Film Archive

Retrospective 2022
Filmstill The First Birthday
The First Birthday
Gabriele Hochneder
Silvia, single mother, celebrates her daughter’s first birthday. A matter-of-fact and occasionally sobering portrait that revolves around a sanguine woman.
Filmstill The First Birthday

The First Birthday

Der erste Geburtstag
Gabriele Hochneder
Retrospective 2022
Documentary Film
GDR
1978
17 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

Silvia Szuprizinski has lived alone with her little daughter for a year now: time to take stock. The young woman talks, her stories commented by Gabriele Hochneder’s pictures of everyday life that tell of efforts. Silvia, leaning against the tiled stove, talks about the failed relationship with the child’s father with detachment, but also with a certain degree of regret. At least her own family are present, all of them at the door in time for the first birthday. Still, Silvia spends her nights alone with herself – and the television. The fact that Hochneder’s film, despite the adversities, does not become a lament is at least partly owing to its sanguine main protagonist.

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Gabriele Hochneder
Cinematographer
Jürgen Lubosch
Editor
Ilona Thiel
Producer
Hochschule für Film und Fernsehen der DDR
MDR Special Screening 2022
Filmstill The Corner
The Corner
Christa Pfafferott
World history meets local history on the street corner of Sperlingsberg in Oberdorla, Thuringia. In 1945, an American soldier was shot here. Decades later, a photo of him is circulating on the internet. Director Christa Pfafferott places this picture at the beginning of her research.
Filmstill The Corner

The Corner

Die Ecke
Christa Pfafferott
MDR Special Screening 2022
Documentary Film
Germany
2021
90 minutes
German,
English
Subtitles: 
German

World history meets local history on the street corner of Sperlingsberg in Oberdorla, Thuringia. In 1945, an American soldier was shot here. A photo of him became famous and, decades later, is circulating on the internet. Director Christa Pfafferott places this picture at the beginning of her research.

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Christa Pfafferott
Cinematographer
Johannes Praus
Producer
Katrin Thomas
Broadcaster
arte, Sabine Lange
Commissioning Editor
Ulrich Brochhagen
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E14

E14
Peiman Zekavat
International Competition Short Film 2020
Documentary Film
UK
2020
19 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

What did the Corona lockdown look like from a window in the residential towers of posh East London in the spring of 2020? The reflective two-week observation shows serious shifts in the everyday coordinate system of a privileged urban population at an immediate level. Meanwhile, the vacant apartments in the district, which were deliberately caused by speculation, represent a warning sign for the future of investor-friendly urban spaces.

Ralph Eue

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Peiman Zekavat
Producer
Sanam Jehanfard
Hommage: Punto y Raya 2025
Filmstill Earl Grey – False Horns [INP031]
Earl Grey – False Horns [INP031]
Gilbert Sinnott
Flowing surfaces and flickering textures, accompanied by beats that seem heavy and fragile at the same time. Evoking memories of the last hours of a sleepless night.
Filmstill Earl Grey – False Horns [INP031]

Earl Grey – False Horns [INP031]

Earl Grey – False Horns [INP031]
Gilbert Sinnott
Hommage: Punto y Raya 2025
Animated Film
Germany
2020
6 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

The breakbeats that drive the flowing surfaces and shimmering textured shapes of this experimental music video seem heavy and fragile at the same time. The soundtrack evokes 1990s drum and bass music, but remains hypnotic and soothing. The appeasing images and sounds seem made to accompany the last hours of a sleepless night.

