Cineuropa Interviews EDN’s Paul Pauwels

Cineuropa is a good source if you want to know, what happens in the film world. In the latest edition of the newsletter you will find a brief but informative interview with EDN director Paul Pauwels, who talks about the Media and Society initiative that he and the organisation has launched, including meetings with professionals – next week one is announced at the European Film Market of the Berlinale. I steal a quote from the interview, link to the whole text below:

PP: For 20 years, EDN has been supporting the European documentary sector, and I dare say that we have done this very successfully. However, digital technology has allowed new players to enter the market, and this has turned the power structures within the media environment around. The result is that the “old” business model has been disrupted; the model that for decades has allowed independent documentary producers and directors to contribute in a significant way to the European media landscape. Increasingly, we have noticed that the model that worked so well in the past is now being challenged, and the position of the independent creative documentary is under pressure. This is happening at a time when the media’s influence on the audience’s thoughts, values and behaviour is stronger than ever. We are experiencing a paradigm shift that forces us to reflect on how to protect the position of the independent documentary in a global, mediatised society. EDN is not impervious to this challenge: we, too, have to think about the needs of our community and how best to serve it. We are convinced that we can only successfully protect the interests of the independent European documentary community if we have accurate facts and figures at our disposal, something that our community has never been good at providing. Taking stock of the current situation of the European documentary environment and preparing to defend its position within the European audiovisual landscape are what made us decide to launch Media & Society.

http://cineuropa.org/it.aspx?t=interview&l=en&did=346968

www.edn.network

ZagrebDox 2018 Program Ready

It’s the 14th edition of ZagrebDox that starts in the Croatian capital February 25th to run until March 4. And it is as usual well edited, the best of the best for the audience, with an international and a regional competition, and under the umbrella “Official Program” biographies, music documentaries, “happy dox” (seven this year out of 125 films!) and a masters program with films by Claude Lanzmann (“Napalm”, that I have not seen), Alex Gibney (“No Stone Unturned”, not seen), Joe Berlinger (“Intent to Destroy”, seen, good), Erik Gandini (“The Rebel Surgeon”, good, but is Gandini a master, sorry!) and Frederick Wiseman’s masterpiece “Ex Libris – the New York Public Library” – Wiseman who recently published that all his films will be available through an online service. Bravo! More sections can be discovered on the fine website of the festival that provides you with trailers to watch.

1386 films came in for consideration, 125 were taken, 21 of them for the

international competition, where it is a joy to see that the festival includes short films like the Belorussian director Aliaksei Paluyan’s “Country of Women” that charmed me at DOK Leipzig this year. A fine tribute to a young talent. It is reviewed on this site. As are of course Ai WeiWei’s “Human Flow”, Talal Derki’s “Of Fathers and Sons”, Marta Prus “Over the Limit”, Simon Lereng Wilmont’s “The Distant Barking of Dogs” and Arunas Matelis “Wonderful Losers: A Different World”.

From a Danish perspective nice to see that films praised by colleague Allan Berg in his Danish language reviews, “The Stranger” (“En fremmed flytter ind”) by Nicole Nielsen Horanyi is there as are Eva Mulvad’s “A Modern Man” and “Big Time” by Kaspar Astrup Schrøder about the Danish architect Bjarke Ingels.

I could go on with the name-dropping – and I do so with some fine titles from the Regional competition: of course the IDFA winner, Serbian Mila Turajlic’s “The Other Side of Everything” is there together with “A Woman Captured”, the shocking Hungarian film about modern slavery by Bernadett Tuza-Ritter and the charming Macedonian “Avec l’Amour” by Ilija Cvetkovski and Atanas Georgiev, not to forget the extraordinary “In Praise of Nothing” by Boris Mitic.

Masterclasses with Claude Lanzmann and Talal Derki… of course! And the ZagrebDox Pro with Leena Pasanen and Stefano Tealdi continues to be a strong element in the festival. Summing up. No objections!

http://zagrebdox.net/en 

Docs & Talks /4

VIVIANE CANDAS: ALGÉRIE DU POSSIBLE / A POSSIBLE ALGERIA

French director Viviane Candas grew up in Algiers, where her father, the lawyer and anti-colonialist Yves Mathieu, worked for the Algerian government after the country’s independence in 1962. Following eight years of war against France, one of the most brutal in colonial history, the reconstruction of Algeria was a political experiment striving to create a fair and equal society, notably through extensive land and school reforms. Yves Mathieu died under mysterious circumstances in a car accident in 1966, shortly after Ben Bella’s revolutionary regime had been overthrown by a military coup. Guided by her personal story and through the superb editing of rare archive material and recently recorded interviews with key figures, Candas introduces us to the unique moment of Algerian history just after the revolution.

