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IDFA Chief On Decision To Ban Israeli State-Backed Orgs From Festival
TV & Streaming

IDFA Chief On Decision To Ban Israeli State-Backed Orgs From Festival

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

In her welcoming letter to IDFA guests, the festival’s new artistic director Isabel Arrate Fernandez writes, “In these uncertain times we need the voices of filmmakers and artists more than ever.”

As if responding to that call, some of the greatest documentary filmmakers of our time are bringing new work to the 38th edition of International Documentary Festival Amsterdam: Laura Poitras, Vitaly Mansky, Victor Kossakovsky, Mstyslav Chernov, Tamara Kotevska, Susana de Sousa Dias, Raoul Peck, Gianfranco Rosi, Werner Herzog, Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin, Jay Rosenblatt, Claire Simon, Tia Lessin, Carl Deal and many, many more.

“We meet at a time when we are confronted daily by images of war, injustice, violence, and the genocide in Gaza,” Arrate Fernandez writes, “images that demand our empathy, confront us with the limits of what we can comprehend, even stretching our belief in humanity itself.”

‘Gaza’s Twins, Come Back to Me’

IDFA

Multiple films in the lineup address the war in Gaza that has claimed tens of thousands of lives, including Gaza’s Twins, Come Back to Me, directed by Mohammed Sawwaf, and The Clown of Gaza, directed by Abdulrahman Sabbah.

“They’re really made by people that live there, that come from this place and have been on the ground experiencing all these atrocities,” Arrate Fernandez tells Deadline. “In their storytelling and what the films end up being, they really go further than what we’ve seen in the news in the last two years… bringing the stories of people living there, of a mother, of a man trying to provide for his family through his job. And in that way, I think [they] also manage to create human bridges [by] focusing on exactly these human stories.”

Coexistence, My Ass!, directed by Amber Fares, “looks at what has been happening in the last two years [in Israel and Gaza] from a different perspective and bringing in the comedy elements,” Arrate Fernandez notes. The short documentary Return to al-Ma’in, from Forensic Architecture, examines what has become of a Palestinian village seized by Israeli militia in 1948.

'Silent Flood'

‘Silent Flood’

IDFA

Neither is IDFA ignoring the ongoing war in Ukraine, which is examined in Oscar winner Mstyslav Chernov’s 2000 Meters to Andriivka, Vitaly Mansky’s Time to the Target, and several other films in the program: Militantropos, directed by Alina Gorlova, Simon Mozgovyi, and Yelizaveta Smit, and Silent Flood, directed by Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk.

“Militantropos and Silent Flood really bring in this case a different angle, a more in-depth view of and reflection of this war that has been going on now since 2022 or even before, because it started in 2014,” Arrate Fernandez says, “and take it a little bit beyond the immediate war casualties and war stories.”

IDFA banners

Matthew Carey

IDFA, under the leadership of previous artistic director Orwa Nyrabia, spoke out forcefully against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and has made concerted efforts to support the Ukrainian documentary filmmaking community through the IDFA Bertha Fund. That’s in line with its stated mission to be “a committed institution with a socially critical perspective.” But controversy has attended a decision by IDFA this year to bar Israeli state-backed organizations from attending the festival, citing what it considers the Israeli government’s human rights abuses. IDFA rejected accreditation requests from Israel’s DocAviv Festival, CoPro – The Israeli Content Marketing Foundation, and public broadcaster Kan, and has similarly banned state-back organizations from Russia and Iran.

“Many people think we are refusing filmmakers, film professionals, that we categorically boycott Israeli films or for that matter, other films. And that is not the case,” Arrate Fernandez insists. “We made a decision to not accredit these organizations, but we are open to [individual] filmmakers and film professionals from all over. We watched all the films that we received, the ones from Israel, but also the ones from Russia, also the ones from Iran or from what other country that at this moment is not really upholding human rights values. And we based our decision on watching these films and then looking into, if we were interested in selecting them, who’s funding these films.”

She added, “Looking back, [the decision] created some confusion. I am not sure this is something that we could have avoided.”

On its website, IDFA writes, “This week, several media outlets have falsely claimed that IDFA does not accept filmmakers or films from Israel. This is incorrect. IDFA does not exclude individual, independent filmmakers and film professionals—including those from Israel.”

The festival website also notes, “Recently, IDFA joined 713 organizations and 2,163 artists in signing the Dutch and Belgian cultural boycott against Israel. This boycott is in line with our existing guidelines: to exclude institutions financed by the Israeli government. This does not apply to all films, filmmakers, or other film professionals from Israel.”

IDFA Artistic Director Isabel Arrate Fernandez

IDFA Artistic Director Isabel Arrate Fernandez

IDFA/ Jurre Rompa

This is Arrate Fernandez’s inaugural year as artistic director, but she has long been connected to the institution, serving for more than two decades as executive director of the IDFA Bertha Fund and leading IDFA’s filmmaker support department.

