
Every year, the latest documentary, short and animated films from a selected country are presented at the Krakow Film Festival – this year, the special section of the Festival is dedicated to Denmark.

Krakow Film Festival, announced the first titles of the next year’s 60th anniversary program including “Sunless Shadows” by Mehrdad Oskouei, the opening film of the IDFA festival in Amsterdam and the documentary film “My Father and Me” by British film-maker, Nick Broomfield.

The Polish premiere of “The wind. A documentary thriller,” an emotional story about the “halny” wind – one of the most unpredictable winds in the Polish mountains, directed by Michał Bielawski, will open the 59th Krakow Film Festival on May 26th. The film will be showcased as a part of the international documentary competition and the Polish competition.

Multidisciplinary artist Caroline Leaf, who has gained a special place among the world’s animators, will receive this year’s Dragon of Dragons at the 2019 Krakow Film Festival, for “a unique contribution to the development of the animated film worldwide.”
“Over the Limit” directed by Marta Prus, is the big winner of the 58th Krakow Film Festival taking the Silver Horn for the best feature film in the International Documentary Film Competition and the Silver Hobby-Horse for the director of the best documentary film in the National Competition. The film about the remarkable Russian gymnast Margarita Mamun and the emotional costs of professional sports, received also the award for the best producer of Polish short and documentary films funded by the Polish Audiovisual Producers Chamber of Commerce (KIPA) and the Best Cinematography Award under the patronage of The Polish Society of Cinematographers.
The winner of the International Documentary Film Competition is Talal Derki’s film “Of Fathers and Sons”. The 2014 winner of the Silver Horn once again confronted Krakow audience with the sheer terror of the Syrian war. Four years after the horrifying, successful and widely discussed “Return to Homs” – the opening film of the 54th KFF – the director visited a family of a radicalized ISIS member and followed the process of forming of jihadist fighters. In “Of Fathers and Sons” the camera focuses on little boys who are being prepared the join the ranks of ISIS by their beloved fathers, for whom family is especially important. The film received this year an award for best documentary at Sundance. Jury led by Péter Forgács (Hungary) handed out the prestigious Golden Horn award for “the director’s courageous penetration into the world of extremism”. The film was also awarded by the International Federation of Film Critics Jury (FIPRESCI).
The Silver Horn for the director of the best medium-length documentary went to Pablo Aparo and Martin Benchimol for their film “The Dread” (Argentina).
The winner of the oldest festival competition – International Short Film Competition – is Armelle Mercat for her film “Keep Your Hair On, Oliver” (France).
The jury, whose chairman was Iranian director and screenwriter Merhard Oskouei, gave the French director the Golden Dragon award emphasizing that the story presented in the film was only possible to tell through animation.
Silver Dragons are the awards given to the best short films representing all three competition genres. The Silver Dragon for the best documentary film went to Michał Hytroś for his film “The Sisters” (Poland). The film received also the special mention in the National Competition. The best animated film is “Obon” (dir. André Hörmann, Samo (Anna Bergmann)). Silver Dragon for the best short fiction went to Emmanuelle Fleytoux for her film “Release the Dogs” (France/Belgium). The Krakow Film Festival also gave this film the nomination for the European Film Award in the short film category (PRIX EFA KRAKOW 2018 for the best European film).
The best music documentary and the winner of the Golden Heynal award, chosen by the Jury led by Marcin Borchardt (Polska), is an American-Japanese documentary Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda” (dir. Stephen Nomura Schible). In this moving documentary a story about the roots of music turns into a film meditation, which talks about the human fight with inhibitions. The protagonist, an Academy Award winner for his original score for the film “The Last Emperor”, this time shows his other faces: as a music experimenter, an activist fighting against environmental degradation and a man struggling with serious illness. The film received also the Student Jury award.
The Golden Hobby-Horse in the National Competition went to “Unconditional Love” by Rafał Łysak (Poland). The Jury led by Tadeusz Sobolewski appreciated the film “for a story about an intimate reality of people from different generations, which escapes a stereotypical judgment. If we watch the world so closely it can actually be tolerant as love is unconditional”.
The best Polish animation is “III” by Marta Pajek (Poland). It is the second Silver Hobby-Horse in the artist’s career. After two years Pajek came back to the idea of an impossible figure, which this time in a sensual and full of eroticism way portrays relations between men and women.
The award for the best Polish short fiction was handed out “for an accurate, comedic attempt to encapsulate the madness of the contemporary world” to Maciej Kawalski for his film “Atlas” (Poland).
The special mention went to the last year’s winner Damian Kocur for his film “1410”.
The audience award went to the Polish director Marta Prus for her film “Over the limit”.
For the fourth time the Krakow Film Festival, being among Europe’s most important film festivals, recommends feature documentary films for the European Film Award. This year the official recommendation was given to “White Mama” (Zosya Rodkevich, Evgeniya Ostanina).
The 59th Krakow Film Festival will take place May 26th to June 2nd, 2019.
Every year the third day of the Krakow Film Festival ends with the ceremony devoted to the most important festival award – Dragon of Dragons – awarded for an exceptional contribution to the development of the world cinema. This year the Krakow Film Foundation Program Council honored outstanding documentary filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa as the 21st winner of this prestigious prize, and also the youngest one in the history of the award.
“I can say that Krakow Film Festival is my festival. I came here with my first film and since then each of my documentary films has been shown here. So in this sense Krakow is my city” – said Sergei Loznitsa.
