Sebastian Junger: Which Way is The Frontline…?

Jeg vil gerne anbefale den film DR2 Dokumania sender i morgen 17. juni 21:00. ”Which Way is The Frontline From Here?” Sådan lyder originaltitlen, og der er desuden en vigtig og nøgtrent afgrænsende undertitel: ”The Life and Time of Tim Hetherington.” På dansk er det blevet til ”En fotograf i skudlinien”, det er en skam, det er en urimelig afkortning af filmens indhold, det er en afledning af dens dybe, seriøse tone. Og den gør mig usikker.

Men jeg er straks på sikker grund, da filmen begynder. Dette er jo min tids fotografi i en gedigen fotografisk tradition, som jeg vover at kalde MAGNUM PHOTOS STILEN som den berømte sammenslutning af fotografer. Det er en fotografisk tradition, som bygger på enkeltbilledets fortælling, bygger på enkeltbilledets anekdote, dets pointe. Af og til rammer et sådant fotografi Barthes’ punctum, naturligvis uafvidende. Punctum produceres af betragterens blik, ikke fotografens hensigt. Sådan tænker jeg i begyndelsen af filmen og er lettet. Jeg skal ikke tænke i endsige lede efter en cinematografisk tradition, men måske kunne det blive begyndelsen for sådan en snakkende en som mig, begyndelsen til at afgrænse en en sideløbende dokumentarfilmtradition præget af billedjournalistik.

På fotografiet her sidder Sebastian Junger (tv) ved siden af Tim Hetherington. De lavede sammen den opsigtsvækkende ”Restrepo” (2010) om en amerikansk militær afdeling i krig i Afghanistan. Og Hetherington lavede for sig selv den personlige ”Diary” (også 2010), som er et filmessay over hans fotografiske arbejde i ti år. Så nåede han ikke mere. Han blev dræbt i Mistrata, Libyen under en træfning, han dækkede, dræbt sammen med andre. Blev martyr som disse. En gade i byen bærer i dag hans navn.

Junger har i forlængelse heraf lavet et på alle måder sympatisk værk om sin ven og kollega, om hans arbejde med den fotografiske journalistik, hans reportagerejser og hans tidlige død. Den enkle synopsis ligger i undertitlen, et fyrreårigt livsforløb i signalement, forældrene og vennerne og kollegerne fortæller minderne kort og smukt. Nøgternt fotograferet på mørk baggrund som var det stills, filmen tænker simpelthen i sine stills kvalitet, stoler på den. Og det er der god grund til, hvert fotografi er sin egen historie, sin egen scene.

Til gengæld er der meget få scener i filmisk forstand, men de er prægnante. Den første jeg husker som scene, er et sted i Liberia, tror jeg, Hetherington fotograferer med sin Hasselblad på stativ et portræt af et barn, som sidder ret op og ned på en stol. Med ham ser jeg barnets personlighed og charme, det kommer hans portræt til at handle om. Jungers filmscene handler om Hetherington, som er en sød mand, ja, et godt menneske. En person der filmen igennem roses fra alle sider.

Den anden filmscene, jeg længe vil huske, er på et primitivt hospital, hvor rebellerne har opdaget at hospitalets læge måske, måske ikke er meddeler. De er på vej til at likvidere ham på stedet, men Hetherington lægger sig imellem argumenterer med, at manden er den eneste læge der, at de mange sårede vil være prisgivet. Et par minutter senere er lægen igen i gang med at behandle patienter. Hetherington er ikke kun et godt menneske, han er en modig mand.

Og Tim Hetherington tegnes således som helt, næsten som martyrerne i de middelalderlige helgenlegender, som var en litterær genre med egen æstetisk konvention. Jeg mener faktisk, at her har vi måske Sebastian Jungers films genre: ”Which Way is The Frontline From Here?” er en filmisk helgenlegende, en forbilledlig skildring af et forbilledligt menneske. Uden tvivl, uden skyggesider.

USA 2013, 90 min.

FID Marseille 2014

15 films from 12 countries, 15 world and international premieres… that is what the FID (Festival International de Cinema) in Marseilles presents in the international competition programme, when it takes off July 1 and runs until July 7. The festival also has a section for French films and one for First Films as well as a FidLab – ” FIDlab offers a meeting place for discussing film projects selected from all over the world, in order to offer film-makers an opportunity to make useful contacts and network with producers, distributors, international sales agents, sponsors, and broadcasters.

