2022
In 2022, each of the Doc Alliance festivals has nominated one feature-length and one short film, both eligible for two respective feature and short prizes. This year’s jury members are:
- Leila Basma (dok.revue)
- Frederik Bojer Bové (POV.International)
- Esther Buss (Jungle World, Filmdienst, Der Tagesspiegel)
- Nepheli Gambade (Critikat)
- Teresa Vieira (Antena 3, Cineuropa)
- Nicolas Wadimoff (filmmaker, Head of the Cinema Department at HEAD–Genève)
- Michał Walkiewicz (Filmweb)
Winner
Payal Kapadia
France, India, 2021, 96 min
L is a student at the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII). She fell in love with K and they decided to be together but K had to leave back to his home village and the lovers got separated.
The film looks at letters L writes to K, while he is away. It is through these letters that we get a glimpse into her daily life and the life of her fellow students. Through fragments of her observations, an image of an Indian youth comes to light. The film includes intimate testimonies of L’s friends, along with their memories, their dreams and their fears. With the feel of a home movie, the film is a testimony of their love.
Erika Etangsalé
France, 2021, 51 min
Retracing the footsteps of her ancestors, questioning her identity through the story of her father, thus is the delicate task undertaken by Erika Etangsalé in her first feature film. Shot between Reunion Island and Mâcon, In the Billowing Night weaves a story of silence, dark dreams, mysterious pain and muted violence. Silence. That of a father who has never spoken of the traumas of exile and his arrival in metropolitan France. Pain. That shared by father and daughter, deep down in their bodies, and of which they can never be rid. Violence. That of the French migration policy of the 1960s-1980s promoted by Bumidom2. Bringing flesh to this story, Erika Etangsalé tactfully and discreetly mingles her voice with that of her father, who, in a narrative that is unfailingly contained, reflects upon his “oneway trip” to Paris, where his aspirations were overtaken by the reality of France.
Interspersing the colour sequences of a dull and melancholic French province with the beautiful black and white images of the majestic volcanic cirques of Reunion, the “maroons”, runaway slaves, are resuscitated. From a near past to a more distant one, the gap is so small. By digging into her father’s silence, Erika Etangsalé elicits a voice that recalls, in halftones and whispers, the memory of slavery and the whiff of colonialism from a not so distant policy, which remains a blind spot in the history of France.
Nominations (full-length films)
Nataša Urban
Norway, 2022, 110 min
Pedro Figueiredo Neto, Ricardo Falcão
Portugal, 2021, 84 min
Ole Jacobs, Arne Büttner
Germany, 2021, 120 min
Lucie Králová
Czech Republic, Slovakia, 2022, 91 min
Łukasz Kowalski
Poland, 2022, 75 min
Aren Malakyan, Vahagn Khachatryan
Armenia, Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Georgia. 2022, 80 min
Nominations (short films)
Jeppe Lange
Denmark, 2022, 13 min
José Oliveira, Marta Ramos
Portugal, 2021, 25 min
Monika Proba
Poland, 2021, 28 minutes
Eliška Cílková
Czech Republic, 2021, 8 min
Aleksander Szamałek
Poland, 2022, 30 min
Daniel Asadi Faezi, Mila Zhluktenko
Uzbekistan, Germany, 2022, 13 min