“I’ve been part of this organization for a long time in a different role,” she says, recalling memorable experiences from previous IDFAs. “I will never forget when [director] Victor Kossakovsky came running with the tape under his arm to screen Tishe! for the first time to an audience and I had to pick him up at the station to get him on time in the cinema because people were already sitting there… Having Victor coming back to premiere Trillion at the festival is very exciting as he’s been a regular of the festivals for so many years.”

'Trillion'

‘Trillion’

IDFA

Trillion premieres in the Envision competition alongside Sky Hopinka’s Powwow People; I Want Her Dead, directed by Gianluca Matarrese; Confessions of a Mole, directed by Mo Tan, Amílcar, directed by Miguel Eek, and other films.

“It’s such a varied selection,” Arrate Fernandez observes. “[With] Envision, I think one of the things the team truly enjoys is exactly exploring how filmmakers are working with documentary language in bringing across their stories but also playing with it and challenging us as viewers with what they make.”

'Fordlândia Panacea'

‘Fordlândia Panacea’

Susana de Sousa Dias/IDFA

Fordlândia Panacea also premieres in Envision, a documentary by Portuguese artist and filmmaker Susana de Sousa Dias, who is IDFA’s Guest of Honor this year. The film explores a strange colonial scheme in the 20th century when automaker Henry Ford attempted to create a rubber plantation in the Amazon rainforest of Brazil.

De Sousa Dias “has really changed the way also other documentary filmmakers work with archive where she’s really dissecting and exploring, examining this archive more than using it as an image to tell a story, to illustrate a story,” Arrate Fernandez comments. “She’s really looking, examining the archive in a way also to expose what is not there or what has not been told or what is not being told by the people making this archive.”

Many films with Oscar aspirations are represented in the IDFA program, including The Six Billion Dollar Man, Eugene Jarecki’s film about Wikileaks founder Julian Assange; Raoul Peck’s Orwell: 2+2=5; Cover-Up, directed by Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus; Julia Loktev with My Undesirable Friends: Part I – Last Air in Moscow; Cutting Through Rocks, directed by Sara Khaki and Mohammadreza Eyni; Seeds, directed by Brittany Shyne; The Tale of Silyan, directed by Tamara Kotevska, Love+War, directed by Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, as well as the aforementioned 2000 Meters to Andriivka; Coexistence, My Ass!, and other Academy Award contenders.

IDFA is well timed to aid filmmakers in the Oscar hunt, coming just a few weeks before the start of voting on the Oscar shortlists for documentary and short doc.

“With this role that IDFA has gotten in this race, it brings together different worlds in the gathering because with the internationalization of the documentary branch of the Academy, a big part of these members are not based in the U.S. and many of them do come to IDFA,” Arrate Fernandez says. “So here we have this crossing points where the U.S. side and the non-U.S. side can meet and engage. I think that’s very, very valuable also for the whole industry.”

Screening more than 250 films, including work in VR, IDFA brings together thousands of film professionals from around the world. While the program is set, there’s no telling what will develop on the ground – in meetings, at panel discussions, or as Arrate Fernandez puts it, “on the side… backstage.” There, interesting possibilities emerge “in terms of production contacts, who’s talking to who. New things and new collaborations can come out of that.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Programmers Track a New Wave of Arab Filmmakers at Cairo Film Festival
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Programmers Track a New Wave of Arab Filmmakers at Cairo Film Festival

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

At the 46th edition of the Cairo Intl. Film Festival, programmers from some of the world’s leading festivals are finding something they rarely encounter elsewhere on the circuit: a festival where the energy in the market mirrors the energy in theaters. As regional co-production models expand and the Cairo Film Connection strengthens the festival’s profile as a project incubator, Cairo is emerging as a key site not only for discovering new voices but also for understanding what matters to Arab filmmakers right now.

This year’s expanded Cairo Film Connection, held as part of Cairo Industry Days, signals the festival’s growing weight as a regional hub. With financing structures shifting across Middle East and North Africa and more funds opening conversations with local producers, programmers are watching how Cairo’s evolving market ecosystem could shape the films that eventually land in Europe and beyond. For filmmaker/writer-director Anas Sareen (“The Gods”), Berlinale Generation programmer and CIFF short-film juror, the opportunity lies in the next wave of filmmakers rising through these pipelines. “These structures push emerging filmmakers forward,” he notes, adding that what resonates most is meeting filmmakers “whose sincerity shows in the work.”

