INTERVIEWS

IDFA Envision Competition: I Want Her Dead by Gianluca Matarrese

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Gianluca Matarrese’s I Want Her Dead is a film about enmity, specifically about two middle-aged women, and both cousins of the director, who simply can’t stand one another. And, no, it wasn’t cathartic or healing for them to have the chance to yell insults so spectacularly. “They still hate each other,” the director tells BDE. “It wasn’t therapeutic at all…but they’re expressing everything they wanted to express.”

IDFA interview: Wouter Jansen of Square Eyes

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Wouter Jansen’s Vienna-based Square Eyes is in IDFA this year with half a dozen different films in official selection, both long-form and shorts. Feature docs include The Kartli Kingdom by Georgian directors Tamar Kalandadze and Julien Pebrel in International Competition, the Ukrainian Militantropos by Yelizaveta Smith, Alina Gorlova and Simon Mozgovyi in Best of Fests, and Maureen Fazendeiro’s Portuguese doc The Seasons which receives its Dutch premiere in Paradocs. Jansen talks docs with BDE.

IDFA Int’l Comp: Palimpsest – The Story of a Name by Mary Stephen

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Docmaker Mary Stephen’s Palimpsest: The Story of a Name draws on family secrets and outstanding archive footage to pose the universal question, what’s in a name? As the late Eric Rohmer’s editor, Stephen is a cutter of high renown, a fact that informs her debut feature doc. “The real structure of the story really comes out when I'm editing, so that confirms that editing is my calling,” she tells BDE. “That really is the guiding approach to this film. I kept saying to people that [the story] will come when I'm editing it. Try and convince an unknown funder with that! Luckily, we had ARTE come on board very early.”

IDFA Frontlight: The Desert of the Real by Luuk Bouwman 

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The prolific Dutch filmmaker is back at IDFA, this time with a film that tackles the difficult topic of psychosis. Several of Bouwmann's protagonists mentioned that, during their psychotic periods, they felt “as if they were in a movie.” Some of their insights are also subversive, suggesting that, at such moments, they’re also experiencing life in a heightened fashion, and that going back to “ordinary reality” seems monotonous and anticlimactic by comparison. “Euphoria and deep insights can be part of psychosis,” he says.

IDFA Envision: Amilcar by Miguel Eek

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In his new documentary, Spanish filmmaker Miguel Eek not only investigates what motivated revolutionary leader Amilcar Cabral (1924-1973) to liberate Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde from the Portuguese yoke, he also reveals the man behind the myth. “This was a man who could be involved in high profile diplomatic discussions at the United Nations and, at the same time, he was writing a letter to his wife about the beauty of the camels in the desert,” Eek tells Business Doc Europe.

IDFA Envision Comp: Love-22-Love by Jeroen Kooijmans

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Dutch visual artist Jeroen Kooijmans discusses his debut feature doc which is both therapeutic and loving, and dedicated to fellow artist Elspeth Diederix, the 30-year+ love of his life, and the muse behind the film. “In the first three and a half years when I was starting this project, basically I wanted to make a portrait of her. I wanted to make a love letter for her as a surprise. I also didn't want to tell her because I was afraid she wouldn't like it, and would censor a lot of footage,” Kooijmans confides.

NEWS

Polish Docs Pro delegation at IDFA industry 

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The November 17 Polish Docs Pro Showcase will present five new docs in progress to the professionals in attendance at IDFA Industry. At Docs for Sale, industry guests can watch and assess some the most successful Polish docs of the last 12 month, including Silver by Natalia Koniarz – a multiple winner at Krakow FF, Child of Dust by Weronika Mliczewska and What the...Hen? by Joanna Deja, as well films from the IDFA 2025 official selection, such as Confession of a Mole by Mo Tan (Envision Competition), and Passion According to Agnieszka by Wojciech Staroń (Luminous).

IDFA pitch of eight dok.incubator projects (nearly) ready to...

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Eight new documentaries nearing completion and developed at dok.incubator 2025, will be pitched November 16 during the organisation’s annual showcase at IDFA. “This year’s collection of films offers an extraordinary range of styles, from musical and comedic documentaries to deeply personal auteur films, including a film which is also being turned into an HBO docu-series,” says Andrea Prenghyová, CEO of dok.incubator. “These are profound works shaped by years of devoted filmmaking.”

Chilean filmmakers at IDFA 2025

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“Chile arrives at IDFA with a vibrant and diverse presence that celebrates both new voices and master documentarians, reaffirming the creative strength and international recognition of our cinema,” Flor Rubina, Deputy Director of Chiledoc, comments of her country’s presence in Amsterdam this year. Highlights include Blue Silence (by Matías Rojas Ruz) in International Short Film Competition, and two films in Signed; Letters to My Dead Parents by Ignacio Agüero and Invisible Life by Bettina Perut and Iván Osnovikoff.

IDFA Forum Rough Cut: Bugboy by Lucas Paleocrassas

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As doors open on 2025 IDFA Forum 2025, one of the most delicate and emotionally resonant titles in the Rough Cut line-up is Bugboy, the new documentary by Greek director Lucas Paleocrassas. The film is produced by Anemon Productions (Greece) in co-production with Toolbox Film (Denmark) and Flach Film Production (France), with world sales being handled by Austria's Autlook. Shot over three years, it examines the growing bond between a sensitive teenager, Yorgos, and the insects he cares for - an unlikely friendship that gradually becomes a map of the boy’s inner world.

IDFA Forum Rough Cut: Sweet Belonging by Benjamin Bucher

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In Benjamin Bucher’s debut feature, Joyce, a 22-year-old African-Chinese dancer, tries to find her way in Europe – torn between artistic and identity-related self-discovery, and financial dependence on her mother’s TikTok business. “The film deals with universal themes that many of us can relate to, such as the search for independence, migration and globalisation, identity and the attempt to preserve real moments in an increasingly staged world,” producer Olivier Zobrist tells BDE.

IDFA 2025 Rough Cut: Getting the Message by Neasa Ní...

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With Getting the Message, Neasa Ní Chianáin steps inside the heart of political power at a moment when public trust in institutions is eroding and the climate emergency is accelerating. Over 18 months, Ní Chianáin gained unprecedented “fly-on-the-wall” access to Ireland’s Green Party leader and Minister for the Environment, Eamon Ryan, capturing both the mechanisms of democracy and the private moments that reveal the human cost of political life. The project is one of the Rough Cut presentations of this year's IDFA Forum, and will be presented November 16.

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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