Mikael Opstrup: Why has Danish Documentary film been so internationally successful for decades? Here are some of the possible answers.

The documentaty Mr. Nobody against Putin
‘Mr. Nobody against Putin’, the first Danish produced film to win the Oscar for Best Documentary in 2026.

At the same time as the documentary film festival CPH:DOX in March 2026  was upon us for the 23rd time, the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature went to Denmark — after an impressive eight previous nominations. What did not succeed for, among others, Flee (2022), The Act of Killing (2013), and Burma VJ (2010) was achieved by Mr. Nobody Against Putin. Since the first Danish nomination in 2010, only the United States has received more nominations. That is impressive. And therefore it is interesting to consider what might explain the fact that Danish documentary filmmaking has remained so strong internationally for decades. For if we momentarily set aside the fact that the Oscars are at least as much about (film) politics as about film art — and that the principal and co-director of Mr. Nobody Against Putin are American and Russian respectively — it does not change the fact that Denmark has stood remarkably strong on the international documentary scene for decades. It is, for example, no coincidence that two of the companies that have worked consistently and effectively on the international stage for decades have chosen to brand themselves by naming their production companies Danish Documentary and Made in Copenhagen; the latter being the production company behind Mr. Nobody Against Putin. Denmark is a quality brand. Here are some suggestions as to what may, among other things, explain the decades-long strong position. And finally, a not insignificant twist: what actually is a documentary film? An interesting question with several answers.

The National Film Board

We must begin by going quite a long way back in time — specifically to 1939, when The National Film Board was founded. It was a core Social Democratic initiative to promote public education and information. The public was to be enlightened — and, now and then, probably also lectured. After a few years, the NFB began not only distributing films but also supporting their production, and the foundations were laid for a truly unique institution. Those of us of a slightly older generation will never forget the noise of a 16mm projector in the middle of the classroom; slightly younger generations were subjected to the hair-raisingly poor quality of VHS videotapes; and the youngest generations have had the pleasure of first the far superior DVDs and, from around the turn of the millennium, digital streaming. Since the mid-1980s, we have not even needed to go to school to access the films. We could borrow first VHS tapes and later DVDs from our local library, and now we can stream them via the same institutions. Something like four generations have grown up watching documentary films. That cannot be underestimated, and when I mention it to foreign colleagues, they are practically falling off their chairs. For us, it is everyday life; for them, paradise on earth. Before making a major leap forward in time, it is worth noting the development that took place in the films supported — and gradually also imported — by the NFB. They were no longer merely educational but also artistic. Creative documentary filmmaking, as it is often called for lack of a better term — there are probably not many people who promote themselves as wanting to make an uncreative film. But film as an art form was given more and more space. Documentary film was not only about subject and content; it stood on its own aesthetic and dramaturgical footing. Yes indeed, just like feature films.

The documentaty The Act of Killing
‘The Act of Killing’, Oscar-nominated in 2013

The merge

In 1998, something decisive happened. The institution for fiction films, the Danish Film Institute (DFI), and its documentary counterpart, the National Film Board (NFB), were merged. The positive and negative aspects are still debated among people working in documentary film.
It is almost never an advantage for documentary filmmaking to come under the same roof as its big brother. And it was indeed a setback for the development of the genre that it lost its dedicated ambassador. I am, however, among those who also see some positive aspects for documentary film as a result of the merger — more on that shortly.
But I cannot resist mentioning a couple of curiosities that, strictly speaking, have nothing to do with the matter but are nonetheless quite illustrative of the ‘balance of power’.

The new institution was named the Danish Film Institute. That sounds more like absorption than merger. The DFI people used PCs; the NFB people used the slightly cheekier Macs. The new DFI dictated PCs. The DFI people had a day off on Denmark’s national day, and the NFB people on 1 May. You can guess which day the new DFI chose.

The new DFI established two parallel production departments, one for feature films and one for documentaries. I was hired for a newly created position as a producer in the documentary production department — one of the classic positions in the firing line. And those positions were pretty crowded in the first years after the merger.
For example, after only a couple of days in the job, I attended a meeting of the Danish Film Directors’ Association. As far as I recall, the first question I was asked was, “What the hell is a type like you supposed to be good for?”

There were several reasons for this question.

First, I was to assess whether it was realistic that a film, the film commissioner wished to support, could actually be made within the planned budget and organisational framework. Applicants were not used to that kind of professional challenge.
Second, if a production had international potential, producers were asked to explore those possibilities before the DFI determined its level of support. Producers were not used to that either.
And third, producer and director could no longer be the same person. Many directors who had only acted as producers out of necessity were not used to that.

Today, as far as I am aware, there is no criticism of the producer system at the DFI.
Probably because it has contributed to the current situation: directors can concentrate on directing; producers have generally become more professionalised; and engagement with the international market brings inspiration, financing, and valuable contacts. A number of strong documentary producers have emerged hand in hand with these initiatives — including several behind the Oscar nominations.
Finally, it should be mentioned that the new DFI introduced Development Funding — support at a stage when the director has not yet found the film’s form. At a moment when it is extremely difficult to obtain other funding because it is so hard to describe the final product.

The other three institutional corners

However, the DFI was only one corner of a decisive square. Three other corners were the Film School, the professional organisations, and Public Service television.

