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Filmstill We Had Fun Yesterday

We Had Fun Yesterday

We Had Fun Yesterday
Marion Guillard
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Belgium
2024
34 minutes
French,
English
Subtitles: 
English

Unexpectedly, Marion Guillard captures the perfect shot: A flock of birds pirouette in the evening sky, the camera follows their graceful movements as if hypnotized, symbiotically. The road to this moment was long. Guillard shares her journey to the USA with us, which is not only marked by feelings of alienation from her family – the postcard motifs spread before her eyes also leave her cold. In a voiceover, she talks about her relationship to herself and her body, about an ideal of femininity she does not conform to, and disturbing encounters with men.
“We Had Fun Yesterday” follows Guillard’s stream of thought, both autobiographical exploration and reflection about the way we look at others: animals – wild or caged; nature - unspoiled or shaped by humans. The result is a surprising weave in which mental and digital images arise and crumble.

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Marion Guillard
Script
Marion Guillard
Cinematographer
Marion Guillard
Editor
Pauline Piris-Nury, Lenka Fillnerova
Producer
Cyril Bibas
Co-Producer
Stefanie Bodien
Sound
Marion Guillard
Sound Design
Maxime Thomas, Sébastien Van Dhelsen, Jeff Levillain
Filmstill What Goes Up

What Goes Up

What Goes Up
Samar Al Summary
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Saudi Arabia,
USA
2024
29 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
English

The aeroplanes are stationary, nothing moves, nothing takes off at the US military airbase in Arizona – until a young woman in a white dress begins to jump on a trampoline outside the fence, framed by an idyllic sunset. She conveys her story from the silent offscreen – only through subtitles. Having come from Saudi Arabia, she is stuck in the US because her father stole her identity papers. So homesick that she is considering drastic measures to get back home, she almost enlists in the military. But the US Army is suspicious and would not station her, a risk factor, anywhere near the Middle East. But there is a Baghdad in Arizona, too …
Artist Samar Al Summary’s work is an investigation into systems of power. She does not only talk about herself, the prejudices and obstacles she faces as a Saudi woman, but also about the crash of two Iraqi air force pilots who were to be trained by the US Air Force but never made it home either. In her dramatically condensed film essay, she takes up the symbolic fight – both against gravity, which she can at least temporarily defy by using cinematic means, and against patriarchy. The latter, however, is not so easy to fight.

Borjana Gaković

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Samar Al Summary
Cinematographer
Samar Al Summary
Producer
Samar Al Summary
Nominated for: Silver Dove
Winner of: Silver Dove Short Film (International Competition Documentary Film)
Filmstill What We Ask of a Statue Is That It Doesn’t Move

What We Ask of a Statue Is That It Doesn’t Move

Afto pou zitame apo ena agalma ine na min kinite
Daphné Hérétakis
International Competition Documentary Film 2024
Documentary Film
Greece,
France
2023
31 minutes
Greek
Subtitles: 
English

An Athenian filmmaker is struggling with insomnia and seeks help from a tarot reader. She says that when she does manage to sleep, her dreams are strange, she dreams of her childhood apartment, where everyone has turned to stone. Yet such surreal thoughts hardly sound outlandish given the current state of Greece: petrified monuments to past glories as far as the eye can see, even as any sort of movement in the present has slowed to a standstill. She sets out to understand this curious paradox, dipping into literature, fiction and documentary to do so, disparate elements given unity by playfulness, political sensibility and shimmering celluloid.
Conversations with locals on the streets of the Greek capital about the nature of statues; the 1944 manifesto by poet Yorgos Makris that proposed blowing up the Parthenon and the groupuscule that now seeks to complete his work; the story of the political prisoners forced to rebuild the same monument in miniature; a rogue Caryatid now discovering love. Such times are hard to make sense of, whether in Greece or beyond, and perhaps there is only one way to proceed, to move forward, to live: everything bit by bit. “When will we gather the world together piece by piece?”

James Lattimer

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Daphné Hérétakis
Script
Daphné Hérétakis
Cinematographer
Robin Fresson, Daphné Hérétakis
Editor
Daphné Hérétakis, Konstantinos Samaras, Jean Costa
Producer
Jasmina Sijerčić, Daphné Hérétakis, Ethan Selcer, Konstantinos Samaras
Sound
Nicole Assimossi, Dimitra Xeroutsikou
Sound Design
Alexandre Hecker, Simon Apostolou
Score
Kornilios Selamsis