”

And films by Marguerite Duras will be screened – it’s all very well put together as the website link proves.

Back to the international competition – what a joy to see that Croatian “Mitch – the Diary of the Schizophrenic Patient” has been chosen. This is the beginning of my review of the film:

… It is rough. It is provoking. It is touching, poetic and shocking because you experience the difficulties of a man’s aim to come to terms with himself and life as it goes on in his head and around him in the psychiatric hospital, where he is, has been for 12 years and where he in a film, he is making himself, expresses his despair. Outstanding it is, nothing less!…

http://www.fidmarseille.org/index.php/en/

MIFF 2014 Documentary Programme announced

Big words from the two curators of the documentary programme at MIFF, Moscow International Film Festival, whose 26th edition includes a competition of 8 films and a panorama of 15 films under the label ”Free Thought”. Sergey Miroshnichenko and Grigory Libergal writes:

“Our competition brings together strong and prominent directors like Alex Gibney with “The Armstrong’s Lie”, Jean-Stéphane Bron with “The Blocher’s Experience”, Thomas Balmès, with “Happiness” and other famed directors whose films are be shown out-of-competition – Errol Morris, Michael Glawogger, Godfrey Reggio. All of them are analyzing lies, the shaky swamp of falsehood. And we believe that after seeing this program our audience will think again about what kind of society we should build together on this planet. It is important to defend truth and freedom and truth and to fight lies and the lack of freedom”.

The other films in competition are Lebanese Zeina Daccache’s “Sheherazade’s Diary”, “Deep Love” by Polish Jan P. Matuszynski, “Web Junkie” by Israeli Shosh Shlam and Hilla Medalia, “The Green Prince” by Nadav Schirman and “Cardiopolitika” by Svetlana Streinikova.

The “Free Thought” out-of-competition programme “includes winners of the most prominent film festivals and contests, as well as the box-office leaders” – “Joanna” (PHOTO) by Aneta Kopacz is there, “Cathedrals of Culture” directed by – among others – late Michael Glawogger, whose “Workingman’s Death” will also be screened as will Michael Obert’s “Songs from the Forest” and Errol Morris “The Unknown Known” about Donald Rumsfeld.

The festival runs from June 19 until June 28.

www.moscowfilmfestival.ru

The Flaherty: Turning the Inside Out

It starts today, the yearly Flaherty seminar at Colgate University, Hamilton, New York and runs until June 20. Programmers are Gabriela Monroy & Caspar Stracke – you can read more about them on the website of Flaherty, link below. Here is the interesting introduction to the seminar:

”The Flaherty’s 60th Anniversary Seminar probes the essence and frontiers of the form that inspired its beginnings: the documentary. Turning the Inside Out examines the state of documentary as it travels between the art gallery, the cinema, and the interactive screen. In an era of colliding genres and mediums, what holds documentary together from the inside out? What can a radical, Godardian, focus on the form of documentary reveal about the politics, poetics, and ethics of making media today?

To answer these questions, we turn to a unique group of documentary artists—some of whom produce new aesthetic idioms for documentary beyond the black box, and others who move seamlessly between media without changing their vocabulary. Together they ask: which genre (essay film, autobiography, docufiction) and exhibition form (gallery installation, web-based platform) best supports the expression of an idea? That is, how can form optimize documentary’s potential to connect us to unfamiliar places, objects, or situations? In confronting the effectiveness of form, these works amplify new and unexpected tensions: between the need to participate and the desire to withdraw, between aesthetic expression and direct action, between staying inside or going out…”

Also The Flaherty announces a celebration programme organised together with Moma to take place end of June. The opening screening includes two films by D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus, ”Daybreak Express” (1953) and ”Town Bloody Hall” (1971).