Senior researcher at DIIS Rasmus Alenius Boserup introduces us to the subject before the film, and after the screening, the director and he will discuss the significance that French colonial history has had and still has for both Algeria and France even today – and they will talk about the role the Algerian revolution played at the time. This is the film’s Danish premiere. The debate is in English. Tickets: 95/65 kr. The event is supported by the Institut français. (Docs & Talks’ programme)

Algérie du possible / Viviane Candas, 2016 / eng. subtitles / SUN 25/02 14:00 / Cinemateket, Copenhagen

KOMMENTAR

Filmen bygger på stemmen, filminstruktørens egen stemme. Den fortæller historien. Det kan jeg altid godt lide, det er reelt, det er litterært, tæt på skrift, tættere end en ren billedside. Og Viviane Candas stemme gør mig tryg og lyttende selv om, hvad den fortæller mig er forfærdende. Dernæst bygger hendes film på arkivmaterialet, en sjælden samling historiske optagelser klippet sammen med et privat arkiv. Det kan jeg også næsten altid godt lide, i hvert fald, når det er poetisk konstruktion som her og ikke et formidlende pensum. I Candas’ værk er det selve forbindelsen mellem verdenshistorie, Algeriets historie, Frankrigs historie og undertitlens Yves Mathieus biografi. Han var Viviane Candas’ far, fransk som hun, men dybt forbundet med Algeriet i landets skæbnetime. I titlens og undertitlens indhold ligger filmens fortælling, og i modstillingen samfund / nation / folk og person dens ekstistentielle drama, dens identitetsovervejelse. Endelig bygger filmværket på Candas’ enestående følsomt ærlige interviews med nogle få af fortællingens nøglepersoner, som i den litterære ånd mere er søgende samtaler end faktuelle spørgsmål/svar scener. De er lavet helt uensartede, og de vidner om en langvarig indsamling af filmens optagelser, som kædes sammen af vignetter fra researchrejserne i en rekonstruktion, som har en fast billedmæssig ensartethed, som et eftertankens hvilerum. Men mærkeligt nok gør det dem ikke til filmens, fortællingens nu. Det gør Candas’ fortællestemme, og det gør de medvirkende, som fører ordet i interviewscenernes samvær, samtaler hvor instruktørens stemme oftest er klippet fra, men mærkeligt er hun meget til stede. Det bliver til mit møde med disse mennesker, og mødet med en gammel Ahmet Ben-Bella er et emotionelt chok. Her er filmværkets nu, her er selveste verdenshistorien til stede i denne skrøbelige krop, som taler om sig selv som socialist. I dag, nu…

2

Krigen i Algeriet var et fransk anliggende, som jeg husker den, og krigen var det franske militærs brutalitet. Jeg læste om Djamila Boupacha i tidsskriftet Perspektiv, en bestemt replik fra hende under retssagen, en oplysning, hun kom med, sidder i min hukommelse endnu, ryster mig endnu, fordi jeg husker, hvordan det var med mig og viden om voldsom brutalitet dengang, og hun var altid Picassos tegning, men det handlede ikke om Picasso, i stedet fæstnede hun sig; hun, modellen indprentede sig ved det lille portræt tegnet efter et fotografi stærkere end tegneren på en måde modsat Guernica, som altid var den berømte maler mere end den ulykkelige by. Og jeg læste i Simone de Beauvoirs roman Mandarinerne om det franske intellektuelle venstre i 1940-erne, om Camus og Sartres kreds. Og jeg læste om krigen og om general Jacques Massu og hans faldskærmstroppers sejr i 1957 over modstandsbevægelsen FLN i hovedstaden, som han trevlede op ved vilkårlige arrestationer og brutale forhør og systematisk tortur. Det var Slaget om Algier, som i 1966 også blev en film af Gillo Pontecorvo med Jean Martin i rollen som oberst Mathieu, som nok er et portræt af general Massu, en spillefilm i dokumentarisk sort-hvid billedstil med amatører lige fra gaden i de fleste andre roller. Den mimisk dokumentariske kvalitet i Pomtecorvos film er så forbavsende, at Candas har kunnet bruge scener derfra som en del af sit  arkivstof, for eksempel henrettelsesscenerne. 

