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- Two families fight for justice from within the digital prison of the Chinese surveillance state.
- Shadow Game is a journey through the dark side of Europe with teenage refugees as our guides.
- Follows an abusive man when he speaks out, positioning himself as a critic of violence.
- Look What You Made Me Do shows three women, victims of terrible abuse, who killed their partners. The women testify with courage and disarming sincerity of a patriarchal system that wants to deprive them of the right to rebellion.
- In a desperate attempt to meet their parents' expectations, Andy goes on a hunt for a lesbian woman to marry and Cherry in search of a baby to adopt. Being homosexual makes it hard to conform to their families' and society's expectations, but both Andy and Cherry are determined to do things 'the right way'.
- Marloes Coenen is at the autumn of her carrier as a women's-MMA superstar. She is a multiple world champion and desperately wants to win the 145 pound belt one last time. Created by acclaimed director Victor Vroegindeweij, The Last Fight is an action packed, emotional roller coaster. It's the first documentary that deeply examines the mind and soul of the modern-day gladiators of Mixed Martial Arts and allows us a glimpse into a secretive world.
- The godwits are disappearing from the Frisian landscape. The farmers have switched to English rye-grass, perfect for cow pastures. But farmer Bote does everything in his power to keep them coming, even if it costs him his farm.
- In Havana, transsexuals Odette, Juani and Malú wait for genital surgery - performed by European top surgeons and organized by the president's daughter, Mariela Castro. Castro is leading a sexual revolution combined with classic state socialism. New possibilities face old problems: will Cuban trans people find happiness despite intolerance, poverty and prostitution?
- When director Saskia Boddeke saw the performance Furia by Kamak, a professional theater group for actors with intellectual disabilities, she was so impressed that she decided to make a film about the ensemble. The piece they perform, a lavishly designed fairytale about lust and anger, is cinematically portrayed by Boddeke with beautifully staged shots in rich, saturated colors. She also follows the rehearsal process, zooming in on various members of the group.
- On November 26, 2008 a series of terror attacks occurred in Mumbai. The famous five-star Taj Mahal Hotel was one of the targets. In the film, some of the surviving hotel guests return to India and talk about what it means to live through an attack like that. The film observes them for 24 hours in and around the hotel. At first, together with these protagonists we get to know the luxurious hotel and then we return with them to the dark hours of the attack. Gradually we discover how this drastic event has impacted the lives and thinking of the victims. The years that went by since the attack offer space in their minds for reflection on fear, both at an intimate, personal level and at the level of society.
- Not wanting to disappoint his best friend Omar again, Jayden (23) tries to overcome his social anxiety by going outside after a long time.
- In His Image focuses on reproduction after death in Israel, where posthumously harvesting sperm is legal. The film follows the bereaved parents of three sons who died during military service. Using semen collected just before, or shortly after, their sons' death, they hope to have them live on in a posthumous grandchild. But can new life cure their grief?
- Rising Tides is a four-part documentary series in which internationally acclaimed Dutch photography journalist Kadir van Lohuizen investigates the consequences of the rising sea level and how sea level rise affects the lives of ordinary people.
- Four kids, who all lost a parent to suicide, share their journey from the moment they heard the news. The filmmaker, who experienced the same tragedy, asks them the questions no one dared to ask her at the time.
- This is Josefien's family story: how she has been told it happened, how it happened, how she remembers it, and how it was filmed. How does kin keep each other trapped in the same role patterns? And can things still change years later?
- After twenty years, filmmaker Wiam Al-Zabari asks his father to open up about their past for the first time. Why did they flee Iraq and why did they never talked about it? Can he let go of the past and finally embrace a future in the Netherlands?
- Marieke van der Winden dives deeper into her family history when she finds out her grandparents collaborated with the Nazi's. Slowly, she uncovers more and more secrets.
- Vetri joined the Tamil Tigers at age 16 to fight in the more than 25-year-long civil war in Sri Lanka. Although the war ended in 2009, the scars have not yet healed.
- For the Syrian dancer Ahmad Joudeh, his war-torn birthplace Damascus was not only a heap of rubble, but also a stage. Still, he leaps at the opportunity to flee his native country. In the Netherlands, Ahmad trains at the Dutch National Ballet and performs both in the Netherlands and other European countries.
- Internationally acclaimed director Oeke Hoogendijk reconstructs the musical universe and dramatic life story of the legendary and controversial composer Karlheinz Stockhausen. Licht shows the creation of his magnum opus; the most radical opera cycle in history.
- On the day of her abortion, Dana looks for her own way to come to terms with her decision.
- Fourteen-year-old Skip and a handful of other boys make up the dance group Rhythm Rangers. The group will compete for the title of Best Dance Crew in the TV program Shall We Dance?. Despite being teased in school - "dancing is for girls" - and all the distractions that go hand in hand with puberty, Skip tries to keep the group together and make Rhythm Rangers a success at all costs. Will he manage to lead the group to the highest level?
- How do Europeans deal with their recent dark history (the wars, dictatorships and occupations)? What traces are etched?
- In the middle of the Jordanian desert, a new tent city, Zaatari, has arisen. Through the eyes of four children, this exceptionally intimate and poetic film sees and feels what it is like to grow up in this unique locale.
- What motivates someone to give up their thriving career to start teaching children? But also: how do you learn to keep order in a classroom? How do you get children to learn? It all turns out to be super complicated.
- In a living room in the south of the Netherlands, saint statues weep over all the bad news on the TV screen. Is it really so crazy that Mary cannot contain her tears in this home?
- Some kids are born with a remarkable talent; they just "have it." This program focuses on 'Titaantjes' who have extraordinary artistic talent, meeting their idol.
