What is it like to wake up one day and be declared dead by the state? Despite being alive, Constantin Reliu becomes invisible to the administrative system, and the director becomes witness to a lonely and agonizing battle against a Kafkaesque system.
A clever documentary that wittly stages the protest of a small rural Portuguese community against the construction of minesby a British corporation where they live.
How does a director cope with his parents' divorce, at the age at which he is starting his own family? He handles them as he knows best: constantly filming himself in the frame with his parents, his girlfriend, his own child. Filming and assuming all possible experiences.
An ex-convict, driven by a desire for redemption, assumes the identity of a priest in a isolated village, provoking an intense confrontation between faith, truth and forgiveness.
Starting from a series of telephone conversations between Russian soldiers on missions in Ukraine and their loved ones at home, intercepted over several months in 2022, filmmaker Oksana Karpovych juxtaposes these audio fragments with images that underline the absence and destruction in abandoned or sparsely populated villages and towns.
How did the Romanian authorities carry out the large-scale operation to kill thousands of Jews in Iași? The documentary "Bloodied Photographs" recounts the harrowing events of the 1941 pogrom against the Jews through photographs and testimonies of survivors.
What is it like to wake up one day and be declared dead by the state? Despite being alive, Constantin Reliu becomes invisible to the administrative system, and the director becomes witness to a lonely and agonizing battle against a Kafkaesque system.
In recent decades, the pace at which we produce and consume plastic has dramatically increased, as has the problem of plastic pollution. The effects of this situation are catastrophic, plastic pollution kills birds and marine animals, and microplastics have made their way from the environment into human organs....See more details
The untold tragedies of factory closures in Eastern Europe still haunt us today. Through this documentary, we witness the closure of the 160-year-old Uljanik shipyard in Croatia—a colossal industrial giant that served multiple political regimes, various production systems, and provided employment for tens of thousands of people across eight generations.