3

Titelsekvensen, de første billeder, broen med bilerne i bjerglandskabet, vejene set fra bilen, jernbanestationen med toget en almindelig dag og billedernes hele stil og deres særlige tekniske kvalitet definerer filmens tid som nutid, netop nu, hvor den optages og nu, hvor jeg oplever, den erindrer historien om Algeriets frihedskrig som spredte fragmenter bundet i arkivets film, fotografier og dokumenter, som bliver gennemgående lag i dens arkitektur, dens datid.

4

De medvirkende i samtalerne er i dette nu, instruktørens stemme er i dette nu, vignetternes scener er dette nu, de rammer det ind med nutid, også arkivoptagelsernes lag, som i den fornemme klipning skrevet i filmens datid. Det er hukommelsens svage billeder, brudstykker af dengang, som stemmerne føjer detaljer til. Alt det forfærdende. Men også opklaringer, hvordan, det virkelig skete. Guillotinen i fængselsgården, henrettelsen af en algerisk modstandsmand, hvordan en afkørsel ved en hovedvej rummer viden om, på hvilken måde Yves Mathieu sandsynligvis blev myrdet, støtter som indicium, at sådan var det muligt, sådan som bilvraget blev fundet. Det er en erindringsfilm på arkivstof mere i slægt med Chris Markers Level 5 (1997) skrevet i et redigeringsrums nutid med sine minimalt få og utydelige, men aldeles afgørende arkivscener og fotos end, den er i slægt med Emile de Antonios Millhouse (1971), som udelukkende er lavet på arkivklip og, som jeg husker det, skrevet i datid som alvorlig underholdning, mens Chris Markers film er en moralfilosofisk opgave i nutid, netop som kernen i Viviane Candas’ værk, som derved er en tilsvarende forpligtelse for mig, en udfordring til min tanke, netop hvad festivalen, den indgår i, har til formål.

5

Candas’ film dokumenterer ikke dette korte, men voldsomme afsnit af Algeriets historie, filmen dokumenterer en kvalificeret tanke om det afsnit af historien, en tanke kvalificeret af en statsleders erindring, en ministers erindring, en datters erindring om sin fraværende far. Hun har nu brug for at dele deres erindringer, for at forstå sine velordnede brudstykker som en historisk viden, for at komme til at elske sin revolutionære far langt borte begravet i arbejde, forstå ham og elske ham uden forbehold nu trods det, at han har været død i mange år. Hun står i nutiden med pladen med gravindskriften i hånden, overvejer den rette lapidariske sammenfatning af dette menneskes liv.

6

Filmens undertitel er La révolution d’ Yves Mathieu læste jeg på skiltet efter titelsekvensen. Det er i dag et par dage siden, og først i dag forstår jeg efterhånden titlens så vigtige sammenfatning. Jeg er ved at være parat til at se den fornemme film igen, parat til at lytte til Rasmus Alenius Boserups introduktion og til hans samtale med Viviane Candas i Cinemateket.

SØN 25/02 14:00: ALGERIET / A POSSIBLE ALGERIA / Algérie du possible / Viviane Candas, 2016 / eng. tekst / 88 min. / 138 min. inkl. debat. Debatten foregår på engelsk. Billetpris: 95/65 kr. Arrangementet er støttet af Institut français.

SYNOPSIS

Den franske instruktør Viviane Candas boede som barn i Algier, hvor hendes far, advokaten og antikolonialisten Yves Mathieu, arbejdede for den algeriske regering lige efter uafhængigheden i 1962. Efter otte års krig mod Frankrig, en af kolonihistoriens mest brutale, var genopbygningen af landet et politisk eksperiment, hvor man forsøgte at skabe et retfærdigt og lige samfund, bl.a. ved hjælp af omfattende jord- og skolereformer. Yves Mathieu døde under mystiske omstændigheder i en bilulykke i 1966, kort tid efter at Ben Bellas revolutionære styre var blevet afsat ved et militærkup. Med den personlige historie som ledetråd og med en eminent sammenklipning af sjældent arkivmateriale og nyligt optagede interviews med datidens nøglepersoner indfører Candas os i Algeriets historie lige efter revolutionen.

