INTERVIEWS
Hot Docs Special Presentations: The Nest by Chase Joynt, Julietta Singh
Concealed within the foundations of Julietta Singh’s childhood home in Manitoba are the stories of women who have lived there in previous times and who have, over many years, confronted colonialism, racism, sexism and ableism. “It [the house] was a repository of some very difficult experiences and memories for our family,” co-director Singh, whose The Nest world-premieres at Hot Docs, tells BDE.
Hot Docs opening film: Parade: Queer Acts of Love & Resistance
Throughout its 96-minute running time, Noam Gonick’s feature doc touches on everything from the persecution and marginalisation of gays and lesbians in the Canada of the 1950s and 1960s to Black Lives Matter and the emergence of the “two spirit” movement among gay Indigenous communities. Featuring a treasure trove of archival material, the film also “takes advantage in a gracious way” of Canada’s rich history of activist filmmaking, the director tells BDE. “We wanted to get their material back out there on screen.”
BDE interview: Roy Boulter on his debut feature Algorithm Party
UK producer Roy Boulter talks to BDE about directing his debut feature Algorithm Party, an adaptation of the book of the same name, in which fiery Liverpool author and spoken word performer “Roy” (real name PJ Smith, and no relation to Boulter) narrates a series of raw, scabrously funny and sometimes very violent tales dealing with drugs, alcohol and domestic abuse - partly drawn from his own experiences growing up in Toxteth.
VdR Int’l Competition: Where Two Oceans Meet by Lulu Scott
Lulu Scott’s new feature doc Where Two Oceans Meet (a world premiere in Nyon) looks very closely at the life of a family in Mitchells Plain, a township not far from the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa. Kulsum Orrie and her two children are waiting patiently for the release of her husband, Phadiel, who is serving a 25-year prison sentence. 30 years after the end of the Apartheid, Kulsum is still enduring her own separation. Director Scott talks to BDE.
VdR International Competition: Mountain Of Gold by Roland Edzard
Roland Edzard’s new documentary, world-premiering in Nyon, takes us into the heart of the Central Sahara Gold Rush. The director asks his characters to re-enact their own story. “The movie in itself is a documentary because it is real people in a real situation and it’s real life,” he tells BDE. “But it’s a documentary that I did like fiction…I didn’t want to explain but to be inside [the story]. I can say it is done like a fiction [film] because I say ‘action’ and I say ‘cut.’”
VdR Burning Lights: I Lost Sight Of The Landscape by Sophie...
“I wouldn’t say it was exactly a carte blanche, but it was close to it,” Montreal-based director Sophie Bédard Marcotte says of the freedom given to her by backers National Film Board of Canada when she embarked on I Lost Sight Of The Landscape (a world premiere in Burning Lights at VdR this week). In the film, Marcotte turns her camera on her playwright neighbour as he develops his latest work within an artist co-operative.
NEWS
Six new trustees appointed to board of Grierson Trust
The new appointments, which include Dogwoof’s Oli Harbottle, Netflix’s Jessica Ross and editor Zeb Achonu, “will support the Trust’s growing role as a provider of successful industry-leading training programmes and other initiatives to identify and nurture diverse new talent in documentary and factual television making, as well as chairing judging committees for Grierson Awards, which this year includes two new categories,” the organisation writes.
Shortlist for The Whickers Podcast Pitch Award 2025 announced
The Whickers, in partnership with Sheffield DocFest, has announced the shortlist for the 2025 Podcast Pitch Award. Now in its third year, the Podcast Pitch has received its highest number of submissions to date from 36 different countries around the globe. “We’re incredibly excited to give these talented creators a platform and support the next generation of audio documentary makers,” comments Jane Ray, The Whickers Artistic Director.
Nordisk Panorama Forum & Work in Progress Call for...
The 32th edition of Nordisk Panorama, the main funding event for the Nordic documentary community and which takes place Sunday-Tuesday 21-23 September, invites independent documentary projects at all stages from Denmark, Faroe Islands, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Åland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The submission deadline is 19 May 2025.
Programme of 40th DOK.fest Munich
For its 40th anniversary edition, DOK.fest Munich (May 7 to 18) will present three competition and 16 thematic film sections. The festival will open with Friendly Fire by Klaus Fried (Germany). Other world premieres in DOK.international Competition include In Hell with Ivo by Kristina Nikolova (Bulgaria) and Ice Grave by Robin Hunzinger (Finland, France, Sweden). “Our aim is to maximise participation…DOK.fest München stays dual!” the festival adds of its online programme that runs 12-25 May.
Millennium Docs Against Gravity 2025 unveils 5th Industry Program
Running May 8 to 12, MDAG Industry 2025 “offers a true backstage pass to the documentary world, crafted in response to the current needs of the audiovisual market, following trends, anticipating changes, and embracing innovation,” organisers write. Highlights include pitches of new and completed Polish projects, a keynote by Mette Hoffmann Meyer, an “anti-masterclass” delivered by Mark Cousins and round-table consultation opportunities with a raft of leading doc professionals.
dok.incubator presents 8 documentaries within regional programme
Over the coming months, the dok.incubator rough-cut programme will workshop eight documentary projects from Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary, soon to be released internationally. They will be worked in parallel with eight previously announced International projects. “From topics spinning around ecology, animal rights, beauty standards and independent press to personal family stories and artists’ portraits, the selected [regional] films have the ambition to premiere at prestigious festivals in the coming year,” organisers write.
REVIEWS
Hot Docs Canadian Spectrum review: Agatha’s Almanac by Amalie Atkins
A charmingly meditative and gently illuminating portrait of the remarkable – and resolutely independent - 90-year-old Agatha Bock as she goes through daily life within her ancestral 54-acre farm, where she lives alone and still tends the land (despite ill-health and a broken thumb), cultivating heirloom seeds that have been passed down through generations.
Visions du Reel Burning Lights review: To The West, In Zapata by David Bim
David Bim’s impressive observational documentary debut offers an astonishingly visceral and powerful portrayal of a couple struggling to survive on the margins of Cuban society, all set against the backdrop of a country reeling from the ravages of the Covid-19 pandemic. The film won both the Special Jury Award and International Critics’ (FIPRESCI) Award at Visions du Réel 2025.
Visions du Réel International Comp review: Niñxs by Kani Lapuerta
In the Mexican documentary Niñxs (a gender-free spelling of ‘children’ in Spanish), director Kani Lapuerta follows trans girl – and friend – Karla for eight years until she enters high school. Looking back from the present, the pair also provide a commentary track on Kani’s film, criticising, discussing and changing the narrative. It’s clever, and it works – and could work for many other documentaries as well.
Visions du Réel National Competition: Kevine and Fortune by Sarah Imsand
While football is very much the driving force of Sarah Imsand’s engaging documentary Kevine and Fortune, at its tender and warm-hearted core is a friendship that is driven by mutual support, faith and determination – as well as a love of the beautiful game.