Diarise 5-15 June 2014 for Encounters, Africa’s leading international documentary festival .
International highlights include:
•Oscar nominee Cutie & The Boxer
•Sundance Grand Jury Prizewinner Return to Homs and Audience Award winner The Green Prince
•Oscar-winning Errol Morris’s documentary on Donald Rumsfeld
•Sarah Polley’s Stories We Tell, named Best Documentary by both The New York Film Critics Circle and The Los Angeles Film Critics Association
The 16th Encounters South African International Documentary Festival will run from 5-15 June 2014 in Cape Town and Johannesburg, exposing audiences to a more diverse, complex, and surprising world than they could ever imagine.
Many of the international documentaries take you behind recent news headlines. In The Unknown Known, Oscar-winner Errol Morris uses declassified memos to guide former US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld through a discussion of his controversial career under four different Republican presidents, shedding light on Vietnam, the Cold War, Desert Storm, and the War on Terror. Return to Homs, winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, takes you to the frontlines in Syria, where two friends fight back against the army transforming their city into a ghost town. The Green Prince, winner of theAudience Award at Sundance, focuses on the oldest son of a founding member of Hamas, who agrees to spy for Israel.
Many of the documentaries explore contrasting responses to injustice.
Dangerous Acts Starring The Unstable Elements of Belarus focuses on a theatre group defying ‘Europe’s last dictatorship.’ Fuck For Forest documents an environmental NGO with an unusual fundraising strategy: they sell their homemade erotic films on the internet.
Concerning Violence is a call to arms, with Lauryn Hill narrating Frantz Fanon’s critique of the dehumanizing effects of colonization.
But there is also beauty in this year’s selection. The Oscar-nominated Cutie and The Boxer celebrates the challenges and richness of both marriage and art. The award-winning Finding Vivian Maier depicts a nanny who’s posthumous cache of 100 000 photographs has seen her hailed as one of the world’s most accomplished street photographers.
The award-winning My Name Is Salt is a tribute to the thousands of stubborn families who move to a desert in India to extract salt from the burning earth for eight months every year, only for every monsoon to wash their salt fields away.
Other films defy simple categorization.
In Stories We Tell, Oscar-nominated writer/director Sarah Polley discovers that in her family of storytellers, the truth depends on who’s telling it. Her deeply personal documentary has won multiple awards, being named Best Non-Fiction Film by The Los Angeles Film Critics Association, The New York Film Critics Circle and The National Board of Review.
12 O’Clock Boys is the stunt-filled story of a Baltimore dirt-bike gang who easily evade the hamstrung police, who must adhere to a no-chase policy to maintain public safety; it’s been described as ‘The Wire with wheelies.”
In The Perverts Guide to Ideology, superstar cultural theorist Slavoj Zizek re-teams with director Sophie Fiennes (The Pervert’s Guide to Cinema) for another wildly entertaining romp through the crossroads of cinema and philosophy.
The award-winning, visually-striking The Great Night explores night life and insomnia in Prague, studying the people who sleep by day andcome alive at night.
And The Pirate Bay: Away From Keyboard is the story of the three founders of the world’s biggest file sharing site, who built a business based on other people committing crimes.
Africa’s most prestigious documentary festival runs from 5-15 June 2014 at Nu Metro V&A Waterfront and The Labia in Cape Town and The Bioscope in Johannesburg.
INFO: Keep an eye on Encounters website for updates