Adrian Pirvu: Our Special Birth Day

We normally do not promote individual film projects on this site but exceptions were invented to be done… Yesterday in Bucharest, Adrian Pirvu, at the One World Romania’s “Cooking a Doc” went on stage to present (photo by Adi Marineci) an amazing film project about himself. He showed a touching clip with his mother, who tells how Adrian’s sight was (almost) saved just after he was born. This is one of the most intriguing stories I have heard for a long time. Adrian Pirvu needs a producer, eventually a co-director, in other words help to develop, and funding for research! Here is his own fine text written for the workshop:

 A documentary by Adrian Pirvu

90 minutes, 4K

Stage of production: Development

Budget: 72 800 EUR

Logline

What are the biological citizens of Chernobyl, born in 1986, doing for the 30th anniversary of the nuclear accident that changed their lives and the continent they live on?

Synopsis

I started on the path to becoming a filmmaker on the 26`th of April, 1986. I was not born yet but a nuclear accident in a country that my pregnant mother was visiting, set me on the journey to make this film. In late July, I was born with all fingers and all toes, a little overweight but completely blind. I have partial vision in one eye now, thanks to a very dedicated doctor, a cornea donated by a fresh corpse and 28 year old country girl with the strength of a lioness, my mother.

When one reaches 30, there is a lot of soul searching. One ponders the shift from the care-free days of youth and joining the rank of “adults”. Hitting 30 with a disability on the 30th anniversary of the nuclear disaster that caused it gives a whole new dimension to this experience. The film will start with me, Adrian, a 29 year old, who is trying to figure out how his life would have turned out had he not been exposed to radiation while still in the womb. Although I have tried to build a life ignoring my handicap, it is still hard not to think about it while attempting to achieve things or interacting with others. I wish to find other people like me and see how they cope with this situation.

Our voyage starts in Romania and goes through Moldova, Ukraine and Belarus in search of the biological citizens of Chernobyl who were just infants when their future was already predetermined. My journey will be set against the background of a post-communist Eastern Europe where people with disabilities constantly fight an uphill battle with societal stigma and dysfunctional institutions. We see how those in power have forgotten the past and are preparing to make the same mistakes that led to that dark April morning.

Together with the films protagonists, I will celebrate the 30th anniversary of the disaster in the place where it all began. Were they able to make the best of a hostile environment, like the countless animals who now flourish in the irradiated wilderness around Chernobyl?

About the Director

Film school graduate with experience both as director and producer for documentary and fiction shorts. After one year teaching English in China, I became more and more involved in disabled issues and am now working for the Romanian National Council on Disability as a TV and documentary producer.

Contact

adishor.pirvu@gmail.com

+40726302265

One World Romania/ 3

Went to watch ”Queen of Silence”, full house, a film directed by Polish Agnieszka Zwiefka, her first film, produced by Heino Deckert and shown at this festival as one of four films in a well deserved homage to Deckert as the strong producer of documentaries he is. The film has been at several festivals and has been awarded.

So it is good? No, it is not, sorry! It is a mess of good wills and ambitions. It wants to portray Denisa, a Roma girl with a hearing handicap. And she is great and you want to live with her. But it also wants to give a characterization of the environment, she lives in, an illegal ghetto in Poland next to high apartment buildings. And it wants to give her the chance to live her dream to be a dancer like the dancers she has watched on the tele through Bollywood films. The result unfortunately is not successful as the editing remains automatic with no space for (poetic) breathing and interpretation of the girl’s inner emotions – as you all the time has to go forward for another musical scene where she is dancing. And then back to social reality – the police comes and we understand that the houses must be taken down. But we also have to see that she and

a friend of hers take garbage in the city, that they argue with citizens of the city and so on so forth. Jumping around, it seems like an insisting on that it all has to be in the film, which makes the film stay on a surface and Denisa being a doll in the hands of well-meaning filmmakers. Having said so, I have no doubt about the director’s honest intentions and commitment, maybe she had too many advisers around, too many cooks… according to the end titles showing the many workshops the film project has been to.