The documentary directing department at the National Film School of Denmark was established in 1992 and from the very beginning placed emphasis on students developing a strong personal voice.
An auteur education — no Public Information for Citizens about Society here.
The documentary education has played a decisive role in ensuring that Denmark now have a veritable flood of talented directors.

The introduction of a proper producer education in 1983 — later called Creative Producer — and the upgrading of the Screenwriting education in 1988 were also important. These two departments are located within the Film School’s fiction department, but collaboration with students from the documentary department naturally took — and continues to take — place.
Producers are not only trained to prepare budgets and organise shoots, but as creative collaborators. And directors gained more and increasingly specialised sparring partners for writing scripts — something one is not necessarily good at, even if one is a good director.
Fortunately, this collaboration continues beyond the period of study. Many professional roles — not least cinematographers and editors — work across both genres, to the great benefit of each.

Among the professional organisations, it has been particularly significant that producers from the documentary and fiction genres joined forces in the Producers’ Association in 1998. Documentary producers had struggled to make themselves heard on their own, and the Association’s structure — with independent organisation of the genres and representation in a shared board — made the merger of the two genres, unusually, a strengthening for documentary professionals.

The relationship between the independent documentary sector and public service television has not always been an uncomplicated love affair. The more artistically driven documentaries from independent directors and producers have often struggled to reach large viewing figures. The sector has regularly criticised television for failing to promote the films sufficiently and for scheduling them when most viewers had already gone to bed.
TV commissioning editors, conversely, argued that the sector did not do enough to reach a broader audience.
But again, if we compare ourselves with the many countries that have not had strong public service television, the comparison clearly falls in Denmark’s favour. Hats off to DRTV and TV2.

The documentaty Burma VJ
’Burma VJ’, Oscar-nominated in 2010

Important developments within fiction film

Interestingly, major moments within feature filmmaking have also had an impact on documentary film. They have drawn international attention to Danish film in general and opened the eyes of Danish politicians to the value of branding Denmark abroad. And here it is important to consider the significance of individuals — not only the four institutional corners. In 1987, Babette’s Feast won an Oscar. In 1988 and 1989, Pelle the Conqueror won the Palme d’Or in Cannes and an Oscar respectively. In 1996, Breaking the Waves won the Grand Prix in Cannes. And in 2000, Dancer in the Dark won the Palme d’Or at the same festival. Add to this the Dogme films’ Vow of Chastity from 1995, which not only placed Denmark even more firmly on the world map but constituted an internationally recognised revolution in filmmaking method and aesthetics: handheld camera, no artificial lighting, no sets, no costumes, and so forth. The camera was to follow the actors — not, as usual, the other way round. Incidentally, a vow of chastity that was effectively tested in advance in The Kingdom (Riget) from 1994 — a television series that sent tremors through television screens and was followed by songs of praise from actors liberated from taped floor marks and carefully rehearsed camera movements. With the focus of this article, it is impossible not to point out the obvious: The production conditions for The Kingdom and the Dogme films bear a striking resemblance to those of documentary filmmaking. One can almost see the opening credits: Based on a true film. Prior to these successful fiction years, Danish feature film had for decades lived a languishing existence, and the number of productions had fallen to a level barely sufficient to sustain the industry. As representatives of the professional trades put it: so much time passes between productions that in the meantime we forget how to make films. Naturally, the film industry had complained about these conditions for years and had repeatedly called — in vain — for increased funding. But the international successes and the resulting branding opportunities created momentum that the leadership of the new DFI was able to exploit. Instead of merely calling for more money, they presented a concrete four-year plan that would have done any Soviet planner proud: If you grant us the requested budget increase, here is the plan for how we will spend it. It worked. Funding was increased — and, because of the merger of the genres, documentary film benefited as well. So, this more or less covered the ground. But not quite.

… and then there are:

The recently concluded documentary film festival CPH:DOX (March 2026) was founded in 1993 and has grown into one of the largest and most significant festivals in the world. In everyday circumstances, it is not easy to fill cinema halls when documentaries are on the programme. But encouragement can be found at CPH:DOX, which last year attracted more than 150,000 paying cinema-goers — and it would not be surprising if attendance rises once again at this year’s festival. Competition for calendar space among the vast number of festivals worldwide is fierce; CPH:DOX has succeeded in establishing a distinct profile, particularly by challenging the traditional boundaries of documentary film, both in terms of the films themselves and the screening. Equally important was the founding in 1996 of the Danish-based international documentary organisation European Documentary Network (EDN). For decades, EDN contributed to the creation of crucial documentary institutions in European countries with weak film infrastructures — including several Southern European countries where national film funds were little more than an office on the fifth floor of the Ministry of Culture. But above all in the former communist countries of Eastern and Central Europe, which after the fall of the Wall experienced the collapse of a fully state-funded and state-organised film infrastructure. Here, EDN was a decisive factor in building organisations and activities that connected these countries to the rest of Europe. Most of them still exist today. Thousands of documentary filmmakers across Europe have a great deal to thank Danish EDN for. It is no coincidence that EDN’s first director received two national orders of merit from the presidents of Latvia and Lithuania. And then there is the European Film College in the beautiful dunes near Ebeltoft, Jutland — an international folk high school that opened in 1993 and every year offers a highly respected film course to more than one hundred international film students. And the DFI’s support scheme New Danish Screen, established in 2004, which — unlike the existing funding schemes — focuses not on the finished product but on developing talent. And the independent voice that documentary film lost with the closure of the National Film Board has since been partly restored through the creation of a position as Head of Documentary at the DFI. Have I forgotten something — or someone? Almost certainly. And to that there is only one thing to say: my apologies.