Céline Routan, director of programming at Palm Springs ShortFest and a NETPAC juror in Cairo, whose background includes programming roles within SXSW, IDFA and TIFF ShortCuts, views Cairo’s industry expansion as part of a broader regional realignment. The shift, she emphasizes, is not only financial. “It’s important for filmmakers to rely on partners from the region,” she explains. “When producers share the same context, the collaboration starts from a place of understanding.”

If the industry draws programmers in, it’s Cairo’s audience that defines the festival’s character. Both Sareen and Routan point to something that sets CIFF apart from Doha, Red Sea and other major regional festivals: a deeply invested local audience that fills screenings.

“Every seat is filled,” Routan notes. “You don’t come here to play to an empty room. Cairo audiences go to the movies, they react, they debate. It really matters to them.”

Watching films with an Egyptian audience, Routan adds, reveals narrative nuances that may not surface elsewhere. The ideal film, as she frames it, is authentic to its own world while still allowing international audiences a way in, not designed for Western gatekeepers but not shutting them out either.

Sareen, attending Cairo for the first time, feels the distinction begins with the city itself. “Cairo is cinema,” he reflects. “Everywhere you look feels like the beginning of a story.” The city’s cinematic lineage, from its foundational role in Arab filmmaking to figures like Youssef Chahine, continues to shape how programmers engage with the films presented today. Cairo’s longevity as the region’s oldest FIAPF-accredited festival, he adds, brings an institutional memory newer festivals can’t duplicate. “It has managed to position itself as a leading place over many years.”

That foundation now meets a generational shift. Routan points to a rise in films by women and Gen Z directors, reflecting changes in training, access and regional funding. More notable to her is a confidence among filmmakers telling stories intended first for local audiences rather than optimizing for international palatability. “More films are unapologetically themselves,” she notes.

Some of that confidence is already visible in this year’s lineup. Routan points to shorts like “First the Blush Then the Habit,” the kind of film she’s eyeing for Palm Springs, for its precision and strong sense of voice. On the feature side, she points to “Flana,” by Iraqi filmmaker Zahraa Ghandour, which has already screened in Toronto and IDFA, as part of a wave of well-crafted regional films moving fluidly between Arab and international festivals.

Sareen sees a parallel movement among diaspora filmmakers reconnecting with the region. Many, he observes, are returning with new perspectives shaped by displacement or migration. “There’s a generation trying to shed new light on our cultures,” he notes, pointing to an emerging pan-Arab filmmaking sensibility he finds particularly exciting.

Some themes, however, remain unavoidable. “It’s impossible not to talk about Palestine,” Sareen reflects. “It’s a responsibility filmmakers feel, and they’re proud to take it on.” Conflicts in Sudan and across the region carry similar weight. Politics, he emphasizes, is not a branding device for Arab cinema but a lived reality that inevitably informs the work. Yet filmmakers are equally intent on not being defined solely by it.

Short films often register these tensions most quickly. With their rapid production timeline, Routan views shorts as a sharper pulse of the moment: “They reflect the state of the world faster than features,” she emphasizes. But urgency alone doesn’t justify selection; the filmmaking must stand on its own.

Both programmers consider Cairo a genuine launchpad. Distributors watch how Egyptian audiences respond, and programmers use CIFF as a scouting ground for films that may later reach Palm Springs, Berlin, or other key festivals. “The industry is here,” Routan says. “Films can be picked up, and filmmakers can build connections that matter.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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DOC NYC: 10 Films to See at America’s Largest Documentary Festival
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DOC NYC: 10 Films to See at America’s Largest Documentary Festival

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

More than 200 films and events come to New York City from November 12-20. Here’s a mix of under-the-radar titles to check out.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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'The Silent Run' Debuts Trailer Ahead of Cairo Film Festival Screening
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‘The Silent Run’ Debuts Trailer Ahead of Cairo Film Festival Screening

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The trailer has debuted for Marta Bergman’s drama “L’enfant bélier” (The Silent Run) before it world premieres in International Competition at Cairo Film Festival.

The film centers on Sara and Adam who, with their two-year-old daughter, have entered Belgium illegally and are now trying to reach England. Crammed with other migrants in the back of a van, fear starts to overtake hope. Redouane, a police officer for 20 years, spends his nights chasing smugglers on Belgium’s busy motorway network. That night, as his team attempts to stop a van suspected of transporting migrants, everything changes.

The cast of the film, shot in French and Arabic, includes with Salim Kechiouche, Zbeida Belhajamor, Clara Toros and Abda Razak Alsweha.

The writers are Bergman, Camille Mol, Ely Chevillot and Sacha Ferbus.

The producers are Cassandre Warnauts and Jean-Yves Roubin for Frakas Productions, and Geneviève Lavoie and Richard Angers for Productions des Années Lumière.

International sales are being handled by B-Rated Intl. International distributors so far attached include Cineclub Internazionale (Italy), Destiny (France), O’Brother (Benelux) and Axia (Canada).