What an active organisation. Congratulations!

http://flahertyseminar.org/

http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/films/1478

Phil Cox & Hikaru Toda: Love Hotel

”You’re nobody till somebody loves you” is the well known song that, among others, accompanies the visit to one of Japan’s 37.000 love hotels, the one in Osaka, Angelo Hotel. This song underlines the tone of a film that works with many characters, chosen from a representative point of view. There is the couple, Mr. And Mrs. Sakamoto, who – in their 40’es – come to give their sex life a revival. There is the pensioner couple, who come to dance in one of the many play rooms offered by the hotel. The single young woman who meets the married man for his secret affair. The gay couple. The old man who does not have sex any longer but comes to have a calm moment, some pornography and to write a letter to his smiling neighbour. And the fashion designer to be, who brings her suitcase for the s & m sessions she performs…

It’s all very respectfully conveyed, no tabloid, it is nice to look at, it’s a light film that has been given a dreamerish touch in colours and editing, in and out of the corridors to the rooms. Of course you go to the bed of some of the customers but you never feel like a naughty peeper. The casted characters are natural in front of the

camera – except for the sequence with the gay couple that has strong sense of set-up and arrangement in dialogue and action – and the whole business around the love hotel is described well: the surveillance room, the way food and equipment is brought to the rooms, the ones working there, especially the manager from whom I would have loved more.

Love hotels are a threatened business. Way into the film this theme is introduced and Angelo Hotel is to be closed, at least for some time if I get it right. The conservative government is apparently cleaning up ”dirty business” but the way the film introduces the hotel, it is difficult to see what should be ”dirty” at that place. 2.8 mio. people are said to visit love hotels every day, and I can only love (sorry!) Mr. and Mrs. Sakamoto and their way of being together, playing games as if they were part of a Bunuel-film, the train conductor game, the doctor game, their fine talk about their relationship now and then, and it feels natural that we are invited to their home, as we are to the garden of Mr. Yamada, 71 years old, close to the neighbour, his secret love with the wonderful smile.

The film had its Northern American premiere at HotDocs, it runs now at Biografilm in Bologna.

UK, France, Japan, 2013, 75 mins.

https://www.facebook.com/lovehotelmovie

http://www.biografilm.it/2014/en/

Uncle Tony, Three Fools and the Secret Service

… is the title of a film made by Mina Mileva and Vesela Kazakova. It was on its way for several years and is now out and has raised strong controversy in the country of origin, Bulgaria. But I have seen nobody write about the film! I saw a rough close to final cut last year and wrote to Mina and Vesela, whom I have known for many years:

“Thanks for inviting me to watch. And, ahhh, got tears in my eyes, when I saw your text – that Uncle Toni died this year. What a wonderful man and fine artist, you have made him to be in a film that is very creative, I liked it a lot.

The scene where he is drawing on the blackboard and making movements manipulated in pace by you, the clips from his films of course, you and him when he is taking  down the boxes, (some of) the conversations with colleagues, your dispute with the school principal is hilarious, and veeery good that you kept the two children for the ending and make them perform in each their way…”

Back to the trouble, this is a quote from Film New Europe yesterday:

Producers/directors Mina Mileva and Vesela Kazakova from Activist 38 have accused the Union of the Bulgarian Film Makers – Film Academy (consisting

of over 900 members) and the Bulgarian Society for collective management of authors` and producers` rights in audiovisual works Filmautor of organizing deliberate actions against their controversial documentary “Uncle Tony, Three Fools and the Secret Service”.

Dedicated to the talented animator Antony Trayanov (the Uncle Tony of the title), the famous animated films director Donio Donev’s “right hand”, the film premiered at the Sofia autumn world film panorama Cinemania on 26 November, 2013. The screening brought strongly negative reaction from Donev’s heirs who said “the film does not respect the legitimate interests and dignity of one of the most talented Bulgarian film directors.”

“Donio Donev is perhaps the best known name of Bulgarian cinema, but he was also an informer for the Secret Service,” Mileva and Kazakova said.

On behalf of EDN (European Documentary Network) Paul Pauwels supports the filmmakers and “…EDN urges all Bulgarian authorities to stop the threatening and harassing campaign against Mina Mileva and Vesela Kazakova and their film. EDN is also encouraging all members, collaborators and colleagues to show support for Uncle Tony, Three Fools, and the Secret Service and the team behind the film.”

http://www.filmneweurope.com/news/bulgaria/108404-bulgarians-respond-to-activist-38-claims/menu-id-147

www.edn.dk

 

Documentarist Istanbul

For the seventh time the Documentarist festival is running in Istanbul – until June 12 – under the leadership of, among others, director Emel Çelebi. There is a Turkish Panorama, a focus on Syria, a tribute to Johan van der Keuken, an international Panorama, a section called Memoriam, where Alain Resnais classic ”Nuit et Brouillard”, Malik Bendjelloul’s “Searching for Sugar Man”, Peter Liechti’s “The Sound of Insects” and Michael Glawogger’s “Working Man’s Death” will be on screen.

