INTERVIEWS
Awards FYC: American Sons by Andrew James Gonzales
In American Sons, director Andrew James Gonzales follows a brotherhood of Marines a decade after their deployment to Afghanistan, as they struggle to overcome the trauma of combat and the loss of their best friend, Corporal JV Villarreal. “It goes back to what Charles Dickens said in A Tale of Two Cities. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” the director tells BDE. “Even though it was horrible, it was also the greatest experience they’ve ever had…the love you have for someone who you’re willing to die for and who is willing to die for you, we cannot imagine.”
Awards FYC: Norita by Jayson McNamara and Andrea Carbonatto Tortonese
The part-animated feature documentary tells the story of the firebrand Nora Morales de Cortiñas, aka Norita, who became a symbol of resistance in Argentina after her son Guistavo was disappeared in the 1970s, along with thousands of other young activists. With other grieving women, she founded the campaigning Mothers of Plaza de Mayo. “It's just remarkable. It's phenomenal to think that a group of housewives basically toppled a military regime,” says co-director Jayson McNamara.
Awards FYC: On Healing Land, Birds Perch by Naja Pham Lockwood
It is one of the most famous photos in history. In 1968, two days after the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, the South Vietnamese General Loan was photographed executing Captain Lēm of the invading Vietcong with a single shot to the head. “For the Vietnamese, it was really the definition of the civil war. It was a Vietnamese brother shooting another Vietnamese brother,” director Naja Pham Lockwood underlines to BDE of her short documentary On Healing Land, Birds Perch. “I wanted to tell the stories behind that photo.”
Awards FYC: Orwell: 2+2=5 by Raoul Peck
Producer George Chignell talks to Business Doc Europe about Raoul Peck’s Orwell: 2+2=5, an Oscar contender that was released in the US this autumn by Neon. Peck uses Orwell’s work, and Nineteen Eighty-Four in particular, to look at the growth of authoritarianism today, everywhere from Trump’s America to Putin’s Russian, from Myanmar to Viktor Orban’s Hungary. “For me, it was a gift to work with a director like him,” Chignell says of her association with Peck.
Awards FYC: The Breakthrough Group by Ben Rekhi
“I struggled with addiction and depression for most of my young adult life,” filmmaker Ben Rekhi clarifies to BDE of one of his main motivations for making his Oscar-qualifying short, The Breakthrough Group. The 40-minute film looks in depth at the remarkable work of The Other Side Academy in Salt Lake City, a programme providing care and “tough love” for those at the lowest ebb of drug or alcohol dependency.
Tallinn Black Nights: Sunday Ninth by Kat Steppe
It may be a fiction film, but it is the first by a director acclaimed for her documentary output. What’s more, Kat Steppe’s Sunday Ninth, a story about Alzheimer’s and the vulnerability of memory, is set in a real operational care home. “This approach allows fiction to take a step further. Blending real people into the fictional storyline highlights the real-life story, and vice versa. This mix creates a powerful viewing experience that deeply connects with the audience,” the Flemish director underlines.
NEWS
FYC chat: The Perfect Neighbor by Geeta Gandbhir
Roger Ross Williams (Stamped From The Beginning) speaks to Geeta Gandbhir about her Sundance-winning feature doc The Perfect Neighbor, which presents a devastating critique of race, inequality and the vigilante-style ‘stand your ground’ legislation in operation in the US today, and which details the events leading up to the murder of Gandbhir’s friend Ajike Owens. The director recalled the conversation she had with Ajike’s mother Pam in terms of the outreach support she could offer after the tragic loss. “I have no money to give you. I'm not a doctor. I'm not a lawyer…but I think I can make a film.”
EURODOC celebrates successes at IDFA 2025
Business Doc Europe caught up with EURODOC’s Nora Philippe before an IDFA 2025 closing ceremony that awarded three films that were developed at the leading producer training lab. In total, no fewer than 37 former EURODOC alumni were selected for IDFA 2025, including nine within International and Envision competitions. “EURODOC helps good projects become excellent, highly creative projects that definitely deserve such prestigious selections,” Philippe told BDE.
IDFA 2025: And the winners are…
A Fox Under a Pink Moon picked up the Best Film in International Competition while Past Future Continuous won Best Film in the Envision Competition. The IDFA Award for Best Directing (worth €5,000) in International Competition went to Tamar Kalandadze and Julien Pebrel for The Kartli Kingdom while The IDFA Award for Best First Feature went to Paikar by Dawood Hilmandi. The IDFA Award for Best Dutch Film was won by Maasja Ooms for My Word Against Mine.
Winners of 22nd Verzió Film Festival (11-19 Nov)
The award for Best Doc went to the Georgian film 9-Month Contract, which examines the struggles of a single Georgian mother who turns to surrogacy, and the limits imposed by poverty. The Best Hungarian Film award was given to My Father’s Daughter, a story about the search for a lost sister. The festival continues online until 30 November, including all winning and special mention titles.
8th FIFDH Impact Days Lab Selection announced
The Geneva-based human rights festival unveiled this week the 12 internatonal projects for its Impact Lab training program in 2026. Each project representative will receive expert training to craft an impact strategy ahead of presentation to dozens of NGOs, international organisations and philanthropists, both in Geneva and beyond. The next edition of FIFDH Impact Days runs March 8 to 10 2026.
EFA unveils the five Doc nominees for European Film...
Albert Serra’s Afternoons of Solitude; Fiume o morte! by Igor Bezinović; Riefenstahl by Andres Veiel; Songs of Slow Burning Earth by Olha Zhurba and Kamal Aljafari’s With Hasan in Gaza were unveiled November 18 as the five nominees in the European Documentary category of the 38th European Film Awards. All five are also nominated in the European Film category. The winners will be revealed in this year’s award ceremony on 17 January in Berlin.
REVIEWS
IDFA Luminous review: Weeping Rocks by Karlis Bergs and Andrew Siedenburg
Just like its subject - 79-year old entomologist Professor Arthur M. Shapira - this documentary is a wonderful example of focus, calm and modesty. With thoughtful persistence and an eye for detail, the film shows the life of a “slow scientist” who has made an enormous impact with his seemingly small deeds. It is a wonderful film to lose yourself in and reflect upon – a labour of love, not unlike the body of scientific work that Shapira has painstakingly built over more than half a century.
IDFA International Comp: All My Sisters by Massoud Bakhshi
In the intimate and personal, at times melancholic All My Sisters, two sisters’ coming of age in Iran is beautifully documented by their uncle. The subsequent film, in which the sisters are invited to observe and comment on the material he had shot for almost two decades, speaks of family, loyalty and compassion, but also of oppression and resistance.
IDFA Envision Comp review: Confessions of a Mole by Mo Tan
In this entertaining, clever and very personal film, what at first appears to be a culture clash story about a Chinese film student returning home from Poland to her family in Huai’an, explodes – or rather, implodes – into something much more intensely and darkly personal, and therefore highly universal. What’s more, it includes some of the most intense and intimate arguments you will have ever witnessed in a documentary film.
IDFA Frontlight review: Steal this Story Please! by Carl Deal, Tia Lessin
Amy Goodman is remarkable. As host and executive producer of Democracy Now, she is a multi-award-winning standard-bearer for independent journalism and a fearless advocate for a just society. Besides a multi-layered portrait, Steal this Story Please! film is a celebration of resistance and compassion, but which furthermore shows just how much the concept of a free press is in danger.






