Born in Bucharest, Bergman first worked as a freelance journalist for print and television, before turning to documentary filmmaking. Her documentaires, which explore Romania and the Roma communities, include “Clejani Stories, Histoires, Povesti …,” “Happy Stay,” “One Day My Prince Will Come,” “Bucharest, Anonymous Faces,” and “The Ballad of the Snake, A Gypsy Story.”

In 2018, she directed her first fiction feature “Alone at My Wedding,” produced by Frakas Productions and shot between Belgium and Romania. It was selected at ACID in Cannes. “The Silent Run” is her second feature film.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | Princess Kate & George attended the Festival of Remembrance, William skipped
Celebrity News

bitchy | Princess Kate & George attended the Festival of Remembrance, William skipped

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Before Saturday evening, November 8, no one had seen the Princess of Wales for three-and-a-half weeks. She was last seen in public on October 14 in Northern Ireland, and then she made a brief appearance at Windsor Castle one day later. And that was it – she was in the wind, on vacation and moving into her latest forever home, Forest Lodge. Last night was the Festival of Remembrance, always a big night for the Windsors – all of the working royals (and even a few non-working royals) are expected to show up en masse for a concert ahead of Remembrance Sunday (today).

The Festival of Remembrance would have been a perfect moment for Prince William, fresh from his Brazilian Flop Trip, to show up with a refreshed-looking Kate and show that they are both ready to take over, that they are perfectly in sync and Kate definitely didn’t skip the Brazilian trip because William doesn’t want to spend any time with his wife. Alas, William did not show up to the Festival of Remembrance. I’m trying to think if there was ever a time when then-Prince Charles skipped ANY Remembrance event. I don’t think Charles ever shirked those dates. William’s absence is most likely related to his five-day trip to Brazil, but he left mid-day Friday (from what I can tell) and would have been back in the UK with plenty of time to spare, even flying commercially. Still, British outlets were told that the Brazil-to-London turnaround was “impractical” for Scooter King. He’s showing his real priorities constantly.

Kate brought a distraction from William’s absence – their eldest child, Prince George. This was George’s first Remembrance event (and his father wasn’t there to see it). King Charles pulled Kate and George up to the front tier of the balcony alongside himself and Camilla.

Fashion notes: Kate wore a new Alessandra Rich dress which retails for £1,685. She also wore the HMS Glasgow brooch and earrings which belonged to QEII.

Photos courtesy of Cover Images.

Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall

Featuring: Catherine, Princess of Wales, Prince George
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 08 Nov 2025
Credit: Jack Taylor/PA Images/INSTARimages

**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**

Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall

Featuring: Catherine, Princess of Wales, Prince George
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 08 Nov 2025
Credit: Jack Taylor/PA Images/INSTARimages

**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**

Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall

Featuring: King Charles III
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 08 Nov 2025
Credit: Jack Taylor/PA Images/INSTARimages

**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**


Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall

Featuring: Catherine, Princess of Wales, Prince George
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 08 Nov 2025
Credit: Jack Taylor/PA Images/INSTARimages

**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**

Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall

Featuring: Catherine, Princess of Wales, Prince George
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 08 Nov 2025
Credit: Jack Taylor/PA Images/INSTARimages

**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**

Annual Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall

Featuring: Prince George, Catherine, Princess of Wales, King Charles III
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 08 Nov 2025
Credit: Jack Taylor/PA Images/INSTARimages

**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**


November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Kate Middleton Channels Princess Diana as Prince George Makes His Festival of Remembrance Debut
Fashion

Kate Middleton Channels Princess Diana as Prince George Makes His Festival of Remembrance Debut

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Kate Middleton channelled Princess Diana in a black dress with a white frill collar as she brought Prince George to the Royal British Legion’s Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall for the first time.

Making her first public appearance in three weeks, the Princess of Wales looked elegant in the black Alessandra Rich dress, which she wore with her favourite Scottish Silver Thistle Brooch and poppy pin. Rather than arriving on the arm of her husband, Prince William, Kate Middleton arrived with her son Prince George, 12, who looked smart in a suit and tie and dutifully shook hands as he arrived at the central London concert venue.

In a dramatic shift from her traditional all-black Remembrance ensembles, the Princess of Wales opted for the somber black dress with contrasting prairie collar. The outfit was reminiscent of one worn by Princess Diana at the 25th London Film Festival, although many of the late royal’s looked featured the distinctive oversized collar.