Tomorrow, if you happen to be in Istanbul, Pawel Lozinski will be visiting the festival to show and discuss the idea behind “Father and Son”. The festival presents the case study like this:

The documentary filmmakers Marcel and Pawel Lozinski are father and son. They went on a trip together in order to make a film and they ended up making two differently edited documentaries of the same journey. What has happened on roads and in the editing room? Why have they decided to make their own versions but not one common film? In the ‘case study’ about this unique experience, we’ll hear the son’s side of the story.

http://www.documentarist.org/2014/fest/eng/home.html

Ukraine: A Country at Rough Cut Stage

I have posted several texts on Ukraine and the brave filmmakers there. Here is one more after contact with Dar’ya Averchenko and Roman Bondarchuk. The two of them have taken part in the admirable work “Euromaidan. Rough Cut”, which is a final film and NOT a rough cut.

This is what Roman Bondarchuk wrote to me: The name  of the project is Euromaidan. Rough Cut.  But actually it is not a rough cut but a completed project. In this case ‘rough cut’ is a concept, a metaphor. At the moment the Maidan and all movements it has launched still are not over and you can say the whole country is on the stage of rough cut now…

A clever thought and a clever film, that has the presence and the passion of the moment. Ready to be shown at festivals all over…

However, renowned Sergei Loznitsa premiered his “Maidan” in Cannes, 134 minutes, great reviews in Variety and Hollywood Reporter, and that will unfortunately influence the distribution of the omnibus film made by the young Ukranian filmmakers, who lived at Euromaidan. Festivals tend to go for names, don’t they?

Or will you? Why not both films, dear festival programmers. I have not seen Loznitsa’s

work but from the descriptions I can see that it is quite different in approach… also knowing Loznitsa’s always clinical method where “Euromaidan. Rough Cut” is the totally opposite of being clinical.

An edited short description from Dar’ya Averchenko:  Three months of revolution. From indignant protest to national unity. From pots on their heads to batons and body armour. From the euphoria of victory to the mourning of the fallen Heavenly Hundred. Revolution as an explosion of revived dignity, as the euphoria of freedom, as the pain of awareness at the cost, as the birth of the modern history of Ukraine… we asked the directors who were filming the Ukrainian protest to share their best shots with us – in a rough cut, just as they were… We took one or two episodes from each director and put them in chronological order, adding short intertitles between the episodes to show the context…

As you see from the footage, some of the directors truly risked their lives while shooting. Most of them are young Ukrainian filmmakers, just beginners, for whom shooting those events was far beyond professional interest, but rather their way of dealing with the situation – the possibility of getting involved in the most suitable way. This fact adds another dimension to the whole collection: their burning passion brought the authors as close as possible, then drew on their natural documentary ability to observe without judgement, finally resulting in a unique and stunning chronicle of the Ukrainian protests. Experience the three months of struggle with us, feel and see the revolution through our eyes!

Get your festival show this film, the opening title of DocyDays Kiev 2014.

Ukraine, 60 mins. several directors

Away from Home – After DocsBarcelona Thoughts

It was quite moving to be an observer outside the Aribau Club on the closing night of the DocsBarcelona festival. Syrian refugees lined up to hug the director Talal Derki, who got the main award for his ”Return to Homs”. Many of them were from Homs, you could see their emotions and gratitude towards the director, who had documented and interpreted. They wanted to have photos taken together with him holding the sculpture of the DocsBarcelona winner. A souvenir, a memory coming from the heart.

The night before in a restaurant after the screening of ”Return to Homs” this photo was taken. Talal Derki to the left, your reporter to the right and in the middle Adam, son of Talal, 18 months, away from home as his father and mother, impossible to really understand what it means to be an exiled filmmaker.

Andreas Koefoed: Våbensmuglingen

Fotoet viser et privat russisk transportfly, besætningen er i cockpittet, men jeg er i filmen i lastrummet hos mændene og lasten af våben og ammunition. Mændene er ret forskellige, det ser jeg allerede på de andre stills. Han som sidder ned udmattet i dybe tanker er danskeren Niels Holck, han som står op og allerede – om lidt vil lastporten agter blive åbnet og flyet stige i en stejl vinkel – har spændt selerne, han som lige før personligt ved et greb i en af transportkasserne har bevæbnet sig med pistol og patroner, forberedt sig på sin måde, han er englænderen Peter Bleach. Det er de to, det handler om, det her.

