IDFA announces Luminous, Frontlight, IDFA on Stage, Paradocs selections
The International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) has unveiled the selections for
Luminous and Frontlight, two premiere-only cornerstones of the program, in addition to the lineups for live cinema section IDFA on Stage and experimental section Paradocs.As part of IDFA on Stage, the festival also announces
the international premiere of Arcadia Live in a major live cinema concert
performed by members of Portishead and Goldfrapp, among others.
81 more titles have been added to the program,
shaping an increasingly international selection that covers much of the globe.
The 35th edition of IDFA takes place in person from
November 9 to 20, 2022.
Luminous
The premiere-only section Luminous presents 24 titles
and a wide spectrum of stylistic approaches: from cinéma vérité to
experimental; from artist-driven works to socio-politically engaged films.
Together, they claim the personal as a window onto the universal.
Several films in the selection tell powerful stories
of families across generations. Dear
Mother, I Meant to Write about Death by Siyi Chen delicately evokes the
shifting dynamics of a mother-daughter relationship in the world of cancer and
caregiving.
Transactions
by Rumbi Katedza tells the intimate story of Zimbabwean migration through one
family separated across circumstances of differing economic opportunity who,
filled with longing and sacrifice, attempt to sustain each other through
remittances.
In Loving
Martha, debut director Daniela López explores first-hand her grandmother’s
fight to end the family’s cycle of abuse as illustrated by the raw pain embedded
in her tapes and diaries.
Other titles take a personal perspective on different
modes of bodily experience. Uncanny Me by
Katharina Pethke questions the grounds of contemporary identity in the story of
a fashion model who scans herself into a virtual avatar.
Stuntwomen
by Elena Avdija turns to the spectacle of gendered violence that three
stuntwomen must physically endure on camera.
Kam Loo Tsui
by Pang-Chuan Huang and Chunni Lin looks to the poetics of the physical form
via a hundred-year-old nude sculpture that changed the tides of Taiwanese art.
Frontlight
23 films are selected for the premiere-only section
Frontlight, showcasing a leading cohort of truth-seeking filmmakers who don’t
compromise on stylistic integrity.
Within the selection, a number of titles shine a
light on shocking global developments in the media industry.
Urgent newsroom drama While We Watched by Vinay Shukla follows a tormented Indian
journalist in a landslide of fake news, budget cutbacks and populist rhetoric.
In A History of
the World According to Getty Images, filmmaker Richard Misek mines the
world’s largest commercial archives to examine the questionable ethics behind
owning archival footage that would otherwise be public property.
The Etilaat Roz
by Abbas Rezaie spotlights the dedicated team behind Kabul’s best-read
newspaper as their city is recaptured by the Taliban, and they face an
onslaught of censorship and abuse.
Other films turn to the economic systems that preside
over lives around the world.
Money, Freedom,
a Story of CFA Franc by Katy Lena Ndiaye explores the monetary legacy of
colonization in Central and West Africa as a new generation looks to the next
phase of decolonization and emancipation.
Free Money
by Lauren DeFilippo and Sam Soko looks to the harsh reality of a universal
basic income experiment in Kenya driven by the stark corporate idealism of a
Manhattan NGO.
As always, a strong selection of Frontlight titles
reflect on the urgent political events currently unfolding around us.
Notably, Bella
Ciao by Giulia Giapponesi pays homage to the anthem that long symbolized
Italian partisans’ fight against fascism in WWII, turning to the past as a
candlelight for our present times.
IDFA on Stage
Nine live cinema projects make the IDFA on Stage
selection, as a growing number of filmmakers, theater makers and immersive
artists stake a claim in the future of the documentary art form.
Chief among them is the international premiere of Arcadia Live, a live cinema concert of
Paul Wright’s 2017 archival film with the much-anticipated score written and
performed live by Adrian Utley (Portishead) and Will Gregory (Goldfrapp) along
with seven other musicians on stage.
Other highlights include Funeral, a participatory ceremony that explores our relationship
with the end of life, directed by Alexander Devriendt of performance collective
Ontroerend Goed; and The Eagle & The
Tortoise, a collective reading experience by Kathryn Hamilton that tells
the story of a young Turkish activist turned resistance icon, including a
surprise performance by a non-mammalian actor.
The final IDFA on Stage title will be announced on
October 20.
Paradocs
Ten films are selected for Paradocs, showcasing the
year’s leading experimental documentary art. Acclaimed VR artist Ali Eslami
turns to film in A Stretch in Time, a
surrealist work that travels to subterranean spaces to fulfill a mission at the
limits of the documentary form.
Hybridity remains a central concern of genre-bending
films such as A Little Love Package,
Gastón Solnicki’s nostalgic homage to Vienna that brings actors and non-actors
together in a blend of fiction and documentary, and in Europe, in which
director Philip Scheffner draws on fiction to convey the violence and absurdity
of an Algerian woman on the brink of deportation in small-town France.
Observational gems such as The Unstable Object II have a place in the selection as well in
which director Daniel Eisenberg applies the durational observation method to
consider mass production in the 21st century.
Additions to
Masters, Best of Fests, Around Masculinity
16 films have been added to previously announced
sections: seven to Masters, seven to Best of Fests, and two to Around
Masculinity. Notable additions include the world premiere of Nishtha Jain’s The Golden Thread, the world premiere of
Jos de Putter and Clara van Gool’s A Way
to B and the international premiere of Jacopo Quadri and Greta De Lazzaris’
We’re Here to Try.
