INTERVIEWS

BDE Interview: Colossal Wreck by Josh Appignanesi 

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Back in 2023, filmmaker Josh Appignanesi screened his feature doc My Extinction at COP28 in Dubai. While there, he got his camera out to record his impressions, which he presents in the feature doc Colossal Wreck, which opens this weekend across the UK. “I thought, well, obviously, I have to go because it'll be interesting and fun,” he tells BDE. “Also, surely Dubai is going to be insanely dripping with visual irony with every image that surely will be a sort of metaphor for the state of play in the world at large…”

Tallinn Black Nights FF: Days of Wonder by Karin Pennanen

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In her exquisite Days of Wonder, Finnish filmmaker Karin Pennanen tells the story of her late uncle Markku, a multi-talented composer and artist, but a man who lived a hermitic life on the outskirts of a small town in Finland, all the time building an enormous body of work that went unseen until his death in 2021. “Days of Wonder is a film about real freedom, which, more than any external circumstances, is an inner state,” says Pennanen. “The film is about the passion for life and a quest for a genuine existence instead of external success.”

Nordische Filmtage Lübeck: A World Gone Mad by Wilfried Hauke

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Pippi Longstocking would not have existed without the Second World War. This is one of the assertions made in Wilfried Hauke’s remarkable new feature documentary, A World Gone Mad, that received its world premiere in Lübeck this week. “[She] becomes a star after the Second World War in Sweden and Germany because the readers could feel there is a humanistic, moral power integrated in this figure of Pippi which is, of course, against the ugly power of dictators and their authoritarianism.” Hauke tells BDE.

Awards FYC: Predators by David Osit

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In Predators, US director David Osit examines the rise and fall of the infamous TV programme To Catch a Predator, and asks some uncomfortable questions of its tangled legacy in the process. “I wanted to make a film that…really tried to unsettle you, to unmoor what your convictions were, and to make you have a different kind of experience with what you were watching,” Osit tells BDE, adding how the public reaction to the film has been what he has hoped for, “that it crawls under your skin.”

European Film Award Documentary shortlist: Fiume o morte! by Igor Bezinović

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In 1919, the flamboyant, some say narcissistic, politician Gabriele D’Annunzio staged a coup in the Croatian port town of Rijeka, and thereafter ruled for 16 months. In his new film, Igor Bezinović tells the story of this tumultuous period via archive and recreations staged with local people, with a variety of amateur actors playing D’Annunzio. “To tackle D’Annunzio’s madness, you have to be as passionate about it [the story] as him,” Bezinović tells BDE.

European Film Awards Short Film shortlist: City of Poets by Sara Rajaei

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Rotterdam-based filmmaker Sara Rajaei’s City of Poets is a short hybrid work that reflects on the countless inequities suffered by women. It is a film both deeply melancholic and shot through with a magical realist aesthetic. “At the same time the film is addressing something real - something of our contemporary history and things that I experienced during my childhood and that I still experience. So yes, it is a fairy-tale, but it is about something much larger, much more universal.”

NEWS

Docs in competition at Tallinn Black Nights FF (PÖFF)

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The 2025 Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival (PÖFF), which runs November 7 to 23, will showcase docs in both International and Baltic Competitions. For the first time, Baltic documentaries and feature films will compete in separate programmes. “The films in Doc@PÖFF programme open a restless world where bold, author-driven works captivate with their search for balance and understanding — and demonstrate that documentaries can be even more engaging than fiction,” says doc curator Marianna Kaat.

EURODOC call for applications for 2026 edition

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Running March to October 2026, the main objectives of the programme are to enhance the artistic and financial development of film projects, to improve know-how in terms of international co-production and company management, and to reinforce the set of continuously evolving skills a career in independent production requires. “EURODOC has been empowering and connecting documentary film producers for 26 years,” the organisation writes. Deadline for applications: November 26 2026.

68th DOK Leipzig reports “a resounding success”

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The 68th edition of the documentary and animated film festival DOK Leipzig came to a close on Sunday, having attracted a total of 53,000 attendees this year. More than 2,000 accredited guests attended the film screenings and events. “The fact that so many festivalgoers and accredited guests once again flocked to the cinemas, to DOK Neuland and to the DOK Industry events continues to show how great the demand is for artistic engagement with global political issues and diverse lifestyles,” concludes festival director Christoph Terhechte.

Ji.hlava New Visions WIP: Adam’s Tooth by Mariam Chachia, Nik Voigt

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In Adam’s Tooth, which won a Most Promising European Project award at Ji.hlava IDFF, two Georgian archaeologists find a 1.8 million year old tooth, as well as the ancient skeleton of a wolf. But the Minister of Culture “arrests” the tooth, and bans any further digging, forcing the archaeologists to make a last-ditch attempt to free the artefacts from the Ministry’s grip. “Though Adam's Tooth begins with archaeology, it's really about human existence. [It’s] about time, absurdity, and the freedom to act within the limits of our own stage,” says co-director Nik Voigt.

New consultancy service Doc Shelter to launch at IDFA

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Five top industry professionals - Martijn te Pas, Cecilie Bolvinkel, Inka Achté, Maarten Schmidt (Belgium) and Iris Olsson - have come together to form Doc Shelter, a consultancy collective dedicated to supporting filmmakers at every stage of the documentary journey. “In just a few months, we’ve grown into a close-knit team with a shared vision and mission, committed to being generous, fair, and approachable,” says co-founder te Pas.

DOK Leipzig 2025: Winners of 68th edition announced Nov 1

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The awards of the 68th edition of DOK Leipzig were announced November 1 2025, with seven Golden and two Silver Doves handed out to winners, as well as several Partnership Awards. In International Doc Comp Doc, the main winner was Ivan Ramljak for Peacemaker (Croatia). The Silver Dove Feature-Length Film, awarded to the best feature-length doc film by an emerging director, went to Swiss Gregor Brändli for Elephants & Squirrels (Switzerland). The Best German Doc award went to Yulia Lokshina for Active Vocabulary. All awards…

REVIEWS

Doclisboa Portuguese Comp review: Gil, Let’s Explode São Paulo 

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Having spent her whole life aspiring to be a professional singer, middle-aged cleaner Gil finally achieves her dream in Maria Clara Escobar’s hybrid documentary, which invents an alternative story in which Gil can shed the mask forced on her by economic and class factors, and at last present her true self, her own voice, to the world.

Doclisboa/Ji.hlava review: Vacances by Victoria Hely-Hutchinson

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Victoria Hely-Hutchinson’s deliciously paced Vacances is neither a reductive portrait of an old eccentric nor a sensationalist dissection of a dysfunctional family. Although either could probably have been edited from her material. Instead, we mostly find ourselves lounging languidly around a sunny villa in Provence, as the uninhibited, at times inexcusably rude, Granny dominates the proceedings. But at some point, something’s gotta give…

Doclisboa Int’l Comp review: Cinema Kawakeb by Mahmoud Massad

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This elegiac ode to a crumbling cinema in Amman intertwines the messy reality of making a documentary [which entails the filmmaker constantly steering his protagonists from behind the camera] with archival news footage on Palestine-Israel. Both meta levels reflect on this beautiful portrayal of the cinema’s last two elderly employees, who struggle daily to keep their doomed movie theatre afloat. Thus say I, a critic and lover of cinema…and of this film.

Venice FF review – Kim Novak’s Vertigo by Alexandre O. Philippe

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An enthralling, illuminating and warm-hearted examination of the life and work of a woman who was self-aware of her image and abilities, but who defied the expectations of the tinsel town system, ultimately charting her own course away from the movie world.

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