The documentaty Flee
‘Flee’, 3 X Oscar-nominated in 2022

Documentary as a genre

Allow me, finally, to turn briefly to documentary film as a genre. Above, I have referred to it in the singular — and nothing could be more misleading. There are numerous subgenres, as well as hybrid films that blend fiction and documentary; since the turn of the millennium, animated documentary has even gained significant ground.
“What did you call it?” I exclaimed when a producer first asked whether such a project might be eligible for DFI support.

At the risk of oversimplification, one might describe the positions within the documentary genre as follows:
At one end, the journalistic documentary — whose primary purpose is to document and demonstrate in a neutral manner.
At the other end, the character-driven documentary — whose primary purpose is subjective storytelling and interpretation.
As far as I can see, Mr. Nobody Against Putin is neatly positioned somewhere between these two poles.

It is the character-driven documentary that, in its finished form, most closely resembles the feature film: we follow individuals who are exposed to more or less dramatic upheavals.
Interestingly, however, this is also the subgenre that, in the process of creation, lies furthest from the feature film. A feature film has a script, sets, actors, and so on — planned elements under the director’s control.
The character-driven documentary follows living people who — just like you and me — do exactly as they please. The building blocks of the story lie entirely outside the filmmaker’s control. Here, one of the director’s greatest abilities is to spot a potential development:
“I do not know what will happen, but I am fairly certain that something interesting will happen.”

The Danish documentary Apolonia, Apolonia, which won the main award at the leading documentary festival IDFA in Amsterdam in 2022, follows its protagonist for 13 — yes, thirteen — years.
I can assure you that she experiences dramatic upheavals that would have been impossible for the director to foresee in 2009.
Had it been a fiction film — interesting. As a documentary — intensely present.

Thank you for your attention, congratulations, and long live documentary film.

Mikael Opstrup, April 2026

Ukraine House Exhibition and Film Screening

As a loyal subscriber to The Kyiv Independent that gives me information with a different perspective on life from a country at war, different from the traditional media, I was happy to see that the online newspaper was involved in two evening evenings at the Ukraine House in Copenhagen. At the wonderful Gammel Dok at the water, where the House is located: An exhibition “The War They Live” and a film screening of the documentary “Curated Theft”, produced by Kyiv Independent.

Nataliya Popovych, chairperson of the House, welcomed the audience on both nights followed on the first night by Irynka Hromotska, curator of the exhibition and on the second night by Yevheniia Motorevska, director and reporter of the film.

Together with The Kyiv Independent, Ukraine House in Denmark invites you to the opening of “The War They Live,” a photo exhibition curated by Irynka Hromotska curated the exhibition #The War They Live” in collaboration with Ukrainian photographer Serhii Melnychenko. In early 2025, Melnitchenko distributed disposable film cameras to Ukrainian soldiers across the front line, inviting them to document their everyday lives, and each camera was returned with handwritten letters and personal artifacts from the war – from pieces of shrapnel to uniform patches and small objects. The resulting exhibition offers a rare, first-person perspective on wartime that captures life beyond destruction and shows humor and routine. Rather than telling a story about the war, the project presents a snapshot from within it, seen through the eyes of those who are living and fighting it. The exhibition features over 50 photographs from the frontlines, alongside letters and artifacts. Join us for the opening ceremony, followed by a reception and a guided tour.

In continuation of the opening of the “The War They Live” exhibition, we invite you to a documentary film Screening of “Curated Theft” produced by The Kyiv Independent.

“Curated Theft” investigates the largest museum heist in Europe since World War II. In the fall of 2022, before withdrawing from Kherson, Russian forces looted two local museums, the Kherson Art Museum and the Kherson Museum of Local History and stole thousands of artworks and archaeological artifacts, including Scythian, Gothic, and Sarmatian gold.

With almost no witnesses on the Ukrainian side and key details still concealed by Moscow, the case remains largely unresolved. The Kyiv Independent’s War Crimes Investigations Unit set out to uncover who organized the theft and where the stolen collections are now.

After the screening (approx. 60 minutes), the Kyiv Independent team will share their experience of documenting the war. Yevheniia Motorevska, Head of the War Crimes Investigations Unit and reporter of the film, together with Photo Editor Irynka Hromotska, will speak about different formats of documentation – from reporting and photography to documentary filmmaking.

DocsBarcelona 2026 Films Recommended

Anna Kis & András Földes: 80 ANGRY JOURNALISTS

Actuality… one can say and you ask yourself, whether the post-Orban Hungary will be better to improve or restore, if you like, the conditions for the independent media. That’s one thing, the other is the universal pov that we have never needed free and reliable journalism as much as now.

Nathan Grossman: AMAZOMANIA (PHOTO)

It’s an amazing story with amazing footage – conveying the core question for all documentaries: who owns your story. Award at CPH:DOX.

Pepe Andreu & Rafa Molés: LA PIETÀ

I met Maria Colomer, artistic director of the festival and she said this about the film, to which I agree: “I felt compassion, tenderness, and, as suggested by the title itself, pietà, when watching the film. I think there’s great beauty in the film but also a deep sense of pain in the disappearance of the glaciers, with nature placed right at the center, something very difficult to achieve”.

