Swimming out

Source: Xstream Pictures

‘Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue’

The UK’s Sheffield Doc/Fest has revealed its online plans and selection for this year’s edition, and has taken a stand with the Black Lives Matter movement.

The documentary festival previously announced that its edition would not run as planned from June 4-9 due to the Covid-19 pandemic and would instead screen films in Sheffield cinemas over a series of weekends throughout the autumn.

It has now confirmed a VoD platform, titled Sheffield Doc/Fest Selects, will launch on Wednesday (June 10) for UK-based audiences and will offer pay-per-view and subscription options until July 10. Its Exchange strand and filmmaker Q&As will be made available for free.

The platform will host 115 features and shorts from 50 countries, and includes 31 world premieres, 15 international premieres, five European premieres and 40 UK premieres.

A video library aimed at the film industry, titled Doc/Player, will be available globally from today until August 31.

In addition, Doc/Fest has partnered with streaming platforms hosted by the BFI, Doc Alliance Films, The Guardian and Mubi, which will host curated programmes at various points from July to November.

Physical screenings will go ahead between October and November, subject to restrictions.

Filmmakers include Jia Zhang-Ke with Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue, which was nominated for the documentary award at the Berlinale earlier this year, and Lynne Ramsay with short Brigitte, which premiered during the Giornate degli Autori at Venice last year.  

The Rebellions strand includes David France’s Welcome To Chechnya, which chronicles the ongoing anti-LGBTQ persecution raging in the Russian republic of Chechnya and has picked up prizes at Sundance, the Berlinale and Thessaloniki.

Doc/Fest’s pitching forums – MeetMarket and the Alternate Realities Talent Market – will both proceed from June 8-10 on virtual platforms while Doc Society will host online drop-in afternoons for delegates from June 11-12.

Black Lives Matter

The festival has also taken a stand with the Black Lives Matter movement, which has seen protests sparked around the world, primarily in the US following the killing of George Floyd by a police officer in Minneapolis.

In a statement, new Doc/Fest director Cíntia Gil said: “We stand with the Black Lives Matter movement… We acknowledge we are part of the problem, starting by the lack of representation within our own team.

“Within the film community and industry, access and representation is not fair, not all voices have been heard, not all images have been offered visibility. We acknowledge our responsibility as an institution, and we commit ourselves to do better, and to call on our industry to work with us for this change.

“It is not enough to show films by Black filmmakers, or to have Black people and communities represented on screen: we need to actively change the rules of the game. We need to work collaboratively: to form coalitions, to resist, and eradicate systemic racism within the film industry.”

Gil was appointed last July after seven years as festival director of DocLisboa in Portugal.

Announcing the line-up today, she added: “The crisis we are living now point… to the systemic failure of institutions and nations, and their need to be equitable in their capacities to give respect to life, freedom and care. It has given us an acute sense of what needs to change and a desire for stronger bonds between us.

“This programme is our contribution to that: it comes from a collective effort to resist hegemonic views over cinema and its relation to the world and to our lives. It represents multiple conversations we want to continue in the near future, through different programmes and forms.”

Sheffield Doc/Fest Official Selection 2020

(excludes shorts)

Into The World

Online from June 10

  • Aswang (Phil-Fr) Dir: Alyx Ayn Arumpac
  • Bitter Bread (Leb-Iraq) Dir: Abbas Fahdel
  • Flint (UK) Dir: Anthony Baxter
  • Influence (UK) Dirs: Diana Neille, Richard Poplak
  • Oeconomia (Ger) Dir: Carmen Losmann
  • Please Hold The Line (Austria) Dir: Pavel Cuzuioc
  • Seekers (Fr) Dir: Aurore Vullierme
  • The Secret Of Doctor Grinberg (Sp) Dir: Ida Cuellar
  • The Story Of Plastic (US) Dir: Deia Schlosberg
  • The Viewing Booth (Isr-US) Dir: Ra’anan Alexandrowicz
  • To See You Again (Mex) Dir: Carolina Corral
  • Us Kids (US) Dir: Kim A. Snyder
  • Vulnerable Beauty (Ita) Dir: Manuele Mandolesi
  • You Think The Earth Is A Dead Thing (Fr) Dir: Florence Lazar

To be screened in Sheffield in autumn, and online in Sheffield Doc/Fest Selects in parallel