Back to the workshop entitled “Cooking a Doc” (Group PHOTO by Adi Marineci), where 10 projects were pitched on a sunny Sunday in the Journey Pub in Bucharest. We (the participants, Bulgarian producer Ana Alexieva, Czech editor Adam Brothánek and me) had been together for two days working on the projects. The participants were asked to revise or make teasers, they did so, and all of them also came up with a one-page text on their project. It was a fine three hour session, where we profited from the presence of festivals guests: producer Mia Haavisto (”Pixadores”) from Finland, producer Catherine Dussart from France (”The Missing Picture”), director Andrei Schwartz (”Outside”), Romanian director Adina Pintilie, teacher and critic Adina Bradeanu – who all gave constructive criticism to the filmmakers, among who there were several who had never stood on a stage before. Behind it all of course the cool master of irony, festival director and director Alexandru Solomon.

The pitching ended with an award ceremony where Ana Alexieva went to the stage to invite Alex Brendea to take part in the Rough Cut Boutique at the Sarajevo Film Festival, where he can have his rough material evalutated. His ”Teach” about a charismatic, energetic excentric teacher of mathematics, who lives alone with cats and dogs, and does his teaching at this his home is very promising and the choice was very well received by colleagues at the ”Cooking a Doc”.

And then out in the sun to enjoy a cigar and a cup of coffee before back to Copenhagen to watch el classico, and they won FC Barcelona if you are in doubt about what I am writing…

http://thequeenofsilence.com/abou Det-us/

http://oneworld.ro/2015/l/en/guests/

One World Romania Festival/ 2

I arrived a couple of days ago to Bucharest for the One World Romania. Together with EDN’s Mikael Opstrup we were taken to the hotel, I was given one of those rooms, where you can not open the window so I had to change for another one, and then down to the lobby to meet an old friend André Singer, whose ”Night Will Fall” is part of the programme. I saw the film on Swedish television in January, it is impressive and unique as a historical document, made by André Singer, who after many years, as he put it ”was happy to be back to filmmaking”. Among many jobs as a producer Singer has been producing documentaries by Werner Herzog. You see him on the photo with the microphone at one of the discussion sessions after a well attended screening. A true English gentleman!

To the left Alexandru Solomon, the director of the 8 year old festival about which I can only say Bravo! A good programme, several good debates and information gatherings, among them one by Mikael Opstrup talking about the (impressive) research, he has done for the organisation about Co-Productions in Europe. Solomon was on that occasion giving his input on the good and bad sides of co-productions – to be done if necessary, otherwise stay away from it (my comment), far too complicated. Unless an artistic element is involved and not only the financing side.

The festival has a great initiative that can easily be taken up by other festivals, or rather adopted by others: ADOPT A DOCUMENTARY. Click below and you can see the details, who adopted which film… The result is of course that the adopters promote the films for their members. Here is a quote from the website: In our effort to support civil society in Romania, we invited several non-governmental organisations to symbolically adopt a documentary from this year’s selection, a documentary that addresses the cause that is closest to their mission and activity…

I watched two films the other night: ”The Serbian Lawyer” by Aleksandar Nikolic and ”Outside” by Andrei Schwartz. Whereas the first one fails to bring balance between the personal and the professional in its portrait of the very sympathetic Marko, the lawyer, who defends Karadić at the Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in the Hague, the second one by Schwartz is a very well made, interesting, warm and surprising (will not give you the end) story about Gavril Hrib, who leaves prison after 21 years – sentenced for murder of two people. Schwartz made a film about him at that time, ”Jailbirds” and when Hrib contacts him asking for a continuation of that film, Schwratz returns.