Kate Middleton was accompanied not by her husband, Prince William, but by her son Prince George as she arrived for the Royal British Legion’s Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night

WPA Pool/Getty Images

The dress was reminiscent of one worn by Princess Diana at the 25th London Film Festival

The dress was reminiscent of one worn by Princess Diana at the 25th London Film Festival

Tim Graham/Getty Images

Middleton added sparkle with her Bahrain Pearl Drop Earrings, which once belonged to Queen Elizabeth II. The Princess of Wales has worn the jewels on a number of previous occasions—and they have a fascinating history. The then Princess Elizabeth created from a cache of seven pearls, which she received as a wedding present in 1947 from the Hakim of Bahrain. The earrings are comprised of round diamond studs, from which are suspended round and baguette-cut diamonds in an Art Deco style, plus two of of the Bahrain pearls.

In the earl years of her marriage, the Queen wore these earrings often for gala occasions and official portraits, including one taken in the 1950s—when she teamed them with two other wedding presents, including the Girls of Great Britain and Ireland Tiara and the City of London Fringe Necklace. In 1982, the Queen loaned the earrings to Princess Diana, who appeared to like them just as much, often teaming them with Queen Mary’s Lover’s Knot Tiara, which was another favourite.

It marked Prince George’s first appearance at a Remembrance event and a major moment in his preparation as a King-in-waiting.

Kate Middleton with Prince Goerge at the Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night

Kate Middleton with Prince Goerge at the Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night

WPA Pool/Getty Images

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Garin Nugroho's 'Opera Jawa' to Open Jogja-Netpac Asian Film Festival
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Garin Nugroho’s ‘Opera Jawa’ to Open Jogja-Netpac Asian Film Festival

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

The 20th Jogja-Netpac Asian Film Festival (JAFF) will open with Garin Nugroho‘s musical “Opera Jawa” and close with Aco Tenriyagelli’s feature directorial debut “Comedy Buddy” in Yogyakarta.

This edition marks a milestone for the festival, which was first held in 2006. Carrying the theme Transfiguration, JAFF20 highlights the festival’s two-decade journey and the transformation of Indonesian and Asian cinema during that period.

The opening film, originally premiered at JAFF’s inaugural edition in 2006, will be screened in its original 35mm celluloid format at a ceremonial program at Universitas Gadjah Mada’s Gelanggang Inovasi dan Kreativitas. “Comedy Buddy” is produced by Bion Studios and Spasi Moving Image.

JAFF20 will present 227 films from 43 countries across competitive and non-competitive programs. Eleven feature films will compete in the main competition for the Golden and Silver Hanoman Awards: “A Useful Ghost” by Ratchapoom Boonbunchachoke, winner of the Grand Prix at the 2025 Cannes Critics’ Week; “Amoeba” by Siyou Tan; “Becoming Human” by Polen Ly; “Flames” by Ravi Shankar Kaushik; “Girl” by Shu Qi, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival; “Hair, Paper, Water” by Nicolas Graux and Trương Minh Quý; “Lost Land” by Akio Fujimoto; “On Your Lap (Pangku)” by Reza Rahadian, winner of four awards at Busan; “Summer’s Camera” by Sung Divine; “Sunshine” by Antoinette Jadaone; and Pingyao winner “The World of Love” by Yoon Ga-eun.

The Indonesian Screen Awards will feature 13 Indonesian films competing across nine categories, with four new categories added this year: Best Production Design, Best Sound, Best Original Music and Best Poster Design.

Competing titles include “A Thousand Shades of Purnama” (Seribu Bayang Purnama) by Yahdi Jamhur; “Agak Laen: Menyala Pantiku!” by Muhadkly Acho; “Better Off Dead” (Tinggal Meninggal) by Kristo Immanuel; “Dancing with the Body” (Lenggak-Lenggok) by Andi Imam Prakasa; “Dopamine” (Dopamin) by Teddy Soeriaatmadja; “Ikatan Darah” by Sidharta Tata; “Mothernet” by Ho Wi Ding; “Rangga & Cinta” by Riri Riza; “Smothered” (Legenda Kelam Malin Kundang) by Rafki Hidayat and Kevin Nugroho; Indonesia’s Oscar entry “Sore: A Wife from the Future” by Yandy Laurens; “The Period of Her” by Erlina Rakhmawati, Praditha Blifa, Sarah Adilah and Yulinda Dwi Andriyani; “The Tiger” by Ardiansah Sulistiana; and “Worn Out” (Judheg) by Misya Latief. “Ikatan Darah” and “Mothernet” will have their Indonesian premieres at JAFF20.

Non-competition programs include 22 feature films and 27 short films in Asian Perspectives, and nine Indonesian features in the Indonesian Film Showcase, including “Lost in the Spotlight” (Lupa Daratan), which marks Ernest Prakasa’s return to the director’s chair.

The Panorama program will feature works by acclaimed Asian directors, including “It Was Just An Accident” by Jafar Panahi, winner of the Palme d’Or at Cannes 2025, and “Two Seasons, Two Strangers” by Miyake Sho, winner of the Golden Leopard at the Locarno Film Festival 2025.

