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CINÉMA DU RÉEL 2022

The Cinéma du Réel Festival sees the documentary form reclaiming its Parisian setting

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- After two years of adaptation on account of the pandemic, the 44th edition of the international documentary film festival is returning to cinemas and audiences in person from 11 to 20 March

The Cinéma du Réel Festival sees the documentary form reclaiming its Parisian setting
Mr. Landsbergis by Sergei Loznitsa

Pre-opened yesterday evening by Régis Sauder’s En nous, the 44th Cinéma du Réel International Documentary Film Festival is in full swing today, unspooling from 11 to 20 March with an especially tantalising programme concocted by Catherine Bizern, amidst delight at the festival returning to a physical event (and to the festival’s Parisian locus, the Pompidou Centre) after two years of acrobatic adaptations for remote and online access.

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Twenty movies (of which 10 are feature films) steal focus in the International Selection. Especially eye-catching are Mr. Landsbergis [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
by Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa (crowned at the IDFA) and four titles travelling straight from the recent Berlinale, in the form of Mutzenbacher [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Ruth Beckermann
film profile
]
by Austria’s Ruth Beckermann (the champion of the Encounters competition), We, Students! [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile
]
by Rafiki Fariala (a French co-production unveiled in the Panorama section) and two Forum discoveries: Afterwater [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile
]
by Serbia’s Dane Komljen and the Brazilian-Portuguese co-production Dry Ground Burning [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile
]
by Joana Pimenta and Adirley Queirós. The other feature films in competition consist of two majority Canadian productions (offered up by Daphne Xu and the duo Ryan Ermacora - Jessica Johnson), one Argentine (directed by Jonathan Perel), one Australian (David Easteal) and one American (James Benning).

In terms of the French Selection, 21 movies are set to be presented in world premieres, including 9 feature films: Relaxe [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
by Audrey Ginestet, Ceux de la nuit by Sarah Leonor, Boum Boum [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
by Laurie Lassalle, Le chant des oubliés by Luc Decaster, La lumière des rêves by Marie-Pierre Brêtas, Nachtlied by Baptiste Pinteaux, Navigators by Noah Teichner, and two French-German co-productions (Les voix croisées by Raphaël Grisey and Bouba Touré, and Les lettres de Didier by Noëlle Pujol).

Dazzling options on the Special Screenings agenda include the Berlinale’s Silver Bear winner Everything Will Be OK [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Rithy Panh
film profile
]
by Rithy Panh, another two titles selected by the German festival (American Journal [+see also:
film review
interview: Arnaud des Pallières
film profile
]
by Arnaud des Pallières and Rewind & Play [+see also:
film review
interview: Alain Gomis
film profile
]
by Alain Gomis), alongside Édouard Louis, ou la transformation by François Caillat, L‘hypothèse démocratique – Une histoire basque by Thomas Lacoste, the Belgian production Prisme by Rosine Mbakam, the Zorn three-parter by Mathieu Amalric and Who’s Stopping Us [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Jonás Trueba
film profile
]
by Spain’s Jonás Trueba (awarded the FIPRESCI Prize in San Sebastian – due for release in France on 20 April via Arizona Distribution).

Equally appealing is a focus on Documentary Africa, the short films selected within the First Window line-up, the traditional Popular Front(s) section, and the professional ParisDOC sidebar. The latter will notably be hosting round tables (exploring the visibility of works and author-producer pairings, among other topics) on Tuesday 15 March, the European Heritage Documentary Meetings on 18 March and a Work in Progress session running 15 to 17 March, with 9 feature films set to be screened, including Navire Europe by Marina Deak, Ciompi [+see also:
film review
film profile
]
by Agnès Perrais, De part et d’autre by Matthieu Chatellier, Otro Sol by Francisco Rodriguez Teare (steered by France, Belgium and Chile) and Río Rojo by Guillermo Quintero (produced by Colombia and France).

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(Translated from French)

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