Right now I have left the workshop – to write these words – where I am tutoring together with Bulgarian producer Ana Alexieva and Czech editor Adam Brothánek. We are on the second day, the participants – 10 projects are being developed – are preparing their pitch, visual/verbal/written for the public pitch tomorrow. They are all Romanians, some with experience, some new talented people. The themes – Romanian hiphop history, ”I became blind 30 years ago due to Chernobyl”, Slavery, a library in Cluj, death rehearsals (!), women and manele music, the Manakia Brothers (film history), an unconventional teacher, a young man with problems…

We are at the Czech Centre in Bucharest, the main organiser of a festival that is made ”in memory of Vaclav Havel”. Love that!

http://oneworld.ro/2015/l/en/adopt-documentary/

http://oneworld.ro/2015/l/en/

 

     

 

Albert Maysles – The Eye of the Poet

Realscreen News publishes today (editor Manori Ravindran) a tribute to Albert Maysles, who passed away on March 5. We take the liberty to bring to you what colleague and cinema vérité pioneer as well D.A. Pennebaker wrote:

“I was on my way to Russia in the spring of 1959 to film the American Exhibition that was about to open in Moscow. Al Maysles found out about it and came to see if he could come along. He and his brother David had already gone there on a motorcycle and he showed me a film he’d made at a Russian mental hospital.  How he’d gotten them to let him film there intrigued me and since I’d never been there he seemed like a good companion for my filmmaking. I could see he was not just looking for a job but wanted to get to Russia as badly as I did. For us both it was going to be an adventure. So I arranged for an extra visa and the two of us spent the next four months filming Russia together, wherever the trains and trolleys would take us.  It was a fantastic adventure, and Al’s eager curiosity and ability to watch tirelessly through a camera bonded us as filmmakers for the rest of our lives.” 

Read more: http://realscreen.com/2015/03/19/the-eye-of-the-poet-remembering-al-maysles/#ixzz3Us4GJWdI

Joshua Oppenheimer, alle blogindlæg

Tue Steen Müller og jeg har mellem oktober 2012 og januar 2015 skrevet foreløbig 12 blogindlæg, på henholdsvis engelsk og dansk, lange og korte, om Joshua Oppenheimers to danskproducerede film, The Act of Killing (2012) og The Look of Silence (2014). Dem har jeg nu redigeret sammen kronologisk i et enkelt opdateret indlæg, JOSHUA OPPENHEIMER, Collected Posts on his Works. Teksten kan hentes HER

Den kan også hentes via fanebladet DIRECTORS på forsiden. Her gemmer sig en liste med navne på en række instruktører, hvis film, vi har skrevet meget om gennem årene og derfor på samme måde samlet blokindlæggene. Tryk på Joshua Oppenheimers navn, og tekstens titel kommer frem. Tryk på den, og teksten dukker op.

Foto: DFI/Daniel Bergeron

The Great Kate

In the middle of all (the necessary) documentary films about wars and conflicts, going on now and/or some decades ago, it is nice to receive a newsletter from the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival, with a report from a press conference on a film on ”Katherine Hepburn – The Great Kate”. I share the words of the report:

Andrew Davies, who directed Katharine Hepburn – The Great Kate along with Rieke Brendel, spoke first (at the press conference, ed.). As the director explained, inspiration for the movie came from a tribute that the TV channel ARTE showed to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the passing of the great actress. “With the help of Hepburn’s nephew Mundy, we discovered how important a part her family had played in her life. The experiences of her childhood years were incredibly important. Her mother was an activist, who fought for human rights and women’s right to birth control. Hepburn grew up going to demonstrations. As a child, her parents would tell her that she could do anything she wanted, but that she wouldn’t get anywhere if she didn’t try hard.“ With regards to her long career, Davies thought that the secret of her success was “a product of hard work and a creative working ethic”. Answering the question of whether or not he thought Hepburn would like the documentary, Mundy told him that he “thought Hepburn would have liked the documentary more than anything else that had been written or filmed about her life, because she didn’t like biographies.”

Photo of Hepburn and Spencer Tracey – I remember how my mother talked about the two and how she adored to watch her films as I have done and do – remember Bringing Up Baby with Cary Grant!

DocuDays UA 2015

“May you live in interesting times.” This Chinese curse pops up in my mind when I think about you, Ukrainians. To a documentary filmmaker, times like these are not only a curse, but also an opportunity. After all, we are witnesses to change and movement: in society, its consciousness, individual fates and emotions. It is all about movement: the word ‘emotion’ is derived from the Latin emovere, ‘movement in a certain direction’.”