“Indonesian cinema continues to show significant growth. In just the first quarter of 2025, cinemas recorded 35 million admissions, or around 44% of the total audience in 2024,” said Ifa Isfansyah, JAFF festival director. “A remarkable milestone this year was the animated feature ‘Jumbo,’ which broke records by surpassing 10 million viewers. Indonesian films have also premiered at major international festivals and brought home prestigious awards.”

The festival continues its partnership with Cinema XXI as the main screening venue.

JAFF20 will continue collaborations with longtime partners including the Asian Film Academy and Netflix. Under the Asian Film Academy collaboration, JAFF will bring director Ann Hui for a masterclass and screen two of her seminal works, “A Simple Life” (2011) and “July Rhapsody” (2002), in newly restored 4K versions. The collaboration will also present seven Hong Kong feature films and four short films.

Netflix programs include Reel Life Film Camp, a hands-on workshop for entry-level professionals, and Creative Asia, a forum bringing together creators from across Southeast Asia featuring filmmakers including Kimo Stamboel, Joko Anwar, Erik Matti and Kulp Kaljareuk.

“Last year, we introduced the Sneak Peek program, giving filmmakers a special platform to present early footage of their upcoming releases. This year, Sneak Peek will feature ‘Four Seasons in Java’ by Kamila Andini,” said Alexander Matius, JAFF program director.

JAFF Market returns with six programs: JAFF Future Project, Content Market, Talent Day, Film & Market Conference, Market Screening and Film Lab, held Nov. 29 through Dec. 1 at Jogja Expo Center.

JAFF20 runs Nov. 29 through Dec. 6.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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12 New Talent Gems at This Year's Seville European Film Festival
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12 New Talent Gems at This Year’s Seville European Film Festival

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Anyone wanting to argue the riches of European films need go no further than the new talents spotlighted at this year’s Seville European Film Festival which launched last year a Rampa section for first and second features and has added short films to its lineup in 2025. Variety highlights seven features and five short films, championed by critics and announcing most certainly talent to keep on the radar: 

“The Anatomy of the Horses,” (“La Anatomía de los Caballos,”Daniel Vidal Toche, Playa Chica Films, Sideral, Spain; Pioneros Producciones, Peru; Los Niños Films, Colombia; Mito Films, Promenades Films, France). 

Picked up by Loco Films and backed by the Berlin Festival’s World Cinema Fund, and put through EAVE’s Puentes, MRG Work, Ventana Sur’s Proyecta and Málaga’s Mafiz, a take on Peruvian history not far from the pessimism of “One Hundred Years of Solitude”: Revolutions don’t work, Peru is “trapped in an unbroken cycle,” he tells Variety. Jumping from 18th century to modern-day corporate degradation, originally shot, a film style and substance.    

“Dandelion’s Odyssey,” (Momoko Seto, Miyu Productions, Ecce Films, Arte Cinéma, U Media, France, Belgium)

A boundary-pushing animation odyssey using time-lapse, macro-photography, robotics, periscopes and drones to picture four friends, dandelion seeds, floating off into the cosmos from an Earth destroyed by nuclear war. Seto’s fifth work but first feature, “an experimental animated feature unlike anything you’ve seen before,” proclaims Cartoon Brew. Sold by Indie Sales, a Cannes Fipresci Award and Annecy Animation Festival winner.    

“The Last One for the Road,” (“Le Citta di Pianura,” Francesco Sossai, A Vivo Film, Rai Cinema, Maze Pictures, Italy)    

50-somethings Carlobianchi and Doriano chain-booze their way from life, dispensing advice, bar-hopping, exchanging stories and escaping the police. A Cannes Un Certain Regard player with a more melancholic undercurrent rated by Variety as a  “pleasant Italian gem on drinking buddies, aging and wistful flavors of life.” 

“My Father’s Shadow,” (Element Pictures, Fatherland Productions, BBC Film, BFI, Crybaby, U.K.)  

“Nigeria’s first ever Cannes selection marks a miraculous gem of auto-fiction,” Variety proclaimed of “My Father’s Shadow.” “In his feature film debut, Akinola Davies Jr. announces himself as a major cinematic voice,” it added. “One day in the life of two young boys traveling with their father from a small village in rural Nigeria to the bustling capital city Lagos.” But an “intimate and well-observed drama” ends up in a way so devastating it completely upends the movie, elevating it into a deeply humanist narrative.” 

“A Year of School,” (Laura Samani, Nefertiti Film, RAI Cinema, Tomsa Films, Arte France Cinéma, Italy).