Jukka Kärkkäinen: THE BEAUTY OF ERRORS

Jukka is one of these fantastic Finnish documentarians, who has what we call “his own handwriting”, being able to convey – with humour and love – what it means to be a man, a father, a son in a difficult life. Love that film, love what the director still does since he made “Living Room of a Nation”.

Lana Daher: DO YOU LOVE ME

Beirut. Lebanon. I have been there and I love to see this big KISS to a place by a director and her skilled editor Qutaiba Barhamji, who will make a masterclass connected to the film. I’ll be there.

Daro Hansen & Thomas Papapetros: LITTLE SINNER

It was at CPH:DOX, one of the best Danish films in competition because it is personal, because it is full of references to the world we live in, the crises in the Middle East, the generation conflict and Love. And what a protagonist for a documentary!

Kamal Aljafari: WITH HASAN IN GAZA

What else can I say… of course there must be a film from the place we should not forget, the place of a genocide, touching, personal…

Miguel Eek: AMÍLCAR

This is a film that through the vision of Amilcar Cabral communicates an appeal to humanity. Dealing with archive in such a fine manner.

Yegor Troyanovsky: CUBA & ALASKA

One of the many great Ukrainian documentaries that have been made in these years, where the country is at war. This one includes two wonderful protagonists, heroes they are, you laugh and you cry with them.

And check the website for the many other films selected, let me just remind you that Marc Cousins has a retrospective, that the new film of Kossakovsky is programmed…

https://docsbarcelona.com

ZagrebDox: Watching and Reading the World

A total of 112 carefully curated films within sixteen programs open up a space for encounters between different experiences of reality.

At the press conference ahead of the 22nd edition of the ZagrebDox Documentary Film Festival, its organizers announced the program that will run from April 19 to 26 at the Kaptol Boutique Cinema, amounting to a total of 112 films in sixteen sections. The program revolves around the International Competition, featuring twenty titles, and the Regional Competition, with eighteen films. Together, they proffer a layered and impactful look at a world marked by crises and change, as well as the personal stories that rise above them. The program was presented by artistic director Nenad Puhovski and executive director Hrvoje Pukšec.

“In a moment when five million hours of video are uploaded daily across platforms, when a modest documentary can cost as little as one percent of an Oscar ceremony budget, when newsrooms decide day by day which global war zone they can even afford to cover, and when the line between the artificial and the real is becoming increasingly opaque — programming a documentary festival is more demanding than ever. But that’s also when we can come to a simple realization: we are merely the pre-selectors. We have an audience that doesn’t only trust what we do but knows how to recognize, choose, and evaluate for itself. And that makes things easier. Because — not only at the festival — in this troubled world, we are still together,” said Nenad Puhovski.

The International Competition comprises films that approach themes of war and its aftermath, memory and trauma, migration and exile, family and social relationships, the status of women, tradition and change within communities, and humanity’s relationship to nature, labor, and technology in today’s world. The war in Ukraine is one of the program’s central themes. In 2000 Meters to AndriivkaMstyslav Chernov— director of the Oscar-winning 20 Days in Mariupol — once again places his camera at the center of wartime reality, following Ukrainian soldiers attempting to liberate an occupied village. While Chernov remains in the immediate conflict zone, Divia by Dmytro Hreshko turns toward the landscape after destruction, where nature slowly becomes a silent witness and carrier of memory. Between these perspectives is Paleontology Lesson by Sergei Loznitsa, where children at Kyiv’s Natural History Museum find a temporary refuge, as science and imagination attempt to overpower the reality of war. From collective wartime experience, the program moves naturally into more intimate tones. In the autobiographical hybrid film MemoryVladlena Sandu reconstructs her childhood between Crimea and Grozny, marked by the outbreak of the Chechen war and forced displacement, confronting traumatic memories in an attempt to break cycles of violence passed down through generations. One in a Million by Jack MacInnes and Itab Azzam follows Israa over ten years — from fleeing Syria to building a life in Germany and eventually returning — capturing a coming of age shaped by constant movement between countries, cultures, and temporary homes. New Beginnings by Vivianne Perelmuter and Isabelle Ingold portrays a man attempting to rebuild meaning in his life after the Vietnam War, in a present that continually eludes him. A similar thread of inner fracture runs through A Fox Under a Pink Moon by Mehrdad Oskouei, where a teenage girl documents her attempt to escape a violent environment through her own footage and drawings, turning her life into a space of resistance. All My Sisters by Massoud Bakhshi traces the long arc of three sisters growing up in Tehran, their personal lives gradually intertwining with changes in Iranian society. In response, Cutting Through Rocks by Sara Khaki and Mohammadreza Eyni shifts the focus to rural Iran, where the first elected councilwoman, Sara Shahverdi, challenges patriarchy through political action and everyday resistance. In FlanaZahraa Ghandour searches for a missing childhood friend, opening a story about violence against women, family loss, and trauma in Baghdad. The position of women is also central to The Men’s Land by Mariam Bakacho Khatchvani, set in a Georgian mountain village where inheritance traditions collide with women demanding change.