Seniorforsker ved DIIS Rasmus Alenius Boserup introducerer os til emnet inden filmen og taler efterfølgende med instruktøren om, hvilken betydning den franske kolonihistorie har haft og stadig har for både Frankrig og Algeriet op til i dag – og om den rolle, den algierske revolution spillede i samtiden. Filmen har danmarkspremiere. (Docs & Talks’ program)

PROGRAM OG BILLETTER

http://www.dfi.dk/Filmhuset/Cinemateket/Billetter-og-program/Serie.aspx?serieID=15914 

Docs & Talks/ 3

DYLAN BANK, DANIEL DiMAURO, MORGAN PEHME: GET ME ROGER STONE

MARC EBERHARDT: MEUTHEN’S PARTY

There are still some weeks before the kick-off of Docs & Talks but I have had the chance to watch two of the films, that will be shown at the festival accompanied by talks. They are both on politics of today. In the US and in Germany.

One – ”Get Me Roger Stone” –  with a debate before, in English, where one of the participants is the competent Niels Bjerre Poulsen, who is often on Danish television to talk Trump. It’s on the 21st.

The other – ”Meuthens Party” – where the debate is in Danish after the film: Seniorforsker ved DIIS Cecilie Stokholm Banke og forfatter og journalist på Weekendavisen Jesper Vind debatterer baggrunden for højrefløjens fremgang i Tyskland og resten af Europa og forsøger at give svaret på, hvorfor flere af højrepartierne er plaget af fløjkrige, efter de har etableret sig. It’s on the 22nd.

”Get me Roger Stone” (100 mins.) is not only a portrait of the flamboyant dandy, who for decades have ”made” presidents like

Nixon, Reagan, Bush and now Trump. According to himself – and many others. He is been in and out of the limelight, he adores to be there and he knows how to deal with the media. And he is in total control of this film. A good characteristic comes from the NY Times review (by Manohla Dargis): ”Movies about colorful characters, be they saints or sinners, are often hijacked by their subject, so it’s unsurprising that Mr. Stone, with his bespoke suits and Nixon tattoo, owns this one…”. What you get with this film is an entertaining insight (lots of archive from tv, interviews) to a cynical world full of lies; what you don’t get is a journalistic analysis of what is right and wrong. Everyone, and there are many, talking about Stone either shake their head with a smile or characterise him to be like the president: a crook.

German Marc Eberhardt’s ”Meuthens Party” is classical observational documentary in the genre that we know so well from direct cinema – ”Primary” (on J.F.Kennedy and Humphrey), ”Citizen Havel” – getting close to a politician during his election campaign for the right wing party Afd (Alternative für Deutschland), where he wins a seat in the parliament in Baden-Würtemberg and thus gets into the German Bundestag as one of the chairmen. The director, who is also the cameraman, follows him for a couple of months, Meuthen being the man, who denies that there is antisemitism being expressed by members of his party, well denies racism in general… but but when he is in a full hall for the party gathering, he receives standing ovations for his nationalistic anti-immigration formulations. Would it be wrong to compare him to the Danish righ wing party leader Thulesen-Dahl: Academic, always well-dressed and polite in communications, with pretty clear anti opinions… The film, made by a film student, probably a diploma work, is quite impressive, and has a standpoint. Look for yourself.

http://www.dfi.dk/Filmhuset/Cinemateket/Billetter-og-program/

Sergei Loznitsa to Receive Award in Krakow/ 1

A press release came in from Krakow Film Festival two days ago. Here comes the essence of it, followed by a post of some references, we have made to films of a very productive and excellent director of short and long documentary and fiction films:

This year, the Krakow Film Foundation Programme Council decided to honour the eminent director of documentary films, Sergei Loznitsa, with the Dragon of Dragon award in recognition of his exceptional contribution to the development of the international cinema. The 21st laureate of this prestigious award is at the same time the youngest winner of the award in history… big names like Jonas Mekas, Werner Herzog, Marcel Lozinski, Albert Maysles are among previous winners as are Priit Pärn, the Quay Brothers, Jerzy Kucia and Paul Driessen – remember that the festival is also the place for artistic animation films.

The President of the Programme Council, the film critic and film theorist, Prof. Tadeusz Lubelski, gave three main reasons for the nomination: “First, the consistent, extremely original and fruitful explorations of the form. Loznitsa created his own style of documentary film, resulting from patience and distance to the world, based on long shots and brilliant soundtrack. Kracauer would have had an insoluble problem with his works, because this is the cinema of pure recording, at the same time completely created. And the end result tends to be worthy of the dramas by Beckett.

