaupo Muuli
Producer
Ashionye Ogene
Sound
Alexander Faingold
Sound Design
Alexander Faingold
Score
Marcin Mazurek
Animation
Mansi Maheshwari, Ryan Power, Elizabeth Fraser, Paula Gonsalez, Kathryn Haddow, Beatrice Babbo, Lucas Fruen
World Sales
Hemant Sharda
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award
Camera Lucida 2024
Filmstill Collective Monologue
Collective Monologue
Jessica Sarah Rinland
By examining different zoological facilities across Argentina, this experimental documentary crafts an intricate portrait of all the many facets that make up a zoo.
Filmstill Collective Monologue

Collective Monologue

Monólogo colectivo
Jessica Sarah Rinland
Camera Lucida 2024
Documentary Film
Argentina,
UK
2024
104 minutes
Spanish
Subtitles: 
English

Jessica Sarah Rinland visits zoological gardens across Argentina to craft a portrait not of a single institution, but rather its underlying concept: an observational, yet still ever-probing exploration of zoo itself. The different types of image and their textures she collects to this end—the silky 16mm that comprises the bulk of the film, the crisp surveillance footage, the grainy black-and-white cameras that capture creatures roving “undisturbed”, the yellowing photographs that pin down Indigenous people and animals alike – perfectly correspond to the varying perspectives she gathers on her subject: a place of imprisonment and colonial legacy, but now also one of everyday routine, conservation and even tenderness.
For all the ambivalence of its central theme, this is, like all of Rinland’s work, a film of extraordinary tactility: Human hands that clean, catalogue and caress, leathery trunks and furry fingers that reach between iron bars in search of comfort, plumage glistening in the sun. Jean Piaget coined the term collective monologue to refer to the developmental phase in which the child believes nature is created for them alone and can be controlled as such. It is so strangely moving to see control give way to care.

James Lattimer

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jessica Sarah Rinland
Script
Jessica Sarah Rinland
Cinematographer
Jessica Sarah Rinland
Editor
Jessica Sarah Rinland
Producer
Jessica Sarah Rinland, Melanie Schapiro
Sound
Philippe Ciompi
Filmstill EXOMOON

EXOMOON

EXOMOON
Gudrun Krebitz
Animation Perspectives 2024
Animated Film
UK,
Austria
2015
7 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

The longing for something to finally happen is fulfilled by a kiss. Not the romantic kind, however, but a monstrous one, a kiss the world will talk about. Thus Dodi plods vigilantly through everyday life and parties, in a cloud of other people’s voices. “EXOMOON” follows her confident path: like a kaleidoscope with creative fractures.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Gudrun Krebitz
Sound Design
Marian Mentrup
DOK Neuland 2024
Filmstill Nothing Can Ever Be the Same
Nothing Can Ever Be the Same
Brendan Dawes, Gary Hustwit
A collaboration between artists and machine, this continuously-running generative film is based on the visual archive and music of Brian Eno, as well as new interviews.
2023
Filmstill Nothing Can Ever Be the Same

Nothing Can Ever Be the Same

Nothing Can Ever Be the Same
Brendan Dawes, Gary Hustwit
DOK Neuland 2024
XR
USA,
UK
2023
332 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

This film can go on forever. Or at least until we shut it off. A collaboration between a filmmaker, an artist and a machine, this generative film spans the length of the festival. Based on the visual archive and music of Brian Eno, as well as new interviews, this meditative audiovisual experience is created in real time through the imagination of a machine.

Dana Melaver

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Brendan Dawes, Gary Hustwit
International Competition Animated Film 2024
Filmstill The Brown Dog
The Brown Dog
Nadia Hallgren, Jamie-James Medina
A cold winter’s night. Armoured in coolness, Nobody makes his lonely security guard rounds in the square, engrossed in his meandering reflections of life – melancholy of the streets.
Filmstill The Brown Dog

The Brown Dog

The Brown Dog
Nadia Hallgren, Jamie-James Medina
International Competition Animated Film 2024
Animated Film
UK,
USA
2024
14 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

The winter’s night draws its last breaths in the milky amber glow of the street lights. Snowflakes trickle down, the camera slowly circles a small guardroom in a driveway. Night after night, this lonely island is occupied by: Nobody. As a security guard in the cold, he guarantees the safety of the warm homes and their owners. He passes the time with a recalcitrant oil radiator, a calendar girl on a green meadow and his meandering thoughts. His security logs serve as a seismograph of reflections on life and nightly rounds of the square. Nobody is wrapped in a shell of coolness grown over a long time, which makes it hard for him to react to a rare smile the way he would like to in his heart.
Nadia Hallgren and Jamie-James Medina condense an autobiographical short story by artist and musician Willis Earl Beal aka “Nobody”. The actor Michael K. Williams, who died in 2021, lent his voice to this inner monologue and gives it a sleepy, melodious sound. In this very cinematic, melancholy piece in a state of limbo, casual observations open a philosophical cosmos. But every time the journey of the mind crashes on the tarmac of the carpark in front of the block of flats.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Nadia Hallgren, Jamie-James Medina
Script
Willis Earl Beal
Editor
Spencer Campbell
Producer
Michael Stirton, Jamie-James Medina, Nadia Hallgren
Sound
Machine Sound
Sound Design
Michalis Anthis
Score
Tyshawn Sorey
Animation
Fons Schiedon
World Sales
Brian Newman
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award
Filmstill The Role

