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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
Filmstill Open Game

Open Game

Offenes Spiel
Justus Hanfland, Rasoul Mohammadi Koussehabad
German Competition Documentary Film 2025
Documentary Film
Germany
2025
7 minutes
Farsi
Subtitles: 
English

The art of the documentary portrait is to introduce an individual to the audience within a short period of time while going beyond a collection of biographical facts and capturing what actually defines this person. “Open Game” succeeds by showing its young protagonist Amir as someone who seems permanently on the move. First, he mastered the unsafe route from Afghanistan to Germany, now he constantly moves between school, job, and chessboard. He finds rest only when he moves his pieces on the 64 squares of the board, when he delves into a world where every move must be considered and where strategy, not luck, determine the outcome. In chess, Amir knows all the rules and can determine the course of the game – from the cleverly chosen opening move to the end, planned move by move.
“Open Game” structures its material along the phases of a chess match and portrays Amir as a person whose life was exposed to chance. Those who have to hope for luck too often appreciate a controlled environment.

Luc-Carolin Ziemann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Justus Hanfland, Rasoul Mohammadi Koussehabad
Cinematographer
Justus Hanfland
Editor
Justus Hanfland, Rasoul Mohammadi Koussehabad
Producer
Justus Hanfland, Rasoul Mohammadi Koussehabad, Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln
Sound
Leonard Mann
Narrator
Amir Hossein Rezai