Doc Edge 2017 films unveiled
The Documentary
New Zealand Trust presents
Doc Edge International Film Festival
(Doc Edge)
Wellington,
10 – 21 May
Auckland,
24 May – 5 June
Hoka Hey: A Good Day to Die
2017 brings the latest crop of the
globe’s best documentaries to New Zealand audiences for the highly-anticipated Doc Edge Festival. The Festival boasts a
programme of impact-making, award-winning feature length and short films,
covering a vast range of human experiences.
With well over 700 submissions, it has
been a feat to whittle the selection down to the most intriguing, engaging,
uplifting, and incredible new documentaries, both from home (NZ), and around
the world. Doc Edge is thrilled to announce the first nine films to be shown at
this year’s festival.
A selection of highly-acclaimed international documentaries
brings stories from India, Syria, Papua New Guinea, America and beyond. The
outstanding line-up includes:-
Last Men in
Aleppo: Winner of the Sundance Film Festival
Grand Jury Prize: World Cinema Documentary, Last Men in Aleppo is an
unforgettable portrait of reluctant heroes in Syria. Nowhere is the human toll
of Syria’s ongoing civil war more brutally manifest than in the lives of
Aleppo’s “White Helmets”—first responders to the devastating bombing and
terrorist attacks that have pushed this city to the brink of collapse. An ode
to courage and compassion, documented by Syrian filmmaker Feras Fayyad, Danish
filmmaker Steen Johannessen, and the Aleppo Media Center.
Last Men in Aleppo
Last Men in Aleppo
The Cinema
Travellers: Filmmakers Shirley Abraham and Amit Madheshiya
have wowed audiences with their Cannes L'Œil
d'or Special Mention: Le Prix du documentaire award-winning film, looking at the
travelling cinemas of India. Showmen riding cinema lorries have brought the
wonder of the movies once every year to faraway villages in India. Seven
decades on, as their cinema projectors crumble and film reels become scarce,
their patrons are lured by slick digital technology. A benevolent showman, a
shrewd exhibitor and a maverick projector mechanic bear a beautiful burden - to
keep the last traveling cinemas of the world running. Both directors will
attend the Festival.
The
Opposition: Director Hollie Fifer’s feature film
was programmed to play the at 2016 Doc Edge Festival, but was withdrawn when it
faced a court case brought on by a subject in the film. The Opposition
follows a small Papua New Guinean community fighting to retain their land in
the face of commercial development. Hollie and the production companies behind
the film successfully defended The Opposition’s
right to be seen publicly, and the film premiered at IDFA 2016 and won the
Grand Jury Prize at FIFO Tahiti 2017. Hollie will attend the Festival.
The
Opposition
Thank You
For Playing: When Ryan, a video game designer,
learns that his young son, Joel, has cancer, he and his wife begin documenting
their emotional journey by creating an unusual and poetic video game, called “The Dragon, Cancer”. Captured by
filmmakers David Osit & Malika Zouhali-Worrall who previously made “Call Me Kuchu”, Thank You For Playing offers
an intimate, revolutionary glimpse into the complexity of grief. The film has
been shown at some of the world’s most prestigious film festivals, including
Tribeca, Camden and IDFA.
The
Pulitzer at 100: Directed by Oscar and Emmy winning
director Kirk Simon, the film is told through the riveting stories of the
artists that have won the prestigious prize, since its establishment in 1917.
Power, immigration, race and identity are all central themes in interviews
featuring Toni Morrison, Carl Bernstein, Nick Kristof, Wynton Marsalis, Tracky
Smith, Michael Chabon, and readings by Martin Scorsese, Helen Mirren, Natalie
Portman, and Liev Schreiber.
Martin Scorsese in The Pulitzer at 100
Martin Scorsese in The Pulitzer at 100
Sacred: Shot by more than 40 filmmaking teams around the world, Sacred
immerses the viewer in the daily use of faith and spiritual practice. The film
was helmed by Academy Award winning director, Thomas Lennon. At a time when
religious hatreds dominate the world’s headlines, this beautiful documentary
explores a wide range of religious traditions told without narration, without
experts and, at times, without words at all.
Sacred
Stranger in
Paradise: Operating at the intersection of
documentary and fiction, Guido Hendrikx’s Stranger in Paradise
investigates the power relations between Europe and refugees. In this
unflinching film essay, Europe is represented by a teacher who both welcomes
and rejects the class of recent refugees – personifying the complicated
relationships and policies of the disparate continent. Guido will attend the Festival.
The
New Zealand selection features a full length feature from a NZ
based filmmaker, and a poignant short film focusing on the inspirational
journey of a young Cantabrian;
Hoka Hey: A
Good Day to Die: Discover the life story and
extraordinary adventures of British war photographer, Jason P. Howe, who
survived 12 years on the frontline of four wars. New Zealand based filmmaker,
Harold Monfils, brings this eye-opening work to the screen after six years in
the making. The photojournalist Howe will astound audiences with the extreme
lengths he goes to, even embroiling himself in a love affair with an assassin.
The Common
Touch: Jakob Ross Bailey made global
headlines in 2015 with his touching speech delivered at the Christchurch Boys'
High School Prizegiving, just days after learning of his life-threatening
cancer diagnosis. The Common Touch, directed by
student filmmaker Mason Cade Packer, follows this exceptional young man on his
quest to inspire others.
Doc Edge International Film Festival
Wellington
| 10 – 21 May | Roxy Cinema, Miramar
Auckland |
24 May – 5 June | Q Theatre, CBD
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