Continuing this theme of shifting traditions, Ivan Boiko’s The Wind Blows Wherever It Wants follows Tushetian shepherds and their seasonal migration of thousands of sheep, contrasting an ancient nomadic rhythm with the growing presence of industrial and infrastructural development. The program then moves into quieter, almost meditative spaces. In Better Go Mad in the WildMiro Remo observes two isolated brothers whose relationship fractures under the weight of differing desires. Walls – akinni inuk by Sofie Rørdam and Nina Paninnguaq Skydsbjerg explores trust through the relationship between a prisoner and the filmmaker. In ClosureMichał Marczak follows a father who launches his own search along the Vistula River after his son disappears, turning loss into a prolonged confrontation with hope and acceptance. In Confessions of a Mole, a hybrid of documentary and animation, Mo Tan revisits her family home, confronting tradition and her own diagnosis while examining inherited trauma. The program also addresses global economic and technological structures. In SilverNatalia Koniarz depicts life in Bolivia’s highest mine, questioning the cost of modern wealth and the limits of human endurance. Past Future Continouus by Morteza Ahmadvand and Firouzeh Khosrovani connects Iran and the United States through family archives and exile, where technology becomes the only bridge between separated worlds. In Seablindless, Tereza Smetanová looks at ports and container terminals, revealing moments of intimacy within global maritime trade. In Synthetic SincerityMarc Isaacs blends documentary and fiction while exploring attempts to create “authentic” AI characters in a research lab, questioning the boundaries of human emotion and the future of the cinematic image.

The 22nd edition of ZagrebDox takes place at the Kaptol Boutique Cinema from April 19 to 26, 2026. The festival is supported by the City of Zagreb, the Croatian Audiovisual Centre, the Croatian Film Directors’ Guild, and the Zagreb Tourist Board.

Sebastian Cordes: Jenny – en historie om Lydmor

Hvor meget bør en anmelder vide om en film før han/hun sætter sig i biografen? I princippet vel ingenting? Sæt dig ned og bliv overrasket på den gode måde. Få en god historie, giv dig hen til en filmisk oplevelse.

Jeg vidste intet om Lydmor… Men jeg valgte nu alligevel – efter pressevisningen i går morges – at søge hjælp i familien: Kender I Lydmor? Filmen havde skærpet min nysgerrighed.

Min niece, nogle årtier yngre end mig svarede: “Jeps, kender hende, hun er helt vildt dygtig og virkelig alsidig! Kendte hende nok mest fra det elektroniske. Men K og jeg var til en akustisk koncert med hende i 2023, der var helt fantastisk. Har du mulighed for det, synes jeg, at du skal lytte til hendes album “Nimue” fra 22, det er et mix af elektronisk og akustisk.”

Det gjorde jeg så, og genkendte flere af sangene fra filmen. Faktisk er “Nimue” optaget på på den norske ø Giske, som fylder vidunderligt meget af filmens begyndelse. Vidunderligt, fordi instruktøren Sebastian Cordes selvfølgeligt lader naturen spille med indendørs og udendørs. Voldsomme bølger skyller ind på klipperne omkring huset, hvor Jenny Rossander bor i en måned – og hvor hun optager og redigerer sine numre. Hvis hun ikke lige er ude i det barske vejr med en mikrofon for at optage havets lyde og sine egne skridt i sneen! Det må have været den rene svir for klipper og lydmand at sidde med det materiale! Lydsiden er i øvrigt helt formidabel, kunne jeg høre i den store sal i Empire Bio. Og altså ikke alene Lydmors sang og arrangementer.

Det er også her i begyndelsen at filmens røde tråd bliver gjort synlig: Udover at komponere og arbejde med sine sange og give koncerter, er Jenny i færd med at skrive en bog, der får titlen “Jeg har tænkt mig at skrige hele vejen”. Det er en personlig roman, som har magt som tema. Som den udføres af en mandlig kulturpersonlighed overfor en ung kvindelig musiker. I mange fine scener i filmen vender Jenny tilbage til bogen, som er under udarbejdelse, hun nærmest svælger i det, “I Love Pain”, men ikke alene indholdet, temaet, bliver berørt men også forholdet til forlagets redaktør, som vil have ændringer i manuskriptet og der er en herlig scene, hvor en anden redaktør træner Jenny i, hvordan hun kan svare journalisterne, når de vil have at vide, hvorfor hun har skrevet bogen og HVEM den magtfulde abuser er!

Bogen som jeg ikke har læst, men nu har lyst til at læse, akkurat som filmen – med niecens anbefaling – fik mig på Spotify. Hvor man også kan læse teksterne til sangene. Der er godt nok megen smerte i Lydmors kunstneriske univers.

Cordes har lavet en glimrende film. Med kærlighed tøver jeg ikke med at skrive. Han er der bag kameraet, reagerer ind imellem på, hvad Jenny siger, så kærligheden ligger i kameraarbejdet, de mange nærbilleder, gosh hvor hun “skifter ansigt” undervejs i de fem år, optagelserne har fundet sted. Smukt og fascinerende at følge. Emotionelle ture op og ned har kameraet fanget.

Og så er der de mange koncertoptagelser, direct cinema, som vi kender dem fra Beatles-filmene, fra Pennebaker og fra filmen om Paul Anka. Jenny forbereder sig, får lagt make-up, går ud til publikum, som i en scene er ganske lille og i en anden er kæmpestort, i Hanoi, hvor hun blomstrer og nyder den anerkendelse, som alle kunstnere angler efter. “Champagne og cigaretter” siger hun efter koncerten. Et andet højdepunkt er koncerten på Gamle Scene i Det Kgl. Teater. Desværre fik vi – filmpublikummet – kun set et glimt. Lydmor elsker at optræde, det ses hele vejen igennem, smerten og tvivlen kommer ud over rampen.