IDFA's audience program is supported by
VriendenLoterij, Deloitte, VPRO, Fonds 21, de Volkskrant, Gieskes-Strijbis
Fonds, WePresent by WeTransfer, Ammodo, NPO, Oxfam Novib, IDFA Friends/Special
Friends, Creative Europe Media, Netherlands Film Fund, European Cultural
Foundation and Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds.
Selected
films: Luminous
All You See, dir. Niki Padidar (Netherlands), 72’, world premiere
Art Talent Show, dir. Adéla Komrzý, Tomas Bojar (Czech Republic), 102’, international premiere
Aurora, dir. Samereh Rezaei, Hossein Hosseini (Afghanistan/Iran), 41’, world premiere
Between Father and Son, dir. Ronin Hsu (Hong Kong), 73’, world premiere
Blue ID, dir. Burcu Melekoglu, Vuslat Karan (Turkey), 85’, world premiere
Dear Mother, I Meant to Write About Death, dir. Siyi Chen (United States/Hong Kong/China), 63’, European premiere
From the Other Shore, dir. Maher Abi Samra (Lebanon/France), 62’, world premiere
Guapo’y, dir. Sofia Paoli Thorne (Paraguay/Argentina), 71’, world premiere
Inside My Heart, dir. Saskia Boddeke (Netherlands), 86’, world premiere
Kam Loo Tsui, dir. Pang-Chuan Huang, Chunni Lin (Taiwan), 40’, international premiere
Loving Martha, dir. Daniela López (Colombia/Argentina), 75’, world premiere
Malavoune Tango, dir. Jean-Marc Lacaze (France/Réunion), 55’, international premiere
Mom, dir. Xun Sero (Mexico), 80’, European premiere
The Northeast Winds, dir. Nikoloz Bezhanishvili (Georgia), 94’, world premiere
Petit Taxi, dir. Samy Sidali (France), 28’, world premiere
Polish Prayers, dir. Hanka Nobis (Switzerland/Poland), 85’, world premiere
Shangri-La, Paradise Under Construction, dir. Mirka Duijn (Netherlands/Sweden), 94’, world premiere
Sisterhood, dir. Mohamed James Sessy Kamara (South Africa/Sierra Leone), 72’, international premiere
The Soiled Doves of Tijuana, dir. Jean-Charles Hue (France), 82’, world premiere
Stuntwomen, dir. Elena Avdija (Switzerland/France), 85’, international premiere
Transactions, dir. Rumbi Katedza (South Africa/Zimbabwe), 52’, European premiere
Uncanny Me, dir. Katharina Pethke (Germany), 45’, international premiere
Walls That Scream, dir. Evi Cats (Belgium), 13’, world premiere
When Spring Came to Bucha, dir. Mila Teshaieva, Marcus Lenz (Ukraine/Germany), 66’, world premiere
Selected
films: Frontlight
Bella Ciao, dir. Giulia Giapponesi (Italy), 92’, international premiere
Beyond Extinction: Sinixt Resurgence, dir. Ali Kazimi (Canada), 102’, international premiere
Blue Files, dir. Ander Iriarte (Spain, France), 113’, international premiere
Dorpie, dir. Julia Jaki (South Africa), 77’, world premiere
The Etilaat Roz, dir. Abbas Rezaie (Afghanistan), 93’, European premiere
Free Money, dir. Lauren DeFilippo, Sam Soko (United States/Kenya), 77’, European premiere
Freedom, Money, a Story of CFA Franc, dir. Katy Lena Ndiaye (Senegal/France/Belgium/ Germany), 102’, world premiere
Heroic Bodies, dir. Sara Suliman (Sudan), 95’, world premiere
A History of the World According to Getty Images, dir. Richard Misek (Norway/United Kingdom), 19’, European premiere
Kenya, dir. Gisela Delgadillo (Mexico), 90’, world premiere
The Last Dolphin King, dir. Luis Ansorena Hervés, Ernest Riera (Spain), 93’, world premiere
The Lost Souls of Syria, dir. Stéphane Malterre, written by Stéphane Malterre & Garance Le Caisne, historical advisor: Garance Le Caisne (France/Germany), 99’, world premiere
Merkel, dir. Eva Weber (United Kingdom/Denmark/Germany), 97’, European premiere
Mothers, dir. Nirit Peled (Netherlands), 81’, world premiere
My Name is Happy, dir. Nick Read, Ayse Toprak (United Kingdom), 82’, world premiere
The Night My Brother Disappeared, dir. Anna Blom (Finland), 68’, international premiere
Racist Trees, dir. Sara Newens, Mina T. Son (United States), 88’, world premiere
Regard Silence, dir. Santiago Zermeño (Mexico), 30’, international premiere
Suddenly TV, dir. Roopa Gogineni (Qatar/Sudan), 19’, world premiere
A Symphony for a Common Man, dir. José Joffily (Brazil), 86’, European premiere
Trained to See
– Three Women and the War, dir. Luzia Schmid (Germany/Italy), 106’, international premiere
While We Watched, dir. Vinay Shukla (India/United Kingdom), 94’, European premiere
White Balls on Walls, dir. Sarah Vos (Netherlands), 90’, world premiere
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