  • Film About A Father Who (US) Dir: Lynne Sachs
  • Memory Is Our Homeland (Can) Dir: Jonathan Kolodziej Durand
  • Remnants Of A Revolution (Phil) Dir: Cha Escala
  • Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue (Chi) Dir: Jia Zhang-Ke
  • The Kiosk (Fr) Dir: Alexandra Pianelli

Rebellions

Online from June 10

  • Blow It To Bits (Fr) Dir: Lech Kowalski
  • Corporate Accountability (Arg) Dir: Jonathan Perel
  • We Have Boots (US-HK) Dir: Evans Chan
  • We’re Still Here (UK) Dir: Melissa Herman
  • Welcome To Chechnya (US-Rus) Dir: David France
  • Your Mothers Comfort (US-Bra) Dir: Adam Golub
  • Bakoroman (Burk-Fr) Dir: Simplice Herman Ganou
  • The Koro Of Bakoro: The Survivors Of Faso (Burk-Fr) Dir: Simplice Herman Ganou

To be screened in Sheffield in autumn, and online in Sheffield Doc/Fest Selects in parallel

  • Antonio & Piti (Bra) Dirs: Vincent Carelli, Wewito Pyiãki
  • The Art Of Living In Danger (Ger-Iran) Dir: Mina Keshavarez
  • Camagroga (Sp) Dir: Alfonso Amador
  • Construction (Lat) Dir: Ilona Bruvere
  • Our Land, Our Altar (Por) Dir: André Guiomar
  • The Filmmaker’s House (UK) Dir: Mark Isaacs
  • Where’s Edson? (Bra) Dir: Dacia Ibiapina

Ghosts and Apparitions

Online from June 10

  • Me And The Cult Leader (Jap) Dir: Atsushi Sakahara
  • Yãmīyhex: The Women-Spirit (Bra) Dirs: Sueli Maxakali, Isael Maxakali

To be screened in Sheffield in autumn, and online on Sheffield Doc/Fest Selects in parallel

  • Everything That Is Forgotten In A Instant (Arg) Dir: Richard Shpuntoff
  • Frem (Cze-Slo) Dir: Viera Čákanyová
  • The Metamorphosis Of Birds (Por) Dir: Catarina Vasconcelos (not online)
  • Mon Amour (Fr) Dir: David Teboul
  • Santikhiri Sonata (Thai-Ger) Dir: Thunska Pansittivorakul
  • Truth Or Consequences (US) Dir: Hannah Jayanti

Rhyme & Rhythm

Online from June 10

  • Breaking Barriers – The Casteless Collective (Ind-Ger) Dir: Maja Meiners
  • Bring Down The Walls (US-Ger) Dir: Phil Collins
  • Elder’s Corner (Nig-US) Dir: Siji Awoyinka
  • The Go-Go’s (US-Ire-Can) Dir: Alison Ellwood
  • Keith Haring: Street Art Boy (UK) Dir: Ben Anthony
  • Shut Up Sona (Ind) Dir: Deepti Gupta
  • Southern Journey (Revisited) (US-UK) Dirs: Rob Curry, Tim Plester
  • Universe (US) Dirs: Sam Osborn, Nicholas Capezzera
  • The Vasulka Effect (Ice-Cze-Den-Swe) Dir: Hrafnhildur Gunnarsdottir

To be screened in Sheffield in autumn, and online in Sheffield Doc/Fest Selects in parallel:

  • Faith And Branko (UK-Serb) Dir: Catherine Harte
  • King Rocker (UK) Dir: Michael Cumming
  • Medium (Arg) Dir: Edgardo Cozarinsky
  • Retrospective (Fr) Dir: Jérôme Bel
  • Schlingensief – A Voice That Shook The Silence (Ger) Dir: Bettina Böhler
  • Sisters With Transistors (UK) Dir: Lisa Rovner

Retrospective: Reimagining the Land

(More titles will be announced for the Sheffield screenings in autumn, and for an online programme on Doc Alliance Films)

  • Mother India (Ind) Dir: Mehboob Khan
  • A Japanese Village (Jap) Dir: Shinsuke Ogawa

Exchange

Online (and free) from June 10

  • The Hyperwomen (Bra) Dirs: Carlos Fausto, Leonardo Sette, Brazil, 2011, 80’
  • Tava, The Stone House (Bra-Arg) Dirs: Vincent Carelli, Patricia Ferreira (Keretxu), Ariel Duarte Ortega, Ernesto Ignacio de Carvalho
  • Corumbiara: They Shoot Indians, Don’t They? (Bra) Dir: Vincent Carelli
  • Martyrdom (Bra) Dir: Vincent Carelli