Franka Sachse

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Gilbert Sinnott
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Earthworks – Installation

Earthworks – Installation
Joe Gerhardt, Ruth Jarman
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
Documentary Film
UK,
Spain
2016
2 minutes
without dialogue
Subtitles: 
None

The earth never sleeps. The duo Semiconductor distils research data on earth movements and animates them in a five-channel installation. In a dark hall, visitors to the Sónar Barcelona 2016 festival are captivated by a huge, luminous band of ceaselessly morphing layers of colours and strange sounds, experiencing a cut through both landscape and time.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Joe Gerhardt, Ruth Jarman
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
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Earthworks – Making Of
Joe Gerhardt, Ruth Jarman
Creaking, rumbling and trickling, earth movements leave traces of sound. The duo Semiconductor animates research data and conveys geological processes in a fascinating way.
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Earthworks – Making Of

Earthworks – Making Of
Joe Gerhardt, Ruth Jarman
Animation and Musique concrète 2021
Documentary Film
UK,
Spain
2016
10 minutes
English
Subtitles: 
None

Geologically, layers of earth form over thousands of years. The processes are almost imperceptible to humans. A research project in a Spanish quarry reconstructs earth movements, models them and records them acoustically. Creaking, rumbling and trickling, the layers leave traces of sounds animated in an audiovisual five-channel installation by the duo Semiconductor.

André Eckardt

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Joe Gerhardt, Ruth Jarman
Filmstill Eat Bitter

Eat Bitter

Eat Bitter
Pascale Appora-Gnekindy, Ningyi Sun
Audience Competition 2023
Documentary Film
Central African Republic,
China
2023
93 minutes
Chinese,
French
Subtitles: 
German Subtitles for deaf and hard-of-hearing, English

A man on a river at dawn. He prays, dives into the water, and comes back up with a bucket of sand. The single father Thomas Boa toils away as a sand diver in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic. The sand eventually ends up at the construction site of Jianmin Luan, a Chinese construction manager who went to Africa to further his career. Luan pays a price for this opportunity: He lives very simply, plagued by power failures and fears of malaria, typhoid, and civil war. After years abroad, he has become estranged from his family in China; his wife is mentally unwell.

Directors Ningyi Sun and Pascale Appora-Gnekindy tell a story of globalisation, poverty, and labour, asking how life can be lived with dignity. Instead of perpetuating clichés they introduce us to two men (and their families) who are tiny cogs in the gears of a global competition machine. There is a lot of inequality in this system and next to no winners. But there are also moments when it all seems worthwhile: when Luan’s wife visits Africa and intimacy is suddenly rekindled, or when Thomas cultivates a field and is finally able to look ahead. A visually powerful, enthralling and horizon-expanding film that skilfully evades stereotypes.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Pascale Appora-Gnekindy, Ningyi Sun
Script
Mathieu Faure, Ningyi Sun, Pascale Appora-Gnekindy
Cinematographer
Orphée Zaza Emmanuel Bamoy
Editor
Hannah Choe, Mathieu Faure
Producer
Mathieu Faure
Co-Producer
Ningyi Sun, Pascale Appora-Gnekindy, Orphée Zaza Emmanuel Bamoy
Sound
Aaron Koyassoukpengo
Sound Design
Hollis Smith
Score
Cal Freundlich Moore
Animation
Michael Kosciesza
Executive Producer
Mathieu Faure, Steve Dorst
Retrospective 2023
Filmstill One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?
One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?
Lutz Lehmann
Workers’ revolt or popular uprising? Or an attempted Western coup after all? 20 years after 17 June 1953, a television report looks for answers. The interpretations remain open.
Filmstill One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?

One Wednesday in June – 20 Years Ago: People’s Uprising, Workers’ Revolt or Secret Services Putsch?

Ein Mittwoch im Juni – Vor 20 Jahren: Volksaufstand, Arbeiterrevolte oder Agentenputsch?
Lutz Lehmann
Retrospective 2023
Documentary Film
FRG
1973
60 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

What happened in the GDR on 17 June 1953? Using a lot of original footage, Norddeutscher Rundfunk looks back on the events in a detailed report marking their 20th anniversary and shows different interpretations and explanations. Agent coup? Workers’ revolt? Popular uprising? The interpretations were controversial, even among contemporary witnesses and Western historians.

