MILLENNIUM DOCS AGAINST GRAVITY 2025
Millennium Docs Against Gravity dévoile le programme de sa 22e édition, dont le leitmotiv est "Tout le vaste monde entre nous”
- Le festival, qui se tiendra du 9 au 18 mai dans sept villes polonaises, présentera un bon nombre de documentaires nationaux et internationaux en avant-première

Cet article est disponible en anglais.
The 22nd Millennium Docs Against Gravity (MDAG) is fast approaching, bringing its latest edition to screens across Poland. From 9-18 May, the festival will take place in seven cities (Warsaw, Wrocław, Gdynia, Poznań, Katowice, Łódź and Bydgoszcz), offering a rich line-up of documentary cinema. After the in-person screenings, the event will move online, with a curated selection of groundbreaking international documentaries, many premiering in Poland, available for streaming on mdag.pl from 20 May-2 June.
The 2025 edition of MDAG, held under the motto "The Whole World Between Us", will showcase nearly 180 documentaries from around the globe, including winners from IDFA, Sundance and the Berlinale. With 16 competitions and 20 awards, this year’s programme spans diverse themes, from ecology and art to politics, psychology and sports. The festival opens with two films: Coexistence, My Ass! [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film] by Amber Fares, a humorous take on Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts; and Ernest Cole: Lost and Found [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film] by Raoul Peck, a portrait of the titular pioneering South African photographer and his quest for artistic freedom and equality. On 11 May, the festival will also feature a special charity stand-up show by Noam Shuster-Eliassi, the protagonist of Coexistence, My Ass!, blending comedy and activism to explore identity, politics and, indeed, coexistence.
The Main Competition features 12 films from around the globe, selected to reflect what MDAG artistic director Karol Piekarczyk calls “the very best of documentary cinema – and cinema as a whole”. These titles will compete for the major awards presented across the festival cities, including the Grand Prix – Millennium Bank Award, which offers theatrical distribution of the winning film in Poland and €8,000. This year’s jury features Salma Abdalla, international relations and PR manager at the Austrian Film Institute, and former CEO of Autlook Filmsales; Remi Grellety, a two-time Oscar-nominated film producer, known for I Am Not Your Negro [+lire aussi :
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bande-annonce
fiche film] and Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat [+lire aussi :
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interview : Johan Grimonprez
fiche film]; and Simon Lereng Wilmont, the Oscar-nominated director of A House Made of Splinters [+lire aussi :
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fiche film].
The selection comprises 2000 Meters to Andriivka [+lire aussi :
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fiche film] by Mstyslav Chernov (Ukraine), Apocalypse in the Tropics by Petra Costa (Brazil/USA/Denmark), A Want in Her [+lire aussi :
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interview : Myrid Carten
fiche film] by Myrid Carten (Ireland/UK/Netherlands), Baby Doe by Jessica Earnshaw (USA), Come See Me in the Good Light by Ryan White (USA), Coexistence, My Ass! by Amber Fares (USA/France), My Stolen Planet [+lire aussi :
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fiche film] by Farahnaz Sharifi (Germany/Iran), A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things [+lire aussi :
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interview : Mark Cousins
fiche film] by Mark Cousins (UK), Mr. Nobody Against Putin [+lire aussi :
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fiche film] by David Borenstein and Pavel Talankin (Denmark/Czech Republic), Trains [+lire aussi :
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interview : Maciej J. Drygas
fiche film] by Maciej J Drygas (Poland/Lithuania), Only on Earth [+lire aussi :
interview : Robin Petré
interview : Robin Petré
fiche film] by Robin Petré (Denmark/Spain), and Yintah by Jennifer Wickham, Brenda Michell and Michael Toledano (Canada).
A total of ten films are competing in the Polish Competition, each aiming to win one of three awards: the Best Polish Film Award, which is accompanied by €4,000; the Smakjam Award for Best Production; and the Arthouse Cinema Association Award. The selection features two world premieres and one international premiere, while the remaining titles will be having their Polish premieres during MDAG. The line-up showcases gender parity, as the films are directed by six men and six women. The jury includes: Dorota Lech, programmer at the Toronto International Film Festival; Victoria Leshchenko, programme coordinator at DOK Leipzig; and Jakub Popielecki, film critic at Filmweb.pl.
The world premieres include KOMPLETA by Tomasz Śliwiński and Magdalena Hueckel (Poland), an intimate record of a difficult period in the filmmakers’ lives as the main character, in her eighth month of pregnancy, is diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer; and The Passenger Andrzej Munk by Michał Bielawski (Poland), a portrait of Andrzej Munk, one of the leading figures of the Polish Film School, illustrated with film fragments, chronicles and photographs from the rich archive of the filmmaker. Furthermore, the Berlinale-premiered Das Deutsche Volk [+lire aussi :
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interview : Marcin Wierzchowski
fiche film] by Marcin Wierzchowski (Germany) will make its international bow.
The selection also includes The Guest by Zvika Gregory Portnoy and Zuzanna Solakiewicz (Poland/Qatar), King Matt the First [+lire aussi :
interview : Jaśmina Wójcik
fiche film] by Jaśmina Wójcik (Poland), Letters From Wolf Street [+lire aussi :
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fiche film] by Arjun Talwar (Poland/Germany), My Dear Théo [+lire aussi :
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fiche film] by Alisa Kovalenko (Poland/Czech Republic/Ukraine), Trains by Maciej J Drygas (Poland/Lithuania), Bedrock by Kinga Michalska (Canada) and Trust Me by Joanna Ratajczak (Poland/Germany).
(Traduit de l'anglais)
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