(En anmelder søger ofte efter noget at brokke sig over. Et lille brok er Cordes arkivbrug, hvor han i rasende fart klipper Trump, Epstein sammen med Billie Jean King og mange andre for at understrege de universelle temaer kvindeundertrykkelse og kvindekamp. Unødvendigt. Det har vi fanget!)

Og så slutter anmelderen, der intet vidste på forhånd: Fremragende og tankevækkende musik af en fremragende kunstner, Jenny, der giver sig selv ethundrede procent i en visuel fortælling fortalt af hendes kæreste Sebastian. Har stadig lyden af de norske bølger i mine ører og hvad de blev til i Jennys fortolkninger. Ikke så ringe endda. Der må da komme mange mennesker til den film!

Danmark, 2026, 88 mins.

❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️❤️

Omar Shargawi: Palestinian Unwanted, en debat og et blik tilbage til “Et Undertrykt Folk har Altid Ret”

Det var hårdt at overvære debatten mellem Omar Shargawi og Martin Krasnik efter forevisningen af førstnævntes “Palestinian Unwanted”, som var med i CPH:DOX – på det associerede Para:Dox er den timelange debat at finde. Omar Shargawi (OS) var på hjemmebane, Martin Krasnik på udebane. At dømme efter de klapsalver, der faldt, når den ene eller den anden sagde noget, som publikum var enige i. Som en fodboldkamp… skamløst!.

De kom ikke nærmere hinanden. Det havde jeg nu heller ikke forventet efter at have set filmen og læst de mange indlæg de to har haft i Krasniks Weekendavisen. Og i det her tilfælde er artikler på tryk naturligvis dybere i argumentation.

Hvad står tilbage er en fin film, stærk og personlig, hvor instruktøren og hans far træder smukt frem specielt i scener, hvor de er sammen i Haifa, ved murbrokkerne, hvor faren voksede op inden han og familien flygtede til Danmark. (I øvrigt er, efter min mening, den bedste (positive) filmanmeldelse skrevet af Weekendavisens Lasse Winther Jensen). Der er vrede og smerte i filmen og det var der også fra OS i debatten, hvor ordstyrer Lotte Folke fra Politiken forgæves forsøgte at få OS til at sige noget om Hamas massakre den 7. juli 2023.

Smerte var der også fra Martin Krasnik (MK), der fortalte om sin baggrund og om at være dansk jøde i Danmark i dag, hvor han dagligt bliver mindet om antisemitismen, når han følger sine børn i skole og bliver mødt af bevogtende politi. Som vi gør, når vi skal på biblioteket i Krystalgade i København. Krasnik udtrykte sin foragt for Netanyahus regering, der har klare fascistiske træk og gentog, hvad han andetsteds har kaldt den åbenlyst kedelige løsning, en tostats-løsning – og jeg mener også jeg hørte ham sige “folkemord” om angrebene på palæstinenserne i Gaza.

At se filmen og høre MK og OS fremdrage erfaringer og holdninger og meninger, giver kun yderligere modløshed oveni de daglige bulletiner om bombninger, som kommer ikke alene fra Israel men også fra Libanon og Syrien, og hvornår bliver Iran bombet sønder og sammen?

Og så satte nok et minde sig i mig, som i 1975 startede i Statens Filmcentral (SFC), som distribuerede Nils Vest’s modige “Et Undertrykt Folk har Altid Ret”. Den havde premiere samme år. I OS film står han i en scene foran plakaten fra filmen, som satte gang i en voldsom kampagne mod filmen anført af Arne Melchior og Politikens Herbert Pundik, som havde adskillige artikler om filmens manglende lødighed og der var kræfter, som krævede SFC lukket – for hvordan kunne en statslig filminstitution støtte en film, som var pro-palæstinensisk og dermed imod Danmarks officielle politiske støtte til Israel. Berlingske Tidende gik så langt at avisen trykte filmens dialog og kommentar fra ende til anden, med kommentarer om fejl! Jeg husker én fejl, som gik igen set fra Berlingskes side. Speaken siger til et foto fra Time/Life, at der bliver udøvet tortur i israelske fængsler…

SFC valgte – med programredaktør Børge Høst som den kloge strateg – at anbefale, at filmen blev taget ud af distribution samtidig med at en Israel-positiv film blev sat til udlejning. Jeg husker ikke titlen, men jeg husker at Nils Vest ændrede den nævnte speak til at sige noget i retning af “mange mener at…”. Filmen kom igen i udlejning efter nogle måneder og blev naturligvis et hit og var det i årevis. SFC overlevede og filmen blev ikke forbudt!

Jeg skal også lige nævne – som jeg husker det – at den radikale Bernhard Baunsgaard i folketinget gjorde opmærksom på det vedtagne armslængdeprincip, og at socialdemokraten, juristen Ole Espersen gav gode råd til SFC, når trusler om lukning kom frem.

“Et undertrykt folk har altid ret” er et historisk dokument fra 1975, Omar Shargawis (flere) film om de rædsler, som vi kan bevidne i Israel i dag, om folkemord, intet andet ord passer, er film, der vil blive stående.