Words from Aliona van der Horst, Dutch director of Russian origin, going to Kiev to be in the jury of the DocuDays UA and to hold a class on ”Tone, sound, music and ”libretto” in the film ”Voices of Bam” – a film she made in 2006, followed by ”Boris Ryzhy” (2008), both of them part of a retrospective tribute to the director.

Ukranian DocuDays – I was there two years ago – is a wonderful festival to be at because of its generosity, the commitment to quality and the filmmakers who run it and who know how to put together a programme that is appealing – competition, non-competition in themes or around a director and the so-called Docu/Class that is like a small documentary university for the audience and the visiting guests. Apart from the class with van der Horst, Askold Kurov is there – he was part of the team who made ”Winter, Go Away!”, he made ”Leninland” and ”Kids 404”, and is at the moment making a film on the

imprisoned Ukranian director Oleh Sentsov. If I was in Kiev I would also go to the class of Artchil Khetagouri and Ileana Stanculescu, who present their works under the captions ”from the idea to the film”, ”finding the right protagonists”, ”storytelling structure and interaction with protagonists”, ”interviews or discussions in front of the camera” – or to the conversation with Danish cinematographer Lars Skree, who filmed ”Armadillo”, ”The Act of Killing” and ”The Look of Silence”. It has been said about him that he ” is yin and yang, a toughie and a poet, a soldier and a graceful dancer”.

Or why not go to listen to experienced Martichka Bozhilova, who speak about ”European Co-production and Ways to Go to the International Film Market” or to watch the results of the work done by Ukranian Ella Shtyka and Dmytro Tyazhlov 1): ”Members of documentary film laboratory LabDOCUTOLOKA will present their projects to the board of Ukrainian and international experts, including the honored guests of the festival. At LabDOCUTOLOKA, young documentalists were working on the improvement of documentary films’ concepts, trailers, and synopsis. The training pitching session provides a unique opportunity to learn how to present a project within the framework of world famous format, as well as to learn about the novelties of Ukrainian documentary cinema.” 

3 days to the opening of the festival – wish you all the best Dar´ya, Darya, Gennady, Roman and the rest of the team.

1) Dmytro Tyazhlov: Link 2  Link3

http://docudays.org.ua/eng/

Leslee Udwin: Indiens døtre

… Vidnesbyrdet i litteraturen er altså mere end blot en afslørende beretning. Den adskiller sig i føste omgang gennem to afgørende tilskyndelser: at give stemme til dem, der er gjort tavse og at bevare ofrenes navne. (Horace Engdahl)

Det jeg husker fra filmen, er Jyoto Sings fortvivlede mor, som så mærkelig afklaret vidner om, hvad hun ved om forbrydelsen og i samme interview suppleret af sin mand, som helt tilsvarende afklaret rolig fortæller om datteren. Sådan var denne unge kvinde. Filmen indeholder en række vigtige interviews, nogle meget chokerende og nu vidt kommenterede over alt, hvor filmen har været vist. På DR1 blev den præsenteret således: ”Voldtægten der rystede verden. Dansk/indisk dokumentarfilm fra 2015. 23-årige Jyoti Singh er på vej hjem en tidlig aften efter et biografbesøg med en ven. De overfaldes af seks mænd bevæbnet med jernstænger. Jyoti voldtages og maltrakteres for til sidst at blive smidt nøgen på gaden. 13 dage senere dør hun af sine kvæstelser. For første gang i en dokumentarfilm fortæller Jyotis forældre og en af voldtægtsmændene om, hvad der skete og hvorfor disse brutale voldtægter finder sted i Indien.” (DR)

Det er alt sammen rigtigt, sådan er det journalistisk og historisk antropologisk betragtet,  og det er vist også, hvad Leslee Udwin vælger som sin histories fokus. Moderens vidnesbyrd flytter det imidlertid for mig til hendes datters lidelses historie. Det vil mærkes længe. Jeg var i dyb forvirring efter at have set filmen, kunne ikke finde ord. Kunne ikke være alene med den film, gav mig til at læse om den. Den første forfatter havde som jeg i første omgang måttet give op inden en halv time:

”I tried to watch the BBC documentary India’s Daughter on Sunday, but I switched it off after 25 minutes. I found it too painful to watch, and too familiar. The hour-long film is about the brutal gang rape of a 23-year-old medical student. Twenty-four minutes and 10 seconds into the film, a list of physical injuries a woman endured through rape are read out to one of the men responsible for inflicting them. He sits there and says nothing. There is no reaction…” (Pavan Amara in The Independent)

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/indias-daughter–a-reaction-from-a-victim-of-sexual-assault-in-britain-how-can-a-man-rape-a-woman-and-then-say-its-her-fault-10106871.html

“… Filmen er stilfærdig i al sin gru. Den jagter ikke sensationen. Den fortæller om et syn på kvinder helt underlagt manden og med fast plads i hjemmet. Bundet til en tilværelse hvor de ikke må leve frit, vælge frit, uddanne sig frit, gå ud med hvem de vil og søge en fremtid på lige fod med mændene. Så kan vi godt diskutere, hvor mange kvindelige topledere, vi har herhjemme, men i verdens største demokrati og det økonomisk fremstormende Indien såvel som mange andre steder i verden, ejer kvinderne ikke de mest basale frihedsrettigheder og udsættes for vold og undertrykkelse.” (Lisbeth Knudsen, Berlingske)

http://lisbethknudsen.blogs.berlingske.dk/2015/03/07/kvindekampdag-og-jyoti-singh/  

”… Listening to Mukesh Singh (one of the convicts), I wasn’t surprised. Listening to the defense lawyers, I didn’t know whether to laugh, cry or vomit. Listening to the judges on the Verma Committee, a special government commission set up after Ms. Jyoti Singh’s death to enhance punishments for sexual crimes, I felt pride. Listening to the victim’s relatives, I tried to imagine their anguish and couldn’t. Listening to the rapists’ relatives, I tried to imagine their anguish and couldn’t. But I could, and I did, listen to all of them. And everyone should be able to. “(Sohaila Abdulali, a columnist for the Indian newspaper Mint, in New York Times)

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/13/opinion/banning-indias-daughter-is-a-terrible-idea.html?_r=0

Jo mere jeg læste, jo mere forfærdet og magtesløs blev jeg. Ved et tilfælde læste jeg også den dag, jeg så Indiens døtre, de sidste afsnit i Horace Engdahls Arret efter drømmen og i det allersidste, Philomelas tunge, som er en undersøgelse af vidnesbyrdets rolle i litteraturen fra oldtiden til nutiden, gav mig perspektivet, jeg måske kunne bruge for at fatte filmens erfaring: ”… Hvordan skal en kvinde, i en kultur hvor kvinders menneskeværd ikke tages alvorligt, gøre sine mandlige tilhørere begribeligt, hvad hendes krop er blevet udsat for? Det forekommer så trivielt, de forstår ikke, hvad hun mener. Kroppen mumler mærkeligt, ligesom Philomelas afskårne tunge.”

Indiens døtre / Indias Daughter, Danmark/Indien/England 2015, 54 min. Produceret af Plus Pictures ved Mette Heide for DR ved Mette Hoffmann Meyer og BBC Storyville. Sendt på DR1 8. marts, kan NB ses til 9. april på

https://www.dr.dk/tv/se/indiens-doetre/indiens-doetre

SYNOPSIS

“India’s Daughter is director Leslee Udwin’s stirring documentation of a crime that triggered what she has described as “an Arab Spring for gender equality” in India.

The December 2012 Delhi bus gang rape resulted in the death of 23-year-old medical student Jyoti Singh at the hands of six men. The men threw Singh and her male friend out of the bus before gleefully divvying up the pair’s belongings. One rapist got a pair of shoes, another scored a jacket. There was, however, an item that Singh had left behind which the men didn’t want. So they wrapped the innards they had wrenched out of her in their frenzy of violence in a piece of cloth, and pitched it through the window. “They had no fear,” Mukesh Singh, the driver of the bus and one of four men to be convicted for Jyoti’s rape and murder, tells Udwin.