Katharina Franck, Andreas Kötzing

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Lutz Lehmann
Cinematographer
Hans Jacob
Editor
Elke Düring
Producer
NDR Norddeutscher Rundfunk / German TV ARD Network
Sound
Jürgen Jannsen, Norbert Kinsky
Young Eyes 2024
Filmstill An Octopus Destroyed the Moon
An Octopus Destroyed the Moon
Heidrun Holzfeind
A school in Berlin that offers subjects like horticulture and animal care. The film portrays a group of young people between lessons, childhood and adulthood.
Filmstill An Octopus Destroyed the Moon

An Octopus Destroyed the Moon

Ein Oktopus hat den Mond zerstört
Heidrun Holzfeind
Young Eyes 2024
Documentary Film
Austria,
Germany
2024
90 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

Can school be exciting and even fun? The integrative pre-vocational August Sander school in Berlin-Friedrichshain at least seems the perfect place for this. The noise of the cars of the big city can be heard from the distance, birds are singing on the lush green grounds. Lessons here include horticulture, agriculture and animal care. And when you watch the students weed garden plots and feed rabbits, things look extremely enviable at first glance. But of course, even in this paradisiacal place there are conflicts, annoying teachers and the anxious question: What comes after graduation?
This documentary follows the school life of a group of pupils with different learning disorders and other impairments over one school year. At its focus are young people who are on the way from training to work, from childhood to adulthood, and struggle to find their place in the narrow regulatory system of school and in society.

Lina Dinkla

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Heidrun Holzfeind
Cinematographer
Heidrun Holzfeind
Editor
Heidrun Holzfeind
Producer
Heidrun Holzfeind
World Sales
Gerald Weber
Nominated for: Young Eyes Film Award
Audience Award Competition 2020
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A Lonely City
Nicola Graef
There’s no better place for a lonely life than Berlin. A portrait of a city with its diverse inhabitants, which strikes the right notes far away from any hullabaloo.
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A Lonely City

Eine einsame Stadt
Nicola Graef
Competition for the Audience Award 2020
Documentary Film
Germany
2019
90 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

Loneliness has many faces in Berlin. Young and old are afflicted by it, men, women, single and married people. It’s normal. Nonetheless there’s a stigma attached to this mixture of emotions that makes sufferers stay silent. Director Nicola Graef tries a different approach in her film: She lets the lonely inhabitants of the capital city speak, listens. The result is varied and quite often surprising.

Berlin is a city for extroverts, Tessa thinks. The young woman’s mind, however, is on the opposite site. The consequence is loneliness and that “is quite draining”, she says. 85-year-old Efraim, a photographer and flaneur, has found a confident way to deal with those nagging feelings: He’s “not the type for marriage” anyway. Artist Thomas, on the other hand, suffers from the end of a long-term love affair and wonders whether “the icing sugar is all kissed away by the age of 50”, but also says: “There is a market for everything, even for broken cars.” Poised and affectionate, we move through the expanses of the city in Graef’s film, where stories sprout like weeds between the cobblestones. From the corner pub to the artist’s studio, from the parks to the sports club and, time and again, into the silent flats – she encounters her witnesses to emptiness everywhere. Their reports are moving, but they never make us feel hopeless.
Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Nicola Graef
Cinematographer
Alexander Rott, Philip Koepsell
Editor
Kai Minierski
Producer
Susanne Brand, Nicola Graef
Co-Producer
ARTE Deutschland TV GmbH, SWR Südwestrundfunk
Sound
Simon Hückstädt, Matthias Kreitschmann, Carsten Kramer, Luc Brocker, Alexey Fedorov, Oliver Drüppel, Zora Butzke
Score
George Kochbeck
Commissioning Editor
Gudrun Hanke-El Ghomri, Catherine Le Goff
Kids DOK 2025
Filmstill The Little Puffy Fart Revue
The Little Puffy Fart Revue
Meike Fehre, Sabine Dully
Why are farts so embarrassing? At least that is what fart star Pongy Pippa wonders, and sings of that most human of noises with tubas and trumpets in time with our digestion
Filmstill The Little Puffy Fart Revue

The Little Puffy Fart Revue

Eine kleine Pups-Revue
Meike Fehre, Sabine Dully
Kids DOK 2025
Animated Film
Germany
2024
7 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

We have all been there: A noise escapes in the bus, followed by an unpleasant smell – and everyone knows where it came from. But why are farts so embarrassing? At least that is what fart star Pongy Pippa wonders. She dances with tubas and trumpets in time with our digestion to show how much work and skill goes into making such sounds. A musical show for the most human of noises.