SYNOPSIS

Og denne nat i december 1995 nedkaster de så 4 tons våben i faldskærme over et sted i Indien. Få dage senere vender Holck hjem til Danmark med den dybe hemmelighed. Først da Bleach bliver anholdt af inderne som engelsk civil MI5 agent og står til dødsstraf for våbensmuglingen, dukker Holcks navn under den omfattende internationale efterforskning i sagen også op i offentligheden.

Ved hjælp af dybt disciplineret udførte rekonstruktioner i forholdsvis korte scener med spillefilmkarakter kombineret med dokumentariske optagelser gennem tre år og et stort arkivstof fortæller filmen og disse to mænd parallelt i hver sin fremstilling en aldeles medrivende flerdobbbelt agenthistorie om to mænd, der på en fælles mission sætter livet på spil, naturligvis med hver deres skjulte agenda, som begge oven i købet ændres undervejs.

Missionen mislykkes, men det øger blot filmens spænding, og på det tidspunkt er jeg kun en tredjedel inde i fortællingen. Det mærker jeg tydeligt, for jeg er inde i en sikkert administreret fortælling. En mørklægning ved mørke magter finder sted omkring de to mænd. Mellem dem og bag deres rygge. Deres egen efterforskning af de skjulte manøvrer samt det næsten 20 år lange politiske og journalistiske efterspil, som filmen herefter skildrer, faktisk er konstrueret af og selv er en del af, ja det drama fortsætter og fortsætter for eksempel med begivenhederne disse dage omkring lanceringen af filmen og nu ved salget af en times version til indisk tv, som er meddelt i dag. Det er alt sammen som forlænget filmfortælling, som nye scener efter credits er rullet færdig. Filmværket arbejder fortsat med virkelighedsbegrebet, og de to mænd leder endnu, efter filmpremieren, om ikke efter sandheden, den er måske gået op for dem, men så efter flere skjulte beviser og vidner.

TO GRUNDINTERVIEWS

Andreas Koefoed skriver i pressematerialet om sin motivation og baggrund for at lave filmen. Og det er, nu jeg har forladt filmens historie efter gennemsynene, på sin måde lige så interessant, for her ligger måske en forklaring på, hvorfor det er så vældig god en en film, og i det ligger formodentlig en kommentar til den kunstneriske kerne, som enhver tilskuer nu i dagevis må vende og dreje i tankerne: hvad handler filmen egentlig om? Det begyndte for tre år siden, skriver Koefoed, da han mødte Niels Holck første gang, ”han stod med ryggen mod muren og frygtede at blive udleveret til Indien. Han fortalte mig sin historie. Og han gav mig lov til at filme ham.” Når jeg nu ser Koefoeds færdige film, ser det optagelsesmateriale for mig ud til i princippet at være til stede i filmen som ét langt grundinterview klippet til én lang kronologisk (tror jeg) fortælling. Adam Nielsen skal have tak for den vældige ro, der med det greb skabes i filmens forløb, som ellers, må jeg sige, er fyldt med urolighed.

Det er imidlertid den anden mand, Peter Bleach, som i sin suveræne tilstedeværelse i billedet skaber begyndelsen til og det følelsesmæssige grundlag for den ro. Ham mødte Koefoed nogle måneder senere, ” den engelske våbenhandler, der forgæves forsøgte at få Holck arresteret i 1995, men blev ofret af sit eget land og efterladt i et indisk fængsel i Calcutta. Det blev klart, at der lå en fantastisk og foruroligende historie lige foran næsen på mig.” Og i filmen bliver det til det andet grundinterview, som Adam Nielsen med sikker hånd anbringer parallelt med det første, så jeg næsten samtidig hører og oplever to beretninger om det samme, men så forskellige i de nogle steder bittesmå detaljer, som klipningen lader stå uden at pointere, at de forbliver levende autentiske erindringsbrikker til det uoverskuelige puslespil, jeg sidder med foran mig. ”To mænd på en vanvittig mission i et fly med 4 tons våben, to skæbner der vikles ind i hinanden for altid. En kompromisløs idealist og en kølig våbenhandler/dobbeltagent. Med hver deres agenda. Dobbeltspil, brændende idealisme, stikkeri, svigt, tilgivelse og forsoning.” Det er store ord, Koefoed her har fat i, og jeg vender og drejer hvert enkelt, tøver længe ved Holcks ”brændende idealisme”, vil vende tilbage til den tøven, men anerkender, at filmen generelt dækker store ord ind, der er i den grad værktyngde til det. 