Danmark, 2026, 93 mins. På Para:dox kan du se filmen.

“Et undertrykt folk har altid ret” kan ses på Filmstriben.

DocsBarcelona: Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

The creative consultancies for projects in the rough-cut stage allow participants to present their documentaries to renowned international consultants, who provide guidance to enhance the final outcome of the film. Commissioned by DocsBarcelona co-founder and creative consultant Tue Steen Müller, these 80-minute sessions offer tailored feedback on various aspects of your project, with a particular focus on narrative structure and editing. This personalized guidance helps refine your documentary and bring it to its fullest potential.

Selected projects

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Laura Gabay

Correspondences to Inhabit the World

70 min /

Switzerland

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Paloma Zapata García

Juliette & Camille

90 min /

Spain

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Nicolas Gomez

Life Is Beautiful but It Always Ends

90 min /

Colombia

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Romina Ortega

Lithic

80 min /

Peru

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Isabel Rodas

Gabriel Páez

Saying by Doing

85 min /

Ecuador

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Júlia Boqué Gaya

The Flight of the Butterfly

56 min /

Spain

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Lali Kiknavelidze

The Foggy Trails

76 min /

Georgia

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

María Laura Cali

The Space Had

75 min /

Argentina

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Juan José Gómez Hoyos

Today You’ll Enter My Past

90 min /

Argentina

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Yaser Talebi / Sunrise

Farahbakhsh Farahidnia

Two Sisters

70 min /

Iran

Artistic Consultancies for Rough Cut Projects

Laura Bermúdez

Jorge García

Where the sun is born

80 min /

Honduras

DocsBarcelona

DocsBarcelona: John Wilson Confirmed and Docs&City

John Wilson will return to DocsBarcelona to present his feature film debut, The History of Concrete, following its screenings at the Sundance and CPH:DOX festivals. The American filmmaker, who already presented his cult series How To With John Wilson at the catalan festival in 2024, will be returning to the festival to premiere his latest work in Spain in a special session on May 12 at the Aribau Cinema, with a Q&A with the audience. PHOTO: The History of Concrete. 
With his characteristically unmistakable and ironic style, Wilson transforms a seemingly mundane subject like concrete into a fascinating and profoundly human exploration of urban life. This unique documentary comedy offers a singular portrait of city life and its inhabitants, taking unexpected turns and revealing a humor born of intuition and keen observation. Wilson thus confirms his ability to uncover the absurdity and beauty hidden in the most insignificant details. 
A focus dedicated to the city: Docs&City
The Focus Section, which each year is dedicated to a different theme, will center this edition on the urban environment: Docs&City will bring together documentaries that explore the transformations, tensions, and imaginaries of contemporary cities in settings as diverse as Gaza, Barcelona, Granada, Tokyo, and Damascus.
The section includes With Hasan in Gaza by Kamal Aljafari, which revisits three video tapes shot in 2001 to portray everyday life in Gaza, in constant and forced transformation; Corren las liebres by Lorena Ros, which follows Noa, a gypsy transgender woman trying to regain custody of her children while facing eviction in Barcelona; Quién vio los templos caer by Lucía Selva, which moves between myth and reality to explore memory and urban transformation in Granada; Numakage Public Pool by Shingo Ota, about the disappearance of a suburban public swimming pool in Tokyo, a key space for social interaction within the urban fabric; and Little Sinner by Daro Hansen and Thomas Papapetros, built from more than two decades of Hansen’s personal recordings, combined with footage of the refugee crisis in Lebanon and Greece.

DocsBarcelona 2026 Opens With the Iranian film A Fox Under a Pink Moon

DocsBarcelona will open its 29th edition on May 7 with the Iranian film A Fox Under a Pink Moon, in which sixteen-year-old artist Soraya Akhlaghi documents her attempts to escape Iran, where she lives with her abusive husband, and reunite with her mother in Austria. Directed remotely by Iranian documentary filmmaker  Mehrdad Oskouei (Starless DreamsSunless Shadows), featuring footage Akhlaghi recorded over five years on her mobile phone, offers a first-person account of young women subjected to extreme social circumstances, providing an unusual perspective on both Iran and the migration crisis.  The film will have its Spanish premiere at DocsBarcelona after winning the Best Film Award at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA). 

Using everyday materials—like clay or wet egg cartons—Akhlaghi creates sculptures laden with meaning, transforming art into a way of processing her experience. Interweaving scenes from her daily life, political news, and videos of her singing, dancing, or displaying the marks of the violence she has endured, the film intertwines art and reality as a means of reconstruction and imagining the future. 

The opening of DocsBarcelona will be held on Thursday, May 7th at the Aribau Cinemas in Barcelona and will feature the protagonist and co-director of the documentary, who will share with the public her life experience and the creative process behind the film. 

For Maria Colomer, co-artistic director and head of programming at DocsBarcelona, “A Fox Under a Pink Moon portrays an urgent reality of our present with an original cinematic approach that is very conscious of its language. Amidst violence and uncertainty, the protagonist finds refuge and a form of resistance in art. As in the film, we hope that the festival will also be a space where art helps us to better understand the world and connect with it.” 