The interview with Mukesh Singh, whose death sentence is currently in appeal, is a coup for Udwin, who is the first journalist ever allowed to talk to him, or any of the men. She will likely be the last. Yesterday the authorities banned the film in India after claiming that Udwin had failed to get the requisite permissions. Shortly afterwards the parliamentary affairs minister M Venkaiah Naidu described the film as “an international conspiracy”…

Leslee Udwin spent two years making a documentary on the horrific rape and killing of young medical student Jyoti Singh. And it asks, has the attack really spurred a sea change for gender equality in India? ” (From Sonia Faleiro’s review in The Guardian)

http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2015/mar/05/indias-daughter-review-this-film-does-what-the-politicians-should-be-doing

 

PS:

JURIDISKE OG JOURNALISTISKE INDVENDINGER

Jeg er senere blevet gjort opmærksom på specielt to kritiske artikler om filmen, en juridisk, etisk og en journalistisk, etisk:

THE FILMMAKER IN THE POSITION OF AN INTERROGATOR

“Nowhere in the world would a convicted prisoner, whose appeal is still pending, be allowed to confess on national television that he was part of a gang which raped and fatally injured a young woman, that the juvenile was the one who committed the most brutal violence and that he was only driving the bus. That apart, the Indian Constitution in Article 20(3) provides a guarantee against self-incrimination. Even during investigation, the investigating authority is not permitted to question a suspect in a manner that would incriminate him. Yet, investigating agencies continue to hold suspects in custody and employ third degree methods to get information. So routine has it become for the police to hold press conferences incriminating suspects on national television before trial, that we the people now think it is fine for us to do the same. Something similar has happened with the BBC 4 film India’s Daughter on the Nirbhaya case. The filmmaker has put herself in the position of an interrogator.

And how do we know that the convict Mukesh is telling the truth? How do we know that he is not performing for the benefit of the filmmaker or a larger audience on a predetermined script? There is no way of knowing, which is why the interview with the convict is legally, and morally wrong. There is no transparency in the making of the film…” (Indira Jaising, the former Additional Solicitor General of India. She is currently the Director of the Lawyers Collective Women’s Rights Initiative)

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/indira-jaising-/documentary-violates-the-_b_6862010.html

STING STRATEGY

“… He also said that the interviewed convict, Mukesh was not comfortable talking to the TV crew, though, he had given a consent letter to the film makers, including Bhushan. When they started, they noticed that nothing much would be forthcoming from Mukesh since he was only replying in monosyllables – ‘yes’ and ‘no’. They crew decided to resort to the ‘sting strategy’.

It is learnt that a cameraperson was asked to roll the camera but pretended that it was switched off. The rapist was inveigled into an informal chat. Unaware that he was being shot, his ugly, unrepentant mindset came to the fore and Udwin could get the sensational quotes, which were used in the film. “He was not speaking, so it was decided to do a sting and use the entire set up to look like a proper interview. It was a long informal interview in which he had mentioned so many things. The crew also interviewed a few other convicts, but till that time Tihar authorities did not know the contents of Mukesh’s bytes. They saw it last year and raised objections,” said an official privy to the developments in the ongoing probe. The official also pointed out that the clothes Mukesh wore during the interview indicated that rules were violated. “If he had been convicted, he would have been wearing prison clothes,” points out a Tihar Jail official. (Yatish Yadav, filminstruktør, New Delhi)

http://www.newindianexpress.com/nation/Deception-Lies-Behind-Making-of-India%E2%80%99s-Daughter/2015/03/09/article2704869.ece

IDFA Offers Video Reports

For those of us who were not able to visit the documentary film festival in Amsterdam, the good news is that the festival (link below) is bringing out videos from the festival. You can watch the opening and closing ceremonies but more important is that there are small interviews with directors whose films you might have seen on other occasions.