Winning best actor honors for newcomer Giacomo Covi at this year’s Venice Horizons, Samani’s second feature and a turn-up for the books after her year 800 Frigian community-set “Small Body,” set in 2007 as Fred, Swedish, enrolls in an all-male senior year class of a technical high school in Trieste, soon joining a gang of three close male friends. “About desire,” and “the way the world allows us to express these desires,” which differs for females,” Samani tells Variety.  

“Short Summer,” (Nastia Korkia, Tamtam Film, Totem Atelier, Art & Popcorn, Germany, France, Serbia) 

This year’s Venice Lion of the Future and Chicago New Directors winner, sold by Totem Films and the fiction feature debut of Korkia, now based in France and Germany. A drama set during the second Chechen war, it turns on eight year-old Katya (Maiia Pleshkevich), on summer holidays with her grandparents at their country house. Filmed with fixed-camera shots, an eye to documentary-like details as war insinuates itself into daily life.

“We Believe You,” (Charlotte Devillers, Arnaud Dufeys, Mackintosh Films, Belgium)

Sold widely by The Party Sales to Germany, France and Spain and most Eastern Europe, and described by Variety as a “gripping family custody drama,” a Berlin’s Perspectives player, garnering a Special Mention. Myriem Akheddiou delivers an extraordinary performance, often caught in close-up, of a mother under extreme stress, underscoring the best that Belgium offers: Tough and informed social drama. “We meet victims of sexual assault, and some of them reveal incest to us,” says Devillers, a nurse. 

Short Films

“Baile de Feria” (Rakia Films, Te Lo Garantizo Producciones, Spain)

Set against the atmosphere of the Seville April Fair, “Baile de Feria” meaning Fair Dance traces the bond between a father experiencing cognitive impairment and the daughter who reconnects with him through shared music, movement and ritual. Directed by Bernabé Bulnes, the short blends domestic scenes with the fairgrounds and its “Calle del Infierno,” locating the bond of family entwined within local tradition.

“Dad’s Not Home” (Szkoła Filmowa im. Krzysztofa Kieślowskiego, Poland)

Winner of the Student Academy Award for best narrative short, “Dad’s Not Home” follows two young brothers who conceal their father’s frontotemporal dementia in order to remain together after their mother’s death. Directed by Jan Saczek and produced at the Krzysztof Kieślowski Film School in Katowice, the film depicts an early, imposed adulthood as the boys manage caretaking, household routines and emotional strain of growing up. 

“Éiru” (Cartoon Saloon, HerStory, Ireland)

Giovanna Ferrari directs this Iron-Age mythic adventure of a young girl who journeys underground to restore her community’s water source, a lifegiving essential stolen by magic. Featuring voice work from Coco Teehan Roche, the film reflects BAFTA and Emmy winning studio Cartoon Saloon’s interest in cultural folklore and environmental stewardship. Distributed by Gkids in North America.

“A Good Day” (Portugal Films – Portugal)

António wakes to find a lifeless double of himself floating in the family pool, a discovery that unsettles the household as they attempt to carry on while quietly grieving the inexplicable presence. Doubts arise as to who and what António is. Directed by Tiago Rosa-Rosso, the film stages a gently absurd domestic scenario that drifts between comedy and unease, unfoldig like a theatrical chamber piece where logic slips and all is up for questioning.

“Yonne” (Rita Productions, Norte Productions, Switzerland, France)

Set in mid-19th-century Burgundy, “Yonne” follows two sisters who disguise themselves as men to join a timber raft crew. Their destination is Paris and perhaps a hope for an improved life than what they flee. Co-directed by Julietta Korbel and Yan Ciszewski, the short underscores the physical strain and vulnerability of the flotteurs as they navigate a pastoral river route. Selected for Locarno’s Pardi di Domani before appearing in Seville’s Official Shorts, the film traces emancipation, hiding and survival of spirit through labor, movement and shifting bodies.

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Steven Soderbergh, Michaela Coel Set Doha Film Festival & 2025 Lineup
TV & Streaming

Steven Soderbergh, Michaela Coel Set Doha Film Festival & 2025 Lineup

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Steven Soderbergh, Ramy Youssef and Michaela Coel are among special guests lined up to attend Qatar’s inaugural Doha Film Festival later this month.

Soderbergh and Coel will touch down at the festival – running from November 20 to 28 – for a Special Screening of Neon-acquired The Christophers, which world premiered in Toronto.

Further Special Screening titles include Re-Creation by Jim Sheridan; Shoot the People by Andy-Mundy Castle; My Story by Yasser Ashour; Palestine 36 by Annemarie Jacir and the World Premiere of Qatari feature film Sa3oud Wainah by Mohammed Al-Ibrahim produced by Katara Studios.