Tina Jany

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Meike Fehre, Sabine Dully
Script
Eva Mesken
Cinematographer
Sabine Dully
Editor
Thomas Schmidl
Producer
Meike Fehre
Co-Producer
Ina Werner, Katrin Pilz, Sabine Schmidt
Sound Design
Christian Riegel, Caroline Micol Loguercio
Score
Moritz Denis, Eike Hosenfeld
Animation
Carlo Palazzari, Manijé Angaji, Till Machmer, Friedrich Schäper
Retrospective 2024
Filmstill Something Self Explanatory (15x)
Something Self Explanatory (15x)
Harun Farocki, Hartmut Bitomsky
An educational film about the Marxist vocabulary of commodity and labour, wages and labour power, exchange and use value - demonstrated with political stance and aesthetic actions.
Filmstill Something Self Explanatory (15x)

Something Self Explanatory (15x)

Eine Sache, die sich versteht (15x)
Harun Farocki, Hartmut Bitomsky
Retrospective 2024
Documentary Film
FRG
1971
64 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

This Marxist education offensive cast into actions and images is part of a bigger cycle of so-called educational films that, following Bertolt Brecht’s concept of the didactic experimental play, use lucid illustration to fill abstract terms with practical meaning. In fifteen learning unites, Harun Farocki and Hartmut Bitomsky address the basic concepts of Karl Marx’s main political work, “Capital”, discussing a section that, according to their own statements, they do not consider self explanatory. “The intention is to make a person who is walking think about walking so that he falls down,” as the two filmmakers noted about their project. It remains to be seen whether such a fall also makes the penny drop among the audience.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Harun Farocki, Hartmut Bitomsky
Cinematographer
David Slama, Carlos Bustamante
Editor
Hasso Nagel
Producer
Larabel Film Harun Farocki
Sound
Johannes Beringer
Filmstill One Hundred Four

One Hundred Four

Einhundertvier
Jonathan Schörnig
German Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Germany
2023
93 minutes
English,
German
Subtitles: 
English

The deadliest refugee route in the world claims thousands of lives every year. In the first half of 2023 alone, almost 2,000 people died in the Mediterranean because the European Union’s border policy systematically violates existing laws. Instead of helping shipwrecked persons, Frontex practices illegal pushbacks, finances the violent operations of the Libyan coast guard and takes massive action against private sea rescue missions that act where the EU fails. All this has been documented in the media and yet remains incomprehensible to all who were never forced to live through this situation themselves: How can one deny assistance to hundreds of people in peril of life, even threaten and criminalise the civilian helpers?

Jonathan Schörnig was concerned with this dilemma of lack of perception and decided to bring a sea rescue to the screen as a real time documentary to show how agonisingly long it takes to rescue 104 persons from a sinking rubber boat. One by one, step by step, the film follows the action with several parallel cameras. When the Libyan coast guard turn up, the situation comes to a head. The rescued persons and the crew are stuck on the high seas for days because no Mediterranean country gives them permission to dock. It is only after a heavy storm that one port takes pity on them. What sounds like a bad script is actually – daily – reality.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jonathan Schörnig
Cinematographer
Jonathan Schörnig, Johannes Filous
Editor
Jonathan Schörnig, Moritz Petzold
Producer
Uwe Nitschke
Co-Producer
Adrian Then
Winner of: Goethe-Institut Documentary Film Prize, Golden Dove Feature-Length Film (German Competition), Leipziger Ring, ver.di Prize for Solidarity, Humanity and Fairness
Retrospective 2021
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Introduction to Arnold Schoenberg’s Accompaniment to a Cinematographic Scene
Jean-Marie Straub
A film score to which no film was ever made – except this collage of words and images that deduces terrifying anti-Semitic continuities from letters and visual associations.
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Introduction to Arnold Schoenberg’s Accompaniment to a Cinematographic Scene

