DOK Leipzig announces its competition programme line-ups
- The new films by Nikolaus Geyrhalter, Peter Mettler, Ivan Ramljak and Katrin Rothe, amongst others, will be locking horns at the 66th edition of the German gathering
The competition titles of the 66th DOK Leipzig (8-15 October) have now been chosen and made public. A total of 71 films, 35 of which are world premieres, will be competing for the Golden and Silver Doves.
“Quite a few films made during the pandemic had a personal angle,” festival director Christoph Terhechte observes. “This year, the movies have gone back to looking at broader societal and political themes – partly in order to understand what’s going on at the moment and explore how we can work towards a different future,” he added.
This year’s International Competition Documentary Film includes ten feature-length titles and 13 shorts. They come from various countries and are helmed by filmmakers boasting different statures and levels of experience: some are feature debuts, while others are the works of seasoned directors. Among the feature-length titles, there are six world, three international and one European premiere. The selection includes works by Peter Mettler (While the Green Grass Grows [+see also:
film review
film profile]), Nikolaus Geyrhalter (The Standstill [+see also:
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trailer
film profile]), Sarah Mallégol (Kumwa – Which Comes from Silence) and Ivan Ramljak (El Shatt – A Blueprint for Utopia), among others.
The newly introduced International Competition Animated Film features 27 films, five of which are feature-length titles. It will showcase Katrin Rothe’s Johnny & Me – A Journey Through Time with John Heartfield [+see also:
trailer
film profile]; Ekiem Barbier, Guilhem Causse and Quentin L’helgoualc’h’s Knit’s Island [+see also:
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film profile]; Isabel Herguera’s Sultana’s Dream [+see also:
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interview: Isabel Herguera
film profile] (fresh off its screening in competition at San Sebastián); and Joan Tomàs Monfort, Carlos Pérez-Reche and Juanjo Sáez’s Annecy title Tender Metalheads.
The German Competition Documentary Film boasts eight short and 17 feature-length titles, all of which are world premieres. To name a few of them, Grit Lemke digs into her own ethnic heritage to paint a portrait of the vibrant culture of Lusatian Sorbs in We Call Her Hanka, Nele Dehnenkamp chronicles the fight of one woman against the US justice system to prove her husband’s innocence in For the Time Being, Annika Mayer tries to glimpse domestic abuse in seemingly idyllic family life in West Germany, as captured on Super-8 films, in Home Sweet Home [+see also:
film review
film profile], and Gitti Grüter deals with ADHD in adulthood from the deliberately chosen perspective of females in Sick Girls.
Finally, eight feature-length documentaries have been selected for the Audience Competition. Some of them have already made a splash on the international film-festival circuit. The list includes titles like Lina Soualem’s Bye Bye Tiberias [+see also:
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interview: Lina Soualem
film profile], which arrives fresh from Venice; Maria Fredriksson’s The Gullspång Miracle [+see also:
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film profile], which premiered at Tribeca; Agnieszka Zwiefka’s Vika!, which homes in on the life of a female DJ in her eighties; and Julia Gutweniger and Florian Kofler’s Vista Mare, which takes us behind the scenes of beach holidays in Italy.
The remaining sections include Doc Alliance Award, Camera Lucida (with five hand-picked, provocative titles) and Panorama: Central and Eastern Europe. All in all, 225 films and XR works will be showcased at DOK Leipzig 2023. For the complete list and more information, click here.