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DOK LEIPZIG 2022

DOK Leipzig announces its competition line-ups

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- The selection includes the new films by Sasha Kulak, Mila Turajlić, Nikolaus Geyrhalter, Kim Hopkins and Theo Montoya

DOK Leipzig announces its competition line-ups
Matter Out of Place by Nikolaus Geyrhalter

DOK Leipzig has announced the full competition programme for its 65th edition, running from 17-23 October. Seventy-four feature-length and short animated and documentary films, 48 of which are world or international premieres, will be competing for the Golden and Silver Doves in the International Competitions, the German Competitions and the Competitions for the Audience Awards.

“The films at this year’s festival confront us with genuine social realities, but they also teach us that documentary images must be approached with scepticism,” says festival director Christoph Terhechte. “At a time when deepfakes are circulating online, DOK Leipzig regards itself as a platform that enables a critical discussion of the way images are being created and the forms of truth that are resulting from this.”

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The International Competition Long Documentary and Animated Film is showcasing 13 works. Several of these are based on archival research, including Tropic Fever by Mahardika Yudha, Robin Hartanto Honggare and Perdana Roswaldy, on Dutch colonists in Indonesia; and Ciné-Guerrillas: Scenes from the Labudović Reels [+see also:
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by Mila Turajlić (who will be the subject of the DOK Leipzig Homage), which draws on footage from the Algerian War shot by Josip Broz Tito's cameraman.

The selection also features new pictures by established filmmakers, such as Sasha Kulak's A Hawk as Big as a Horse and Nikolaus Geyrhalter's Matter Out of Place [+see also:
film review
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interview: Nikolaus Geyrhalter
film profile
]
, while other European (co-)productions in the selection include Theo Montoya's Anhell69 [+see also:
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interview: Theo Montoya
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, Faustine Cros' A Life Like Any Other [+see also:
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and Mickäel Bandela's One Mother. The Dependents by Sofia Brockenshire (Argentina/Canada), Divine Factory by Joseph Mangat (Philippines/USA/Taiwan), The Invisible Frontier by Mariana Flores Villalba (Mexico), Landscapes by Hernán Fernández (Argentina), A Night Song by Félix Lamarche (Canada) and Perhaps What I Fear Does Not Exist by Corine Shawi (Lebanon) round off this strand.

The Competition for the Audience Award Long Documentary and Animated Film features nine titles, including the world premieres of Pamela Meyer-Arndt’s Rebels, on three artists who opposed the GDR; Maksym Melnyk's Three Women [+see also:
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, set in an isolated Ukrainian village in the year of Zelenskiy's election victory; and Maryna Peszko's Revolution 21, on an ensemble of theatre actors with Down's Syndrome. Other European titles in the line-up include Kim Hopkins' A Bunch of Amateurs [+see also:
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, Adnane Baraka's Fragments from Heaven [+see also:
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, Helke Misselwitz's The Poet's Wife, Elwira Niewiera and Piotr Rosołowski's The Hamlet Syndrome [+see also:
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interview: Elwira Niewiera and Piotr R…
film profile
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, and Lei Lei's animation Silver Bird and Rainbow Fish [+see also:
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. Meanwhile, the USA is represented by One Road to Quartzsite by Ryan Maxey.

Finally, nine titles will be competing in the German Competition Long Documentary and Animated Film, including Katharina Pethke’s Uncanny Me, which examines how reality is depicted, and The Homes We Carry [+see also:
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, in which director Brenda Akele Jorde reflects on her identity as the daughter of a German mother and a Mozambican father. The other seven films are Blue Sky White Clouds by Astrid Menzel, Daniel Richter by Pepe Danquart, Pastor Lothar Stops by Tilman König, Miyama, Kyoto Prefecture by Rainer Komers, Slaughterhouses of Modernity by Heinz Emigholz, Dead Birds Flying High by Sönje Storm, and She Chef [+see also:
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 by Gereon Wetzel and Melanie Liebheit.

Across all of its sidebars and competitions, the festival is presenting a total of 255 films and XR experiences from 55 countries, including 67 feature films and 179 short films. The full programme can be browsed here.

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