Three films that I like a lot are there: Maite Alberdi talks about her wonderful ”Tea Time” (photo), you can meet the winner of the festival with ”Of Men and War” Laurent Bécue-Renard and there is a more than one hour long registration of a masterclass with Heddy Honigmann, who had a retrospective at the festival, had chosen her 10 favourite documentaries to be screened  AND showed her ”Around the World in 50 Concerts” as the opening work of the festival. I am looking forward to watch that masterclass – Honigmann is a master and (by the way) her ”Forever” was the first film reviewed here on the filmkommentaren, August 2007… Nostalgia.

http://www.idfa.nl/industry/daily/2014/video-reports.aspx

Copenhagen Architecture Festival x 2015

Denmark has a new festival. The first Copenhagen Architecture Festival took place last year and the second edition is coming up soon and has spread to the city of Aarhus as well. More than 70 events in 19 different venues: Seminars, exhibitions, conferences, debates, urban walks, and plenty of interesting film screenings!

Behind this great initiative are Josephine Michau (festival director), architect Peter Møller Rasmussen (responsible for the program) and Ph.D. in landscape architecture and film Mads Farsø (chief of development). Josephine Michau has played an important role in promoting documentary film in Denmark for the past five years. She is the co-founder of DoxBio, a national distribution-network that has, literally, been pulling out the red carpet for documentary films released in theatres across Denmark. Earlier this year, CAF received the prize Lille Arne (“Little Arne”, named after Arne Jacobsen of course) from the Danish Association of Architects for its ability to “rethink the promotion of architecture, emphasize its qualities and diversity, and create a relevant debate”.

Film and architecture are a good match. The themes can be bend in multiple directions and perspectives. And this might be a way to get an audience for a film program that could be seen as somehow audacious – which should be applauded!

This is where I have put my red marks in the program:

A world premiere of Jonas Mekas’ latest film, Scenes from the Life of Raimund Abraham (2015), a portrait of an architect. The festival also shows As I was moving ahead occasionally I saw brief glimpses of beauty (2000), one of the most beautiful films I have ever seen.

Dyrehaven, Den Romantiske Skov (1970), Jørgen Leth and Per Kirkeby’s examination and depiction of Denmark’s oldest nature park.

Jean Rouch’ classic Petit à petit (1971) and Raymond Depardon’s Afrique: Comment ça va la douleur ? (1996). Both films are a part of the two themes related to Africa screened at the museum of modern art Louisiana.

Le Cabanon by Le Corbusier (2010) by Rax Rinnekangas, the story of a small cabin Le Corbusier built for his wife in 1951 that became an important part of his life.

And I might have to see French photographer Françoise Huguier’s beautiful film Kommunalka (2008) again, about life in a traditional communal apartment in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

As goes for the feature films: Tarkovsky’s Nostalghia (1983) screened in a church, Terrence Malick’s Days of Heaven (1978) and Rohmer’s Les nuits de la pleine lune (1984).

If I were in Aarhus, I would go see The New Rijksmuseum (2014) by Oeke Hoogendijk about the restoration of the Dutch museum followed by a debate on the subject. This takes place at the cultural history museum Moesgård that has recently been rebuild by Henning Larsen Architects.

The New Rijksmuseum

There is much more and as I get started, I might venture into some of the more experimental architecture films, this year the focus is on Johann Lurf…

CAF is also cooperating with the Danish culture tv channel DR K that will be tuning in on architecture from March 17-22 (Tuesday you can watch Jytte Rex’s portrait of Henning Larsen and Tarkovsky’s The Sacrifice).

The Danish minister of culture, Marianne Jelved, will be opening the festival on Wednesday night with a gala screening of Barbicania (2014) by Ila Bêka and Louise Lemoine, a video diary of life in the notorious Barbican Centre in London (PHOTO).

So don’t miss it if you are in Copenhagen or Aarhus, or pay a visit if you’re abroad. Enjoy this goody bag of high quality screenings!

Copenhagen Architecture Festival x 2015 March 19-22

Check it out:

http://copenhagenarchitecturefestival.com/