- In her psychoses, Gioia has lived the most beautiful dreams and the darkest nightmares. Now, a stable life anchors her to the everyday world. But what space is there for imagination?
- In the documentary My Father's Choice, director Yan Ting Yuen links the personal history of her father and his family to the major developments of the past fifty years in China: the great Chinese famines in the fifties, the Cultural Revolution in the sixties, the exodus to the West in the seventies. These events created the Chinese conjunction of communism and capitalism and rendered today's China the greatest economic power in the world; events for which its people paid a hefty price. A story unfolds in which the relationship between the individual and the collective, the small-scale, personal history and the big, global history, is one of continuous friction.
- In order for Sofie (18 years) to find a student room in Amsterdam, she must participate in "Room Application Evenings". Time and again, she must present herself to the inmates of a student house, amidst her competitors, as the best option for the vacant student room. The competition is fierce and the inmates are ruthless. Who's accepted and who's rejected? How far are candidates willing to go? Sofie's self-awareness is pushed to its limits. How does the assessment process affect her?
- This movie explores how the depiction of intimacy in the movies of past decades came about through interviewing actors of all ages. What went wrong, when did it go right and how do we look back on it with the knowledge we have now?
- A film about the very close and imaginative friendship between a boy and a girl at the end of their childhood. Will the impending adolescence impact their friendship?
- In 1889, Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh arrived at the psychiatric institution Saint-Paul de Mausole. Through the letters he wrote and the experiences of the current patients, this film explores the line between madness and creativity.
- Black Angolan soldiers, known as 'The Terrible Ones', once fought white South Africa's colonial wars as part of the notorious 32 Battalion. Repatriated to South Africa at the end of the 1980's, some of the ex-combatants still languish in the ruins of Pomfret, a former asbestos-mining town remotely situated at the edge of the Kalahari Desert. When the town's dilapidated buildings turn into a film-set and the ex-soldiers become actors in the Biblical story of Judas Iscariot, it prompts a confrontation with their past. Pivoting between Biblical myth and present-day reality, the film pulls into focus the paradox of being both perpetrator and victim. It reflects upon the notion of betrayal and free will, while providing a compelling view of those at the margins of history. During the course of the film, the prevalent voice of Judas eventually merges into the voice of the filmmaker, interrogating the fundamentals of human existence.
- Uncle Ezequiel is serving a six-year prison sentence. What crime did this Cuban farmer commit? Answer: He sold his own cow.
- Zaatari Djinn is a film about the Refugee Camp Zaatari. Via the perspective of five children, it sheds light on the human ability to create something out of nothing.
- Dutch musical actors are among the best in the world. At the Fontys School of the Arts in Tilburg, students are tutored by a theatre director like no other, Marc Krone. Often, the lessons are marked by intense emotions.
- In the dance film Flight, director Wiam Al-Zabari and choreographer Krisztina de Châtel make us feel what it's like to have to flee, by taking us from our own familiar - Dutch - environment, on a frightening journey of flight. Just like we're one of the ones staying behind, we see a group of dancers flee from a typical Dutch village, through the woods and the dune fields into the sea, heading towards their freedom. Along the way they struggle with nature and its unpredictable forces; a symbol for the obstacles to overcome in order to see a flight through successfully.
- The Netherlands have to deal with an old acquaintance, presenting itself as a new intruder: the wolf. 'Wolvenland' tells the story of the disruptive effect on insecure administrators, wolf haters and wolf huggers. Compromising between different opinions, the Dutch government should solve the problems that arise, but that doesn't seem to be an easy job.
- Mission NS is an allegory of Dutch society in the guise of NS, the Netherlands' national railway company. Transporting a million passengers each day, every citizen has experience of travelling with NS - and everyone has an opinion about it. The film gives a behind-the-scenes account of the company's ongoing struggle to keep passengers satisfied. NS started to create stories in an effort to achieve its mission, because stories can help make sense of this complex world. Theirs are dedicated to making passengers happier, even when the trains are running late.
- The young conductor John Warner (27) and the musicians of the Orchestra for the Earth go to Austria in search of the deeper meaning behind the magical composition 'Das Lied von der Erde' by Gustav Mahler. They travel by train because they refuse to fly. After all, that is the symbol of the pollution that leads to climate change.
- A film about the feeling of immortality of a group of young friends who lost one of their best friends. During a short trip, they seem to party unrestrained. But how does the harsh confrontation with death resonate in their lives?
- Artistic director of Het Nationale Theater Eric de Vroedt writes and directs a performance about his own mother Winnie, who passed away in 2020. This piece, titled 'De eeuw van mijn moeder', is a family story about the migration from the Dutch East Indies to the Netherlands. It is De Vroedt's way of examining the relationship with his mother and not having to say goodbye to her yet: 'I can let her live on stage, but when the curtain falls, when the play is completely finished, then she is really dead'.
- Want to hasten the arrival of the Messiah? Flemish Christian activist Koen Carlier is on a mission to return all the Jews to their homeland in an effort to speed up the return of Jesus Christ to this world. In his laidback, yet aggressive manner, Koen travels through Ukraine, seeking out Jews to send to Israel. Backed by the adept Christians for Israel organization in the Netherlands, Koen aims to encourage all of the Jews to move to Israel and fulfill his lifelong dream of redemption. A documentary about dogmatic actions and the mundane, often far-reaching consequences of utopic missions.
- Director Max Baggerman's mom firmly believes that the radiation in her new home has made her ill. Max finds this hard to believe. While she takes more and more radical measures to escape the radiation, his compassion for her is tested.