Secondly, Loznitsa as a film-maker is an inquisitive and unyielding explorer of Russia. He discovers the weight of its past (often bringing archival tapes to life), but also its unique, sometimes shocking present. To this aim serve him the explorations of the documentary film’s form, though he often uses them also in feature films, such as the recent brilliant film “A Gentle Creature.” Thirdly, this is a film-maker who is connected with our festival since the very beginnings of his artistic work, that is, for over twenty years. So we can almost view this director – born in Baranavichy, educated in Kiev, residing in Germany for many years – as a film-maker from Krakow.”

http://www.kff.com.pl

Sergei Loznitsa to Receive Award in Krakow/ 2

… and here are some quotes from Loznitsa films, we have been writing about on filmkommentaren. It’s very few, only documentaries. If you want to see the full filmography go to Loznitsa’s own website, link below.

The Event (2015) – … Loznitsa is not in Moscow in this film, he is in Leningrad and gives me exceptional material from what happened in the streets and the squares, that I love so much today, where people gathered to try to understand what is going on in 1991. +  he gives me the legendary mayor Sobchak and his impressive speeches, “the sea of faces” listening to him, the USSR flag being substituted by the Russian, the slogans used like “fascism will not prevail”, bring the “coup gang to justice” and the name of Yeltsin shouted again and again. Fascinating…

Maidan (2014) – He is distantly observing and not involved (not meaning that he does not have a point of view, indeed he has), he makes the viewer observe and have the eyes go around his images, that are like paintings, as the jury stated in their motivation for giving an honorary award to the film (in Leipzig, ed.). Several long shots included the singing of the Ukrainian anthem, where you let your eyes wander within the frame, as was it a work by Brueghel! Unique moments they are.

My personal favourite is ”Blockade” (2005) about the 900 days siege of Leningrad during WW2. Will watch again and write…

Austerlitz (2017) – Loznitsa´s construction of the sound score is a superb alliance to the black & white images, where there is no camera movement and where every frame is precise and full of meaning in its composition. Back to the sound… it goes on my nerves when I am confronted with the sound of steps of all the tourists, who are visiting the camps – after visiting several, Loznitsa decided to concentrate on Dachau and Sachsenhausen – in their almost naked summer dress with their smart phones clicking all the time, their audioguides linked to the ear, and their selfie-photo-taking.

http://loznitsa.com/

Magnificent7 Gets Support

Iva Plemic Divjak, one of the many Serbian film people helping to set up the festival has made this English summing up for me and you readers, of the article in blic.rs of today

Members of the Independent Cultural Scene Association of Serbia – ‪NKSS is giving their full support to the ‪Festival “7 veličanstvenih” / Magnificent 7 Festival and are protesting against the decision of the Sava Centre to go full blown commercial and to withdraw from the partnership with the festival after 13 extremely successful years. They are giving an example of one of the Magnificent7 guests, the great German Kral, being astonished by the impressive audience in the full Sava center for the screening of “Un tango mas”… The punch line is the nature of Sava centre’s sources of financing (quote): “We’d like to remind you of the fact that Sava centre, being a public institution, is partially financed from the budget of its founder – the City of Belgrade. As stated in the SC’s business program, this subvention in 2018 amounts to 43.000.000 Dinars (362.870EUR), while the subvention they are receiving from the Serbian Ministry of Culture is 5.000.000 Dinars (42.190EUR).”

The picture is from the first edition’s first film in the festival in 2005, Thomas Riedelsheimer’s “Touch The Sound”.

Docs & Talks/ 2

Bravo! It’s quite a festival that the Danish Cinemateket and the Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS) presents in the Film House in Copenhagen. And yet it is not “only” a festival with high quality documentaries from all over, it is ALSO a so-called event, where screenings of the films are followed by Talks. Connected to international themes of today, inviting us viewers to go deeper via films and discussions than we are used to through the daily news… These were the words welcoming the new festival on this site last year in February. We posted 12 texts about the festival last year and we intend to cover it again through pre-talk, reviews and visits to some of the screenings. Our experience with the festival was very positive, so welcome back – and for those who are not in Copenhagen, follow the program, might give you inspiration to do the same.

12 is a good number – there are 12 films in the program, a couple of them have been reviewed on this site, actually recommended, those are “Mogadishu Soldier” and “Convictions”.

