INTERVIEWS

Cinéma du Réel Competition: Landless Children by René Ballesteros

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Chilean René Ballesteros’ feature documentary, world-premiering in Paris, follows the stories of two Mapuche children, Juan and Daniel who were taken from their Chilean homeland and adopted by European families in dubious circumstances. A trained psychologist, the film has a personal undertow for the director. “Once I met Albert Maysles…and he told me that the link between being a psychologist and making documentaries is listening,” he tells BDE. “With both Juan and Daniel there was a connection, because I was trying to listen to myself, too.”

Movies That Matter Dutch Focus: Voix Invisibles by Bart van den Aardweg

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Dutch Bart van den Aardweg discusses his dynamic new documentary, shot in both Belgium and The Netherlands, which addresses alienation and how youths may resort either to criminality or radicalisation as an outlet. “I wanted to explore the mind of somebody on the so-called wrong path further and deeper, and to create an interior monologue, to connect their thoughts to the physical shape I had used before. And I knew that I had to live amongst my characters to catch the real story, make them talk to me.”

Movies That Matter Dutch Focus: The Winning Generation by Marco De...

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The Netherlands-based Italian filmmaker discusses his new feature documentary, selected for Movies That Matter, about the ongoing febrile political situation in Armenia. “The moment I got interested in Shahen was when I realised the pressure this young guy was under,” recalls director Marco De Stefanis. “He was keeping up the fight while his father was in prison. I felt really sorry for a guy that age that doesn’t have the same youth I had.”

Movies That Matter Dutch Focus: Soldier’s Bones by Kasper Verkaik

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Dutch filmmaker Kasper Verkaik’s new film tells the story of US journalist Alec Shimkin who went missing in action in Vietnam just as he was threatening to lift the lid on the US Operation Speedy Express atrocity of 1968/69, which had an estimated body count of over 30,000, many thousands of them unarmed Vietnamese civilians. In researching Shimkin, Verkaik realised “there was so much more to find out about the Speedy Express story,” and that the journalist’s scoop “was way bigger” than even the journalist himself had known.

Movies That Matter Dutch Focus: Forced Vows by Eva Strating, Roxanne...

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Director Eva Strating discusses her new documentary, co-directed with Roxanne Herder, both about Dutch women who are coerced into forced marriages by their own families, and the human rights activist Shirin Musa who is tirelessly working in their interests. The directors had, of course, heard about arranged marriages, “but we never knew that it's still actually something that takes place here, among girls born and raised in The Netherlands,” stresses Strating.

Cinéma du Réel interview: Catherine Bizern, Fest Director and Anaïs Desrieux, Head...

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The 48th edition of the Paris-based festival and market kicks off March 21. "It is interesting how ParisDOC now covers the full spectrum of documentary filmmaking, from early writing stages to near-completion, and through to questions of circulation and heritage,” enthuses Anaïs Desrieux of the festival’s professional component. “This creates a coherent ecosystem and reinforces our role in supporting the valorisation of documentary cinema in all its forms.”


NEWS

CPH:DOX Forum 2026: Letter to Alvin by Hilton Als...

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A new documentary exploring the life and work of largely overlooked African-American photographer Alvin Baltrop (1948-2004) was pitched to industry professionals at CPH:DOX Forum. The film, titled Letter to Alvin, is directed by Hilton Als and Göran Hugo Olsson, and produced by Tobias Janson and Melissa Lindgren, with Sweden and the United States attached as producing countries. BDE reports.

CPH:DOX Forum 2026: Blackest Ever Black by Roisin Agnew

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Irish filmmaker Roisin Agnew presented her hybrid documentary Blackest Ever Black at CPH:DOX Forum 2026, a project examining the political, environmental and economic implications of Ireland’s rapid expansion of data centres – using satire and fictional framing to interrogate the global power of Big Tech. “Ireland has been at the forefront of this expansion for decades. If you want to understand tech and the threat it presents, you need to understand Ireland and how these companies operate there,” explained Agnew.

CPH:DOX 2026 Award Winners Announced

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The winners of the international competitions of CPH:DOX 2026 were announced March 20. The international competition line-up included a total of 74 films, hand-picked from thousands of submissions from around the world, featuring 53 world premieres, 17 international premieres, and 4 European premieres. The main prize, the DOX:AWARD, was awarded to ‘Whispers in May’ by Dongnan Chen.

CPH:DOX Rough Cut: The Dawn of the Post Plantation...

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A community of Congolese plantation workers turning art into a tool for land restitution and ecological repair took centre stage at the CPH:DOX Roughcut showcase held on 16 March, as filmmakers Céd’art Tamasala and Renzo Martens presented The Dawn of the Post Plantation. “This film is a tool,” DRC artist Tamasala underscored. “A tool to get back our land, our dignity and to bring the sacred back into our community.”

CPH:INDUSTRY 2026 Award Winners Announced

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The winners of the CPH:INDUSTRY Awards 2026 were announced March 19, with the Eurimages New Lab Outreach Award, valued at €30,000, going to Don’t Let The Sun Go Up On Me by director Asmae El Moudir and producer Emma Lepers. The Sandbox Films Science Pitch Prize 2026, worth $25,000, went to Matrescence by Kathryn Ferguson. produced by Eleanor Emptage, Rosie Crerar. All awards…

CPH:DOX Rough Cut: The Siege of Paradise by Gar O’Rourke

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Irish filmmaker Gar O’Rourke (Sanatorium) returned to CPH:DOX this year with The Siege of Paradise, a character-driven documentary exploring the human consequences of over-tourism in Italy’s Cinque Terre. “A few years ago an Italian friend told me about this small place of fewer than 4,000 people receiving more than four million tourists every year,” O’Rourke recalled. “I wanted to understand what that actually felt like.”


REVIEWS

CPH:DOX F:ACT Competition: Hell’s Army by Richard Rowley

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n absorbing and provocative documentary, sometimes featuring moments of graphic violence, the evocatively titled Hell’s Army follows the brutal rise of Russian mercenary group The Wagner Group and its bloody work from Donbas through to Syria, Libya and the Central African Republic, before its brutal return to full-scale war in Ukraine.

CPH:DOX review: All Rivers Spill Their Stories to the Sea by Jeanie Finlay

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A wonderfully well-observed and deeply compassionate film, Jeanie Finlay’s All Rivers Spill Their Stories to the Sea is set against the backdrop of the deprived North-East coast of England, and shines the light on an unusual group of environmental activists, a deep-rooted fishing community fighting for survival and pleading for support from a Government that seems to lack any interest in their plight.

Thessaloniki DocFest Int’l Comp review: La Pietà by Rafa Molés and Pepe Andreu

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How to film on the massive scale of a melting glacier? Rafa Molés and Pepe Andreu, directors of the feature doc La Pietà, selected for Thessaloniki Doc Fest International Competition, approach the subject both from up on high and from right up close, considering both the present and the past, but only sporadically connect with the geological and human perspectives.

CPH:DOX HUMAN:RIGHTS: Scarlet Girls by Paula Cury Melo

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The haunting, terrifying and chillingly visceral stories told by a series of young women in Paula Cury Melo’s moving and deeply provocative Scarlet Girls (Niñas escarlata) paints a harrowing picture of what it means to be a woman in the Dominican Republic, still one of the few countries where abortion remains criminalised without exception. It is a perfectly formed, elegantly artistic and gently angry film that demands attention.

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