Germany, Austria, Great Britain 2021, 89 minby Franz Böhm
With global protests on the rise, DEAR FUTURE CHILDREN is a film about the new generation at the heart of this seismic political shift. We will watch as Rayen protests for social justice in Chile, Pepper fights for democracy in Hong Kong and Hilda battles the devastating consequences of climate change in Uganda. Facing almost impossible odds and grappling with the staggering impact of their activism on their personal lives, we will be asking these three young women why they keep fighting.
Dear Future Children
Germany 2021, 94 minby Johannes Preuss, Marius Brüning
José is born on the floor of a mud hut in a Bolivian mountain village. He is the fourth child of a herdswoman. A few month later he arrives at the house of his adoptive family in Germany. José Noé Estrada becomes Manuel Phillip Sosnowski. 30 years later he makes the journey back into his mother's country for the first time in his life. A film about the search for belonging.
My Strange Homeland
Germany 2020, 70 minby Tim Ellrich, Thi Hien Mai
Bay and Tam are a Vietnamese couple who have been living in Germany for the past 30 years. They work as office cleaners by night and rarely come into contact with German society. By day they spend all their time online, maintaining a virtual connection to their homeland via Skype and karaoke chatrooms. But when a storm destroys their house in Vietnam, their virtual bubble bursts. Tam desperately tries to organize the repairs remotely, while Bay’s priorities begin to shift, and she studies German in anticipation of the birth of their grandchild in Germany. She sees her future forming there, while for Tam it becomes more important than ever to focus on his family in Vietnam. Is home a place or a state of mind? Mein Vietnam is a vivid illustration of living in two places at once, and that duality’s consequences on marriage, family and a sense of belonging. (Hot Docs, Angie Driscoll)
My Vietnam
Germany 2019, 95 minby Stefan Sick
Dementia, a diagnosis that changes everything for those who are affected and for their relatives. Accepting the disease can seem just as difficult as finding an appropriate approach. But perhaps it is much more about compassion than about understanding? In an observational way, THE INNER LIGHT explores the everyday lives of people with dementia and focuses mainly on positive situations and encounters. The film tries to offer a poetic interpretation of this special state of being and aims at reducing fears in dealing with people with dementia and at accepting each person’s humanity.www.theinnerlight-film.com
The Inner Light
Germany 2018, 65 minby Rebekka Kaufmann
In WE OWN THE CRISIS Rebekka Kaufmann accompanies a family from Athens in their everyday lives - as lone fighters and united as a family. But the only place they come together is now threatened with foreclosure: their apartment. The film reflects sensitively and personally the current situation of many citizens of Greece and gives an insight into the consequences of the Greek crisis.
We Own the Crisis
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