The head of the Program Council, film critic and scholar Prof. Tadeusz Lubelski said that “despite the variety of genres Loznitsa’s films are very coherent. First of all, in the stylistic sense: they are easily recognized by the distinctive minimalism, infinitely extended shots (as if he was waiting to extract from reality a hidden truth), carefully counted rhythm and precisely created soundtrack. It produces a certain archaic effect as if the director was going back to one of the previous eras in the history of cinema to reformulate its language, with a complete absence of the author’s commentary neither as voiceover nor non-diegetic music”.
The official Dragon of Dragons ceremony took place on May 29th, 2018 during the 58th Krakow Film Festival. As part of the retrospective included in the festival program, the festival screened films made by the director and among them his latest documentary “Victory Day” (“Den’ Pobedy”), which will have in Krakow its Polish premiere. The traditional winner’s master class will take place on May 30th in Małopolski Ogród Sztuki.
The ceremony ended with the screening of three films personally introduced by the director: “The Letter”, “The Train Stop” and “The Old Jewish Cemetery”.
Sergei Loznitsa was born on September 5th, 1964 in Baranovchi in today’s Belarus which was at the time a part of the Soviet Union. He was growing up and studying in Kiev where he graduated from Kyiv Polytechnic Institute as an engineer and mathematician. For a few years he was doing research in the Institute of Cybernetics and worked as a Japanese translator. In 1997 he graduated with honours in film production and directing from Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography in Moscow. He lives in Berlin.
During his 20-year-old career Loznitsa made a lot of films that turned out to be an international success. His three feature films “My Joy” (2010), “In the Fog” (FIPRESCI Award) (2012), “A Gentle Creature” (2017) and one documentary “Maidan” had their world premieres at the Cannes Film Festival and this year he received the best director award in the Un Certain Regard competition for his feature film “Donbass”. His other feature documentary “The Event” premiered in Venice in 2015. His films won numerous awards at film festivals around the world.
Loznitsa’a documentary debut “Today We Are Going to Build a House” was awarded at KFF the Bronze Dragon award. In the following years he received in Krakow the main festival awards three times: in 2006 the Golden Dragon for “Blockade”, in 2008 the Golden Horn for “Revue” and in 2013 once again the Golden Dragon for “The Letter”. Last year, as a part of the Focus on Germany section, the festival presented his film “Austerlitz”. In 2007 he was a member of the International Short Film Competition jury with Andrzej Żuławski as the head of the jury.
The Dragon of Dragons award, awarded this year for the 21st time, is the highest accolade of the Krakow Film Foundation Program Council, the organizer of the Krakow Film Festival, and is a proof of recognition of the contribution to the development of the documentary and animated world cinema. A lot of outstanding filmmakers were among its winners including Werner Herzog, Kazimierz Karabasz, Bohdan Kosiński, Bogdan Dziworski, Allan King, Albert Maysles, Jonas Mekas, Helena Trestíková, Stephen and Timothy Quay, Raoul Servais, Jerzy Kucia, Paul Driessen and Priit Pärn who is also a festival guest this year taking part in the Focus on Estonia section.
Concerto for Two by Tomasz Drozdowicz[/caption]
The international première of the documentary film “Concerto for Two” by Tomasz Drozdowicz will open the 58th Krakow Film Festival on the May 27th. It is a tale full of vivid episodes, telling us about the eminent conductor, pianist and composer Jerzy Maksymiuk, as well as an intimate depiction of the unique relationship which he forms with his wife Ewa.
The conductor Jerzy Maksymiuk and his wife Eve make up a special relationship. The charismatic maestro, successful in the world of music, seems to be totally helpless and lost in the daily life without the help of his wife, who supports him in the simplest everyday activities and takes many life decisions on his behalf. The camera accompanies the artist during his work with outstanding musicians and orchestras, as well as shows the fascinating world of the genius composer, absorbed in the score to the very boundaries of madness.
The director Tomasz Drozdowicz created a portrait of the artist filled with behind-the-scenes anecdotes, from which the works of the greatest composers sound out. Above all, however, he showed the story of love, passion and talent.
“It is another Polish film which will open our festival and the next one after “Dream of Warsaw” by Krzysztof Magowski, which portrays an outstanding musician,” explains Krzysztof Gierat, the Director of Krakow Film Festival. “The film about Czesław Niemen was made up of archival materials and memories, this one is a dynamic observation of the creative process clashing against prosaic, often funny everyday life, which is much harder to record as a colorful score.”
Jerzy Maksymiuk was born in Grodno. His music studies were crowned with three diplomas: piano, composition and conducting. He is the founder of the Polish Chamber Orchestra, which was considered one of the best orchestras in the world. He has given concerts in the most prestigious concert halls of the world. He has recorded about 100 albums and has written music for several dozen films, out of which he most values the soundtrack written for “The Hourglass Sanatorium,” directed by Wojciech Has.
Tomasz Drozdowicz is a graduate of Directing at the Faculty of Film and Television at the University of Silesia in Katowice. He is the author of documentary films, among others, “Kolba, na szczęście!”, “Zupa na puentach,” and the feature film “Futro,” as well as numerous music videos, television series and teleplays.
The film “Concerto for Two,” produced by Film Studio Autograf, was shown at the session Docs to Go! within the frames of the project DOC LAB POLAND at the Festival in 2016. This year, it will compete for the highest laurels in two competitions: the international music documentary film competition DocFilmMusic and in the Polish competition.
On Saturday the winners of the 57th edition of Krakow Film Festival were announced at the award ceremony, hosted by Brian Scott, a journalist and a presenter well-known to Cracovians. The international jury granted the awards to the best documentary, short and animated films, which for the entire festival week competed for the favors of the experts and the audience in 6 cinemas in Krakow.
The full list of the winners and awarded films.