About “Mogadishu Soldier” I wrote: …Taken from no fewer than 523 tapes,

this compilation (film) gives an honest and sometimes revealing glimpse behind the scenes of war… 523 tapes in the hands of Norwegian Torstein Grude and Danish Niels Pagh Andersen, the again-and-again praised Danish editor, who has put the filmed impressions and interviews and battle scenes together in a way so it is watchable… even if a documentary addict like me had to look away from the corpses and the injured soldiers, and the scenes as well, where captured enemies, children fighting for Al-Sharaab sit there with grown-up soldies surrounding them. It hurts. They get close, the Burundian cameramen… whio had been given cameras by Grude. As an example of the building of “Docs & Talks” a senior researcher from DIIS and a representative from the Somali community in Denmark will talk about the situation in the country and the role of UN and the African Union.

And a quote from the review of award winning “Convictions” by Tatiana Chistova that demonstrates the director’s sense of the absurdity of being called for military service… and homophobia: … There’s a nurse, uniformed military men, a woman who puts all the questions – in the room where Viktor enters asking for ”alternative military service”, because of his, as he puts it, ”non-traditional sexuality”. His case is discussed, a nurse comes in and says that she does not think homosexuality is a decease… But the camera and the sound catches the leading lady at the table saying to the military man next to her: ”… maybe he is insane”!… After the film senior researcher Flemming Splidsboel Hansen fra DIIS will talk about Russian current nationalism.

Just two out of 12 – there are also short films and debate from Kurdistan and Myanmar, the brilliant “Mama Colonel” from Congo, the German “Meuthen’s Party” about the leader of the righ wing party Afd, the Basque “Walls”, the Swedish “Dead Donkeys Fear No Hyenas”, “A Possible Algeria” by French Viviane Candas, who will be present at the screening, another French on migration “On Call”, “Get me Roger Stone” is a film from Trump’s US and finally the film that opens the festival #The Road” from China, by Zanbo Zhang.

Wow for a program, we will be back with more as the festival gets closer.

http://www.dfi.dk/Filmhuset/Cinemateket/Billetter-og-program/Serie.aspx?serieID=15914

Docs & Talks /1

Docs & Talks 2018 / Film- og forskningsdage 20.-25. februar + 27. februar

I 12 + 3 filmarrangementer kombinerer festivalen Docs & Talks dokumentarfilm med forskningsformidling og debat. 20.-25. februar i Cinemateket i København og 27. februar i Øst for Paradis i Aarhus.

ARRANGØRERNE AF DOCS & TALKS SKRIVER I INDBYDELSEN:

“Hvad sker der, når to soldater i den upopulære fredsbevarende FN-styrke i Somalia får til opgave at filme deres egen hverdag? Hvordan oplever almindelige mennesker Kinas gigantiske infrastrukturprojekter over alt i verden? Og hvordan skildrer man russisk nationalisme gennem en historie om militærnægtere?

Svarene kan du få, når Dansk Institut for Internationale Studier (DIIS) og Cinemateket endnu en gang byder velkommen til DOCS & TALKS – Film- og Forskningsdage fra 20. til 25. februar i København og 27. februar i Aarhus. I en række tankevækkende arrangementer kombinerer vi dokumentarfilm med forskningsformidling og debat.

DOCS & TALKS byder på i alt 12 filmarrangementer i CINEMATEKET, hvor debatpaneler med forskere fra DIIS og andre internationalt anerkendte forskningsinstitutioner, instruktører, case-personer og praktikere vil diskutere og perspektivere filmenes temaer.

Vi skal følge den dramatiske historie om opførelsen af en kinesisk motorvej og diskutere Kinas infrastruktur-projekter ude i verden. Vi kommer helt tæt på en af nøglepersonerne i det tyske højrefløjsparti AfD og tager med afsæt i filmen en debat om de bevægelser, der driver Europas nye højre. Med to migrationsfilm ser vi både på det store perspektiv: Grænsepolitik – og det helt nære: Migranternes fysiske og psykiske helbred.

Tanken med DOCS & TALKS er at formidle viden på en anderledes måde – og at gøre båndet mellem film og forskning stærkere. DOCS & TALKS går endnu tættere på aktuelle begivenheder end den daglige nyhedsstrøm, samtidig med at vi skildrer de grundlæggende politikker, ideologier og udviklingstendenser, der ligger bag.