Einleitung zu Arnold Schönbergs Begleitmusik zu einer Lichtspielscene
Jean-Marie Straub
Retrospective 2021
Documentary Film
FRG
1972
16 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

“Imminent danger, fear, catastrophe,“ the Austrian-Jewish composer Arnold Schönberg wrote on top of his film score in 1930, to which – except in this collage, swaying like a battered boxer between austere reading document, black film abysses and roaring tempests of images – no film was ever made. Schönberg’s letters articulate the forebodings of the disaster the National Socialists were to bring upon the Jews, describe anti-Semitism that was becoming systematic, marginalization and defamation. Inserted in between, as a look back and forward at historical continuities: bombers approaching Vietnam, the shot Paris Communards in coffins arranged like letter cases.

Sylvia Görke

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jean-Marie Straub
Script
Jean-Marie Straub
Cinematographer
Renato Berta, Horst Bever
Editor
Jean-Marie Straub, Danièle Huillet, Danièle Huillet
Producer
Jean-Marie Straub, Danièle Huillet
Sound
Jeti Grigioni, Harald Lill
Performer
Günter Peter Straschek, Peter Nestler, Danièle Huillet
Filmstill Being That Boy Again

Being That Boy Again

Einmal wieder dieser Junge sein
Jan Koester
German Competition Short Film 2022
Animated Film
Germany
2022
7 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
English

His mother starts drinking when he is eight years old. Jan Koester projects photos from his childhood on his own body that tell of loneliness and helplessness in toxic relationships. These Rorschach-like superimposed images put physical abstractions in relation to their violent and alienated surroundings. Shifting between fluid and halting movements, telescoped pixels tugging at each other deconstruct predominant gender norms.

Samuel Döring

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jan Koester
Cinematographer
Lisa Violetta Gaß, Jan Koester
Editor
Jan Koester
Producer
Christine Haupt
Sound
Alexander Heinze
Score
Jan Koester
Animation
Jan Koester
Nominated for: mephisto 97.6 Audience Award, Gedanken Aufschluss Prize
Thomas Heise (1955–2024) 2024
Filmstill Iron Age
Iron Age
Thomas Heise
Cancelled in 1981 “for reasons of state discipline”, continued ten years later: a film about young people in Eisenhüttenstadt – their escapes from reality and the wish to think for themselves.
Filmstill Iron Age
Filmstill Iron Age

Iron Age

Eisenzeit
Thomas Heise
Thomas Heise (1955–2024) 2024
Documentary Film
Germany
1991
90 minutes
German
Subtitles: 
None

This film about children in Eisenhüttenstadt, that showcase project of socialist urban development, was planned in 1981 and terminated “for reasons of state discipline” before it began. Ten years later, its protagonists are already in the West or no longer alive, Thomas Heise sweeps up the remains. Very little material, but memories. Neil Young’s ballads accompany car and train rides through the new non-places of the German East: “Gone, gone, the damage done.” From there, “Iron Age” delves into old and new conflicts – baffled parents, escapes from reality, the wish to think for oneself and not be thought. Odds and ends. A DEFA production, placed with Norddeutscher Rundfunk by Klaus Wildenhahn and awarded the Sponsoring Prize at DOK Leipzig.

Jan Künemund

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Thomas Heise
Script
Thomas Heise
Cinematographer
Sebastian Richter
Editor
Karin Schöning
Producer
DEFA-Studio für Dokumentarfilme
Sound
Patrick Stanislawski
Score
Tilo Palukat