Film Archive

Jahr

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
Filmstill Cutting Through Rocks

Cutting Through Rocks

Uzak yollar
Sara Khaki, Mohammadreza Eyni
Audience Competition 2025
Documentary Film
USA,
Iran,
Germany,
Netherlands,
Qatar,
Chile,
Canada
2025
94 minutes
Azerbaijani,
Farsi
Subtitles: 
English

The “Woman, Life, Freedom” protests in Tehran and other major cities seem far away from the place where Sara lives. But in her rural community in northwestern Iran, the protagonist of this film advocates the same feminist values in a practical, everyday way. Again and again, we are reminded by the images that her father once taught her to ride a motorbike – to the disapproval of the whole village. A small favour with big consequences: For Sara, it paved a way outside patriarchal marriage. Mobile on two wheels, she works as a midwife and has delivered many girls for whom she now wants to fight: At the start of the film and in middle age, Sara decides to be the first woman in the history of her community to run for the local council. A step which earns her enthusiastic support on the one hand; on the other, she must endure open hostilities and an interrogation by the moral enforcers of the Islamic Republic. In “Cutting Through Rocks”, Sara Khaki and Mohammadreza Eyni capture these power structures and their individual impact as precisely as the gestures of solidarity and self-determination.

Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Sara Khaki, Mohammadreza Eyni
Script
Sara Khaki, Mohammadreza Eyni
Cinematographer
Mohammadreza Eyni
Editor
Sara Khaki, Mohammadreza Eyni
Producer
Sara Khaki, Mohammadreza Eyni
Sound
Karim Sebastian Elias
Sound Design
Miguel Hormazabal
World Sales
Stephanie Fuchs
German Distributor
Stephanie Fuchs
Nominated for: Leipziger Ring
Winner of: Golden Dove (Audience Competition)