DISCOVER THE PLJ19 FILM PROGRAMME
Film Festival
News - 13.12.2021.

We are pleased to present our third online festival programme Re:Versus. As the oldest festival programme section, Re:Versus brings a selection of five films by established documentary filmmakers in trajectory. This year’s programme opens up with Mr Bachman and His class by Maria Speth, an intimate documentary portraying the bond between an elementary school teacher and his students. His unconventional methods clash with the complex social and cultural realities of the provincial German industrial town they live in.

Next two films The New Gospel by Milo Rau and Futura by Pietro Marcello, Francesco Munzi & Alice Rohrwacher capture the spirit of collective work.  The New Gospel is both a live recording of the play, and a glimpse behind the scenes. We see Sagnet grow into his role as Jesus, while in between mobilizing groups of laborers working nearby Matera into a large-scale protest dubbed the “Revolt of Dignity.” And dignity is precisely what this film is aiming towards in its portraits of activists and actors alike. Futura explores what boys and girls from 15 to 20 think about the future, through a series of interviews filmed during a long journey across Italy. It is a portrait of the country, as seen through the eyes of a group of teens who talk about the places they live in, their dreams, expectations, desires and fears.

Last two films of selection are The Other Side of the River by Antonia Kilian and Homes by Laila Pakalnina. The Other Side of the River tells a story of 19-year-old Hala that crossed the Euphrates River to escape a forced marriage and her IS supporting family. She finds shelter in a Military Academy where she is trained with a weapon to free other women in danger. After the Kurdish military takes over her city from ISIS, she returns to free her sisters from her parents’ house. Homes is a simple conceptual work film about people, their homes and about filmmaking where director Pakalnina goes to peoples’ homes, asks them to go outside and film them through their own windows.

Already available on our pravoljudski.org platform is the special programme Annals of Crosscuts in Sarajevo. This selection focuses on scientific research, art and activism for the expansion of the Environmental Humanities and it is developed in collaboration with the Crosscuts Environmental Humanities Festival for Film & Text, Sweden.

Annals of Crosscuts in Sarajevo is presenting five films: Too Late for History to End by Karl Palmås, Kalle Sanner; Uppland by Edward Lawrenson, Killian Doherty; MARAKÁ’NÀ by Grupo Popular Pesquisa em Ação; Prophesy of Present Value by Evan Charles Marcus, Maya Nadine Billig.

Adrianna Quena, one of the programme curators, points to several questions the programme raises: Why are researchers and scholars so often writers, and almost never filmmakers? What would academic writing with a camera look like? And how would film appear if it was subjected to a similar blind peer-review process that researchers subject their manuscripts to? These are the kinds of questions explored in this collaborative program, at a time when more and more researchers are taking serious interest in the audiovisual registers and its possibilities of expression with and beyond text. 

The 16th edition of the Pravo Ljudski Film Festival has been generously supported by the National Endowment for Democracy (Washington), and many other partners, while the Special Programme More than Anything Else I Wanted to Stay Awhile is made possible with the support of the Embassy of Brazil in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

For all information about the availability of films, and all other festival activities, please follow our website pravoljudski.org, social networks, and the hashtags #plj16 and #pravoljudski16.

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