New Tutu documentary comes home to Encounters after Berlin win at Peace Film Prize

by | May 5, 2026 | Featured | 0 comments

Hollywood Reporter praised the documentary as “a deeply personal portrait of the man"

Fresh from winning the Peace Film Prize at the Berlin International Film Festival, TUTU will have its African premiere at Encounters South African International Documentary Festival this June. 

The feature documentary is an intimate portrait of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the rebel cleric and Nobel Peace Prize winner who helped end Apartheid in South Africa.

Even if you think you know the story, the footage lands with startling power. Tutu intervenes to stop a mob from necklacing a man accused of being an informant. He loses his temper over Ronald Reagan opposing sanctions, telling the media “the West… can go to hell.” He weeps while chairing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. He lovingly renews his wedding vows.

Throughout, we hear his hyena cackle, even as he speaks truth to power with all the moral weight of being not just an activist but a priest too.

“I wanted Tutu’s voice to be the heartbeat of the story, to let his humanity, humour and moral conviction lead us through his world,” says director Sam Pollard (MLK/FBI), an Emmy and Peabody Award winner who received the International Documentary Association’s Career Achievement Award in 2020.

Central to the film is the remarkable archive filmed over two decades by South African journalist Roger Friedman and photographer Benny Gool, who are both interviewed in the film and credited as consulting producers. The pairing was something Tutu took particular delight in. “It was part of our party trick,” says Friedman. “He enjoyed telling people that we were a Jew and a Muslim, and that he loved us.”

The documentary doesn’t end with Apartheid but shows how Tutu’s activism expanded globally, continuing even after his retirement. Often described as “South Africa’s conscience,” Tutu closes the film on a characteristically optimistic note: “I hope that the world would realise that there is no situation of which we can say, ‘This is absolutely devoid of hope.’ God bless you.”

The Hollywood Reporter praised the documentary as “a deeply personal portrait of the man, so much so that by the film’s conclusion you will feel as if you’ve truly come to know him.”

During Encounters, Pollard will attend the screenings, as well as host editing masterclasses in Cape Town and Johannesburg with the editor, Paul Trewartha. Before moving into directing, Pollard cut a number of films for Spike Lee, including Jungle Fever and the Oscar-nominated documentary 4 Little Girls.

Cape Town screenings:
• Sunday, 7 June 2026 at 12:30 at the Labia Theatre
• Sunday, 7 June 2026 at 16:30 at the V&A Waterfront Ster-Kinekor

Johannesburg screenings:
• Tuesday, 9 June 2026 at 17:00 at Ster-Kinekor Sandton
• Wednesday,10 June 2026 at 18:30 at Ster-Kinekor Southgate

Masterclasses & legacy panels, sponsored by Clinix
• Monday, 8 June 2026 in Cape Town
• Wednesday, 10 June 2026 in Johannesburg

WHAT: TUTU – African premiere
WHERE: Encounters South African International Documentary Festival
WHEN: 4- 14 June 2026 – see details above
INFO: Encounters VISIT

  • Cape Town is fortunate to be the home of the Truth To Power Exhibition at Desmond and Leah Tutu House.

TRUTH TO POWER EXHIBITION [18]

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