Vi glæder os til at byde et spørge- og diskussionslystent publikum velkommen. Billetpris: 95/65 kr. Hvor intet andet er anført, foregår debatterne på dansk.

OG

DIIS OG CINEMATEKET I PARADIS PRÆSENTERER DOCS & TALKS AARHUS

FILM- OG FORSKNINGSDAG D. 27. FEBRUAR 2018

Dansk Institut for Internationale Studier (DIIS) og Cinemateket byder for første gang velkommen til DOCS & TALKS AARHUS– Film og Forskningsdag tirsdag d. 27. februar i Øst for Paradis, hvor vi byder på tre tankevækkende arrangementer, der kombinerer dokumentarfilm med forskningsformidling og debat.

Forskere fra DIIS vil sammen med kolleger fra bl.a. Aarhus Universitet diskutere og perspektivere filmenes temaer – og invitere publikum til at tage del i debatten. Vi skal debattere den nye globale grænsevirkelighed med afsæt i filmen Walls. Vi skal følge den dramatiske historie om opførelsen af en kinesisk motorvej med filmen The Road og diskutere Kinas infrastrukturprojekter ude i verden. Og endelig skal vi helt tæt på en af nøglepersonerne i det tyske højrefløjsparti AfD, der portrætteres i filmen Meuthen’s Party, for derefter se nærmere på de bevægelser, der driver Europas nye højre.

Med DOCS & TALKS går vi endnu tættere på aktuelle begivenheder end i den daglige nyhedsstrøm, samtidig med at vi skildrer de grundlæggende politikker, ideologier og udviklingstendenser, der ligger bag.

Sara Thelle og Mira Bach Hansen / Forum for Film og Formidling. Anne Blaabjerg, Troels Jensen og Sine Plambech / DIIS. Rasmus Brendstrup / Cinemateket”

PROGRAM OG BILLETTER

Se programmerne og bestil billetterne her:

http://www.dfi.dk/Filmhuset/Cinemateket/Billetter-og-program/ (Cinemateket)

http://paradisbio.dk/NextDaysProgramme.aspx?offset=0 (Øst for Paradis, find 27. februar på siden. Her er de tre film med)

FILMKOMMENTAREN

Vi har her på bloggen planer om at omtale alle filmene og selv skrive om dem vi har set. 

Protest from Magnificent7 Festival Belgrade

Dear audience, dear friends of the Festival,

After thirteen magnificent years of the Festival’s continuous growth in quality, after its extraordinary contributions to the Belgrade, Serbian and European cultural landscape, the Festival has faced insurmountable difficulties. These difficulties have unfortunately nothing to do with our will or actions; yet, in such circumstances, the Festival has to find a way to exist in another time and another place – which, we believe and hope, will be the spring of this year.

Since the very beginning and the first Festival in 2005, we had an agreement with Sava Center about a joint organization of the Festival. Throughout the years, this cooperation was very successful, fueled by mutual trust and enthusiasm. We are deeply grateful to all those at Sava Center who persisted with us year after year and who invested their best efforts in helping the Festival take place under the best possible conditions and in the best possible way. When Sava Center celebrated its 40th birthday in 2017, we received recognition for “an extraordinary cooperation and special personal contribution to the affirmation of Sava Center.”

Before signing a new contract for 2018, we were notified, to our great surprise, by the administrative department of Sava Center that all future forms of such cooperation were terminated. The argument claimed that the current situation required Sava Center to begin running its operations exclusively on commercial grounds. This in turn meant the cancellation of the agreement about the co-organization of the Festival.

The Festival was thus given the status of any other commercial client overnight – along with the offer to use Sava Center upon paying very high rental prices. The General Director of Sava Center denied any form of communication or dialogue; his response was one of ignoring, which resulted in resounding silence.

Due to lack of means to accept such conditions – but also due to lack of will, since we strongly believe that the commodification of culture inevitably leads to its destruction – we publicly protest such treatment of the Festival and refuse to allow money and profit to have priority over more important human values and needs.

Encouraged by your loyalty and enthusiasm, we are not giving up the Festival that we have made for you and with you. Just like in the past years, we are ready to fight for the superb beauty, the magic of film, and for the values that this unique anthology of modern documentary – The Magnificent 7 Film Festival – brings together.

We will notify you in a timely manner about further developments.

Belgrade, January 19, 2018.

Festival Directors
Svetlana and Zoran Popović