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VISIONS DU RÉEL 2023

The Visions du Réel line-up promises to be especially rich and inclusive

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- With a total of 163 films, and 82 screening as world premieres, the festival will boast young talent and established directors making their return to Nyon

The Visions du Réel line-up promises to be especially rich and inclusive
Nightwatchers by Juliette de Marcillac

Between 21 and 30 April, Nyon will be hosting its historic festival which is now at its 54th edition. Always looking to the future and captained by Emilie Bujès, Visions du Réel is continuing to forge a path built upon boundary-breaking documentary film approaches, whether in terms of genre, format or language, advocating a refreshing and modern hybridisation of the form. Between up-and-coming young talent (24 first feature films, overall) and familiar faces at the festival, such as Swiss-Canadian director Peter Mettler, Polish directorial duo Piotr Pawlus and Tomasz Wolski, and Italy’s Mattia Colombo, who have all been selected for the International Competition, the festival is set to shine a light on a vast array of modern documentary productions. The striking number of Swiss (co)productions (37 across the various sections) is also worth a mention and demonstrates the increasing interest we’re seeing in this format.

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The special guests at this year’s event are leading figures in the world of contemporary cinema: the different works by Argentine director Lucrecia Martel (Guest of Honour), Italy’s Alice Rohrwacher (Special Guest) and Swiss filmmaker Jean-Stéphane Bron (Workshop) are all prime examples of the various approaches showcased by the festival. Martel and Rohrwacher will also be delivering two hotly anticipated master classes, while the presence of French director Céline Sciamma, who’ll be handing out the Honorary Prize, is also worth highlighting, as is that of editor Nelly Quettler who’s taking part in the Italian filmmaker’s master class.

This 54th edition of the festival is set to be opened by a world premiere of French director Juliette de Marcillac’s Nightwatchers, a militant film confronting us with society’s paradoxes, taking in winter sports and survival, privilege and endless struggles.

As for the International Feature Film Competition, numerous European productions and co-productions have made the final 14 selectees, notably three Swiss co-productions: While the Green Grass Grows [+see also:
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]
 by Swiss director Peter Mettler, who was a guest at the 2020 Workshop and who’s set to present the first two parts (out of a total seven) of his film-diary; Pure Unknown [+see also:
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]
by the Italian directorial duo Mattia Colombo and Valentina Cicognia, which tells the tale of a doctor fighting for the right to a dignified burial for migrants who have died at sea; and Antier noche [+see also:
film review
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interview: Alberto Martín Menacho
film profile
]
, which is the debut feature film by Spanish director Alberto Martín Menacho who trained at Geneva’s HEAD and which paints a sensitive portrait of four youngsters from a small village in Estremadura who find themselves caught between ancestral traditions and a thirst for modernity. The notably high number of Spanish films is also worth a mention this year. In addition to Antier noche, we’ll also be treated to first feature films by Pau Faus and Pablo Lago Dantas: the former, wielding his sophisticated and entertaining movie Fauna [+see also:
film review
interview: Pau Faus and Sergi Cameron
film profile
]
, creates a dialogue between the animal and agricultural world and science and its hi-tech technologies, while the latter, by way of A House for Wandering Souls, takes us to the heart of Lago Dantas’s native Galicia and its ancient traditions.

France will be taking part with two films: The Lost Boys of Mercury [+see also:
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by Clémence Davigo, a touching movie lending a voice to the victims of a “correctional” Catholic facility, and Machtat [+see also:
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, a co-production by French-Tunisian documentary-maker Sonia Ben Slama which homes in on Fatma and her daughters who are traditional Tunisian musicians performing at weddings. Rounding off the European films list is In Ukraine [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Piotr Pawlus, Tomasz Wolski
film profile
]
, by the Polish directorial duo Piotr Pawlus and Tomasz Wolski (awarded the Special Jury Prize at the 2021 Visions du Réel Festival for his movie 1970 [+see also:
film review
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interview: Tomasz Wolski
film profile
]
).

This year’s Burning Lights competition - dedicated to innovative, audacious and adventurous movies, in terms of both content and form - consists of 15 titles (13 in world premieres), of which more than half are European productions or co-productions screening in world premieres. These include no less than four French films: Geoffrey Lachassagne’s intriguing work Apocryphal County, which explores the imaginary geographical zone invented by US writer William Faulkner, Knit’s Island [+see also:
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]
 by Eklem Barbier, Gulhelm Causse and Quentin L’helgoualc’h, a deep dive into a virtual world captained by avatars of the directors themselves who have turned into survivalist heroes, and the two co-productions An An Owl, a Garden & the Writer by Sara Dolatabadi, which paints the portrait of her father, the famous Iranian writer Mahmoud Dowlatabadi, and Justine Harbonnier’s touching tale of a thirty-year-old in crisis Caiti Blues [+see also:
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]
.

Switzerland, for its part, will be attending with Dreamers [+see also:
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]
, a respectful and sensitive film by the directorial duo Stéphanie Barbey and Luc Peter about the day-to-day life of Carlos who arrived in the US illegally a good 29 years earlier. Another movie created by four hands and likewise in on the action is An Inhabited Volcano [+see also:
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]
 by Spain’s David Pantaleón and Jose Victor Fuentes, who document the fascination and fear provoked by a volcano on the Canary Islands archipelago.

Meanwhile, Astrakan 79 by Portuguese director Catarina Mourão tells us the captivating story of Martim whose parents are militant communists and who dreamed, as a teenager, of building a new society. Equally intriguing and mysterious are Landshaft [+see also:
film review
interview: Daniel Kötter
film profile
]
 by Germany’s Daniel Kötter and Taxibol, a medium-length film by Italy’s Tommaso Santambrogio. The former travels along the mountain-rimmed valley between Armenia and Azerbaijan, highlighting the concerns of its inhabitants who feel helpless in the face of forces who challenge one another with no care for the people’s fate, while the latter starts with a meeting between Filipino filmmaker Lav Diaz and a Cuban taxi driver before opening itself up to more universal discussions, interweaving the past and the present.

Also worth a mention in the National Competition is the world premiere of The Wonder Way [+see also:
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]
 by artist and director Emmanuelle Antille who, in 2018, presented her movie A Bright Light – Karen and the Process [+see also:
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]
in Nyon’s Burning Lights line-up.

Rounding off the rich line-up for this 54th edition of the festival are the National Competition, the International Medium-Length Movies Competition and the Grand Angle line-up.

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(Translated from Italian)

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