FORM

Andreas Koefoed skriver: ”Jeg lagde hovedet i blød og udfordrede mig selv maksimalt for at finde frem til, hvordan jeg kunne fortælle historien bedst muligt. Der var potentiale til en real-life spændingsfilm med eksistentielle dimensioner og jeg kom frem til at løsningen måtte være at forene det bedste fra dokumentarfilmen med det bedste fra fiktionen og stole på, at det ville spille sammen. ” Jeg går ud fra, at det med at fortælle historien bedst muligt, går på det underholdningsmæssige håndværk, mens formuleringen ”eksistentielle dimensioner” svagt berører en vilje til at bestemme en kerne, som ikke alene er den komplicerede historie og dens opklaring. Jeg fornemmer, det har med de to mænd, de to karakterer at gøre, deres shakespeareske potentiale rent ud skrevet. Og det nødvendige greb ligger i tidens æstetikdiskussion, nu måtte det gennemføres, det nødvendige, at forene dokumentar og fiktion. Koefoed skriver: ”De virkelige, multifacetterede karakterer, de naturlige autentiske scener, følelserne, særhederne og tyngden, der ligger i det ægte og dokumentariske kombineret med den dramatik, action, struktur og klarhed, som fiktionen giver mulighed for.”

Det er modigt og værdifuldt, at en filminstruktør offentliggør ikke blot sine skitser fra notesbogen, men sine endelige afgørelser i målsætningsform. Og så er jeg ligeglad med, om det er sket retrospektivt ,eller det faktisk er et originalt dokument fra en tidlig manuskriptfase. Nu ved jeg temmelig meget om, hvad den kunstneriske ambition var. Det skulle være en æstetisk forsøgsopstilling, og det havde således på en måde også været interessant, hvis antagelserne var blevet falsificeret. Men som i videnskaben er og bliver det dejligst, hvis de bekæftes. Det er trods alt den situation vi kalder: eksperimentet lykkedes! Sammenføjningen af rekonstruktion og dokumentar i Andreas Koefoeds film er lydefri i hver eneste lodning, svejsning, syning…

”Jeg satte mig for at rekonstruere våbennedkastningen med dramatiske scener med dialog, hvor man er til stede i et ’nu og her’ med karaktererne og ikke blot bruge rekonstruktionen som illustration af nogle hændelser med interview ind over…” Koefoed isolerer rekonstruktionerne som den vanskelige ting, som udfordringen. Jeg tror han mener, at lykkes de, vil de uden videre kunne monteres med de dokumentariske optagelser. Sådan er det bestemt gået her i hans film, og jeg tror, det skyldes den særlige omhu, hvormed, han har sammensat sit hold. Han allierede sig med ”de dygtigste folk, jeg kender, fotografen Manuel Claro, klipperen Adam Nielsen, manusforfatteren/instruktøren Tobias Lindholm, James Marsh (”Man on Wire”) som konsulent. Uden dem var filmen aldrig kommet i mål.” Nej, sikkert ikke. Lad mig pege Marsh lidt mere ud, slægtskabet med konstruktionen i hans film om manden som gik på line mellem tvillingtårnene i New York er tydeligt i enhver detalje, jeg vælger at gennemtænke. Det er meget smukt. Og lad mig også erindre om Adam Nielsens cinematografi i film som ”Den sidste dans”, ”Ghosts of Cité Soleil” og ”Vesterbro”. Konsekvent er her karakterernes udvikling i fuldstændig balance fra sekund til sekund, der er i alle filmene den lysende klarhed fra først til sidst, og så er der udnyttelsen af den mindste materialestump blot den rummer et strejf af den autenticitet, som er afgørende for værkets helhed som noget, jeg tror på og bevæges af.

Danmark, 2014, 90 min.

DOXBIO viser VÅBENSMUGLINGEN i en række biografer i morgen, onsdag 4. juni, de fleste steder kl. 19 se hvilke og bestil billet her: http://www.doxbio.dk/?page_id=23

http://www.dfi.dk/faktaomfilm/film/da/87821.aspx?id=87821