The Role

The Role
Paolo Chianta
International Competition Animated Film 2024
Animated Film
UK
2023
5 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

Lines scrawled on white paper with a ballpoint pen. Everything looks like a hastily drawn scribble – a sketch of ideas rather than a finished film, possibly only a quick storyboard. The jerkily connected images show a food stall somewhere in the middle of nowhere. Something extraordinary happens here: Two filmmakers – brother and sister – hire the chef as the leading actor of their project. They are planning a biopic about their father. The fast-food expert is not only the spitting image of the famous man, he is just like him! The casting could not be more apt, the film business newcomer lets them convince him. But the task turns out to be difficult. Though the cook does everything to do justice to this demanding role, he seems less and less suited for the job every day. Completely engrossed in the preparations for the part, he becomes increasingly distant from his own children. The boundaries between the film and the single father’s real life begin to blur. Is it possible that shooting has already begun?

Franka Sachse

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Paolo Chianta
Script
Paolo Chianta
Editor
Paolo Chianta
Producer
Paolo Chianta
Co-Producer
Lilah Vandenburgh
Score
Paolo Chianta
Animation
Paolo Chianta
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award
Animation Night 2024
Filmstill Thrum IX
Thrum IX
Will Bishop-Stephens
Accompanied by a vibrant guitar, the animation and noise machine “Thrum IX” enchants with snail shells and poppy capsules growing and shrinking on bicycle spokes.
Filmstill Thrum IX

Thrum IX

Thrum IX
Will Bishop-Stephens
Animation Night 2024
Experimental Film
UK
2024
2 minutes
without dialogue

Will Bishop-Stephens has been working on kinetic sculptures he calls “Thrum” since 2020. Version IX links a bicycle wheel to a guitar. Butterfly wings, snail shells, poppy seed capsules and feathers grow and shrink on the spokes, the guitar strings produce a vibrating drone. The animation and sound machine takes us to a state of floating.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Will Bishop-Stephens
Filmstill Tracing Light

Tracing Light

Tracing Light
Thomas Riedelsheimer
German Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Germany,
UK
2024
99 minutes
English,
German
Subtitles: 
English, German

Light is a fascinating phenomenon. Without light, there would be no cinema, no film – and no life. So light is at the origin of everything, and yet it remains invisible to the eye until it hits matter. This moment is – quite literally – the starting point of Thomas Riedelsheimer’s latest work, for the springtime spectacle of rainbow shreds in the cinematographer and documentary filmmaker’s flat became the starting point of a search for the origin of the images we form of this world. For this quest he dived deep into two spheres that seem to follow different laws but always strive to fathom the magical: physics and art.
An intellectual and poetic ping pong game evolves between researchers from the Max Planck Institute in Erlangen and the “Extreme Light Group” of the University of Glasgow as well as internationally renowned artists such as Ruth Jarman, Joe Gerhardt, Julie Brook, Johannes Brunner and Raimund Ritz. In its course, the various perspectives on light lead to new insights on all sides that would hardly have been achieved without this methodical cross-over: about laser power and colour pigments, about black holes and floating sculptures. In brief moments, the uninitiated may even get some idea of the laws of quantum physics, generally considered impossible to visualise.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Thomas Riedelsheimer
Cinematographer
Thomas Riedelsheimer
Editor
Thomas Riedelsheimer
Producer
Sonja Henrici, Stefan Tolz, Leslie Hills
Sound
Hubertus Rath
Sound Design
Christoph von Schönburg
Score
Fred Frith, gabby fluke-mogul
World Sales
Elina Kewitz
German Distributor
Piffl Medien GmbH
Broadcaster
3sat
Nominated for: VER.DI Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness
Animation Night 2024
Filmstill Zyprazol
Zyprazol
Dan Hayhurst, Reuben Sutherland
“Zyprazol” is medicine, a psychedelic drug. Graphic elements and broken beats zip wildly past our eyes and ears. A music video made by Sculpture.
Filmstill Zyprazol
Filmstill Zyprazol

Zyprazol

Zyprazol
Dan Hayhurst, Reuben Sutherland
Animation Night 2024
Animated Film
UK
2016
5 minutes
without dialogue

At first everything in this music video by the London duo Sculpture is two-dimensional. But better duck down while watching! On intricately composed levels of space, graphic elements whiz wildly past your eyes and broken beats whistle violently past your ears. Zyprazol is medicinal, a mind-expanding drug – just like the animation records made by Sculpture.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Dan Hayhurst, Reuben Sutherland