Taboo-breaking perspectives, in the Official Competition

The Official Competition of DocsBarcelona 2026 will screen three stories that challenge conventions and taboos. Barbara Forever, by Brydie O’Connor, is an immersion into the life, work, and cultural impact of pioneering filmmaker Barbara Hammer.. Known for her courage, creative urgency, and ability to transform cinema, Hammer created films that were extensions of herself: sensual, experimental, and openly lesbian, rooted in a deep desire for connection and a need to tell her own story. Drawing on more than eighty films, previously unseen archival footage, and audio interviews, O’Connor turns the documentary into both a tribute to and an extension of Hammer’s legacy. Following its world premiere at Sundance 2026 and receiving the Teddy Award for Best Documentary at the Berlinale 2026,  Barbara Forever will arrive in Barcelona. 

The documentary The Woman Who Poked the Leopard, by Patience Nitumwesiga,also breaks taboos. It tells the story of  Stella Nyanzione of Uganda’s most prominent activists. Imprisoned and tortured, Nyanzi defied Ugandan dictator Yoweri Museveni by defending queer rights in a country where homosexuality is punishable by death. The film offers a portrait not only of Nyanzi herself, but also of Uganda, and of how the figure of an activist mother, sometimes also marked by a strong ego, impacts her family. 

Mailin, by María Silvia Esteve,reconstructs the director’s memories as she tells her daughter a bedtime story. The tale reveals a girl who suffered abuse for fifteen years at the hands of a priest and becomes an opportunity to offer her daughter the childhood she herself never had. The Argentine director, also known for  Silvia and Criatura , has won awards at IDFA and the Guadalajara and Thessaloniki film festivals, and is currently developing Fauces as a Berlinale Talent.

Narratives of violence and resistance, in the Visions Competition 

The Official Competition – Visions,which brings together films with innovative cinematic language that expand the boundaries of non-fiction, will explore the impact of violence and its narrative on communities with two featured documentaries.  Director and desktop cinemapioneer Kevin B. Lee (Transformers: The Premake) reviews this topic in Afterlives. The film explores the extremist violence coded in ISIS videos and the efforts of those resisting their impact. Beyond their toxic effects, it delves into the power structures that extend from the colonial past to the digital age. Kevin B. Lee has produced more than 360 video essays on film and media, was the founder and senior editor of Fandor, and has written for  The New York TimesSight & Sound, and Indiewire.. He currently teaches at the University of Lugano and collaborates with the Locarno Film Festival. 

The German documentary Das Deutsche Volk, by Marcin Wierzchowski,depicts the racist attack in the city of Hanau, where nine young people were murdered in a matter of minutes. The film explores, over five years, the aftermath for the survivors, their families, and the community, and their struggle to reclaim a sense of belonging to the country they consider home. 

Emil Langballe: Petrolheads

Jeg havde set tre af Langballes tidligere film – hans engelske afgangsfilm “Beach Boy” som jeg så i St.Petersburg i 2014, den fortryllende “Q’s Barbershop” og senest “Theatre of Violence” – og kunne lide dem alle. Så forventningerne var høje, da jeg trykkede Start på min MacBook og jeg blev ikke skuffet. Tværtimod. Filmen var i “Main Competition” i nys overståede CPH:DOX og kunne såmænd godt have fået en pris, men feltet var hårdt. En pris for sin evne til at skabe et smukt og autentisk portræt af et venskab mellem de to benzinhoveder Martin og Casper. Som begge lever lidt udenfor “det normale”, som de gerne vil være en del af. Martin er adopteret og det samme gælder for Casper, som er født i Rumænien. Langballe filmer dem i bilen og på værkstedet og i den campingvogn, som står ved værkstedet. De er begge meget veltalende og reflekterende. Og fuld af følelser for hinanden.

Han kan sit filmsprog, Langballe, som bruger bilens mega-fart ned ad tomme skovveje som skilletegn for de mange fine scener mellem de to unge uadskillelige, som er væk fra hinanden, når Martin ryger ud i noget snavs. Stofmisbrug som Casper ikke vil være vidne til. Jeg er glad for at have set “Petrolheads” – du kan se den på festivalens Para:Dox, kig på hjemmesiden og på et eller andet tidpunkt kommer den på TV2.

Hvis I skal have et handlingsreferat så er der ét her – fra DFI’s hjemmeside:

“To helt særlige venner kører de danske landeveje tynde for at finde en brugt Honda Civic, der måske kan gøre livet bare lidt mere normalt.
Martins største drøm i livet er at være normal, men den drøm har han for længst opgivet. Som 9-årig fik han påvist en udfordrende cocktail af svære diagnoser, og nu er alt, hvad han ønsker sig, at blive den lykkelige ejer af en Honda Civic fra ‘94. Han deler sin altoverskyggende passion for motorer med sin bedste ven Casper. De bruger alle deres vågne timer på at spotte, køre og tale om biler, og de føler sig begge ekskluderede fra fællesskabet på grund af deres udfordringer. Kun når de sidder bag rattet, føler de sig normale. Sammen sætter de kursen mod en brugtvognsforhandler i Tyskland for at indfri Martins drøm om at blive bilejer. Men venskabet bliver sat på prøve af stofmisbrug, identitetstyveri og ikke mindst en nærdødsoplevelse. Med på bagsædet er filmskaber (og Martins storebror) Emil Langballe. Han har skabt en vaskeægte ‘buddy movie’: En både sjov, ægte og rørende film om et venskab, der bliver stående, når alt andet falder fra hinanden.”

Danmark, 2026, 77 mins.

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