Other profile international and regionally renowned guests due to attend include Turkish stars Engin Altan Duzyatan and Hazal Kaya; veteran Kuwaiti actor, Jassim Al Nabhan; Tunisian Egyptian cinema star Dorra Zarrouk as well as Palestinian actors Saleh Bakri and Hiam Abbas who appear in Palestine 36.

The festival will showcase 97 films from 62 countries across different sections, including the previously announced International Competition, offering more than $300,000 in prize money and featuring 13 world cinema titles including Once Upon a Time in Gaza, The President’s Cake and Cotton Queen.

Spearheaded by the Doha Film Institute, the new festival expands its long-running family-focused event of Ajyal, which ran for more than a decade during the same period, and will unfold in various locations across the Qatari capital of Doha including the Katara Cultural Village, Msheireb Downtown Doha, and the Museum of Islamic Art.

It will open on November 20 with a screening of Kaouther Ben Hania’s powerful The Voice of Hind Rajab, about the killing of a young Palestinian girl by Israeli troops in the Gaza Strip in early 2024, which was a recipient of the DFI’s grants program.

Beyond the film selection, the festival will also lay on a talks program featuring speakers such as former MSNBC broadcast journalist Mehdi Hassan; Egyptian journalist Palestinian rights advocate  Rahma Zein, Emmy-nominated journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin as well as artists Yasiin Bey, Dana Al Fardan and Khalid Albaih; industry experts Sylvia Zakhary and Ahmed Al Baker among others.

“At the heart of Doha Film Festival is connection, from spontaneous conversations to the emotions we share, and the ways cinema reminds us of our humanity,” said DFI CEO and festival director Fatma Hassan Alremaihi.

“For the past 15 years, DFI has taken great pride in the extraordinary accomplishments of the filmmakers whose journeys we have shared so far. This year’s Doha Film Festival reflects Qatar’s growing creative ambitions and our deep belief in the power of cinema to unite and inspire.”

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Events

JLA Launches Inaugural Festival of Speech with Political Heavyweights, Industry Insights, and Entrepreneurial Inspiration

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

JLA, the UK’s leading speaker bureau, has officially launched its flagship live event, The Festival of Speech, bringing together thought leaders across politics, business, technology, and the arts for a powerful evening of conversation and reflection. Held at Kings Place in London on September 9th, the event showcased six influential speakers including Nicola Sturgeon, Sir James Cleverly, Jamie Laing, Rahaf Harfoush, and Richard Ayoade, hosted by broadcaster Louise Minchin.

A New Platform for Dialogue

Created in response to growing demand for deeper, more nuanced discussions, The Festival of Speech sets out to provide a forum for critical thinking and complex ideas, a space where insight takes precedence over soundbites.

“The Festival of Speech represents our commitment to creating a platform where the most important conversations of our time can unfold,” said Simon King, Head of Talent at JLA. “Our inaugural event demonstrated the power of bringing together diverse voices to examine complex issues with nuance and depth.”

James and nicolaJames and nicola

Politicians in Conversation: Sturgeon & Cleverly

Opening the evening, former First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon and former Foreign Secretary Sir James Cleverly shared the stage for a candid conversation about the evolving state of UK politics, media scrutiny, and the demands of leadership in a divided age.

Jla 090925 116 hrJla 090925 116 hr

From Reality TV to Resilience: Jamie Laing’s Entrepreneurial Journey

Media personality turned entrepreneur Jamie Laing inspired attendees with a raw, humorous, and insightful talk on building his gourmet confectionery brand, Candy Kittens.

Jla launches inaugural festival of speech with political heavyweights, industry insights, and entrepreneurial inspirationJla launches inaugural festival of speech with political heavyweights, industry insights, and entrepreneurial inspiration

Future Thinking with Harfoush & Ayoade

Digital anthropologist Rahaf Harfoush examined the cultural and psychological impact of artificial intelligence, while actor, author, and director Richard Ayoade offered a reflective take on creativity, collaboration, and originality in a media-saturated age.

Jla 090925 180 hrJla 090925 180 hr

Broadcaster Louise Minchin expertly guided the evening, weaving the themes of leadership, innovation, and authenticity across all the discussions.

Why It Matters to the Events Industry

JLA’s Festival of Speech presents a compelling new live content format for event professionals seeking to create more meaning-driven, insight-led programmes. The event’s blend of political commentary, business storytelling, and future-gazing tech talk exemplifies the type of cross-sector programming modern audiences increasingly expect.

As attention spans shrink and demands for authenticity rise, the Festival of Speech offers a blueprint for how to craft events that engage on a deeper level, merging thought leadership with real-world relevance.

For event organisers, promoters, and agencies seeking inspiring keynote content or new formats to elevate conferences, exhibitions, or corporate events, the success of The Festival of Speech signals the value of curating live experiences that go beyond the expected.


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October 29, 2025 0 comments
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