
Once a year, at the second largest documentary film festival in Europe, DOK Leipzig, an outstanding film is awarded the Goethe Documentary Film Prize by the Goethe-Institut’s jury. First presented in 2003, the award comes with 2,000 euro prize money. The Goethe-Institut also acquires the rights to the film and arranges the subtitling in eight languages so that it can be shown at the 160 Goethe-Instituts throughout the world. The jury is chaired by a documentary filmmaker or international expert and composed of film experts from the Goethe-Instituts. They consider the aesthetic merit of the documentaries as well as relevant perspectives on Germany and the world that contribute to an intercultural socio-political discourse.
The Goethe-Institut Toronto presents three of these recent award-winning documentaries in the series GOETHE FILMS “Peak: German Docs” from May 11-23.
LAND IN SIGHT is an inspiring and sensitive film by Judith Keil and Antje Kruska that won the Goethe Documentary Film Prize 2013 and will be co-presented with the Diaspora Film Festival.
Its protagonists Abdul, Brian, and Farid are living in a home for asylum seekers in Belzig, a small town in the Northeast of Germany. Trying to get access to German society, they experience culture clash daily:
their ideas differ considerably from local mentalities at village fests, in government offices, and in night clubs.
The jury chose the documentary because “within the current discussion about migration to Europe, this film shows the everyday problems with which refugees are confronted. The film succeeds –with subtle humour, by taking a close look, and by always being at eye level with the protagonists– in presenting a multi-faceted panorama of natives and migrants living together in a small German town.
With their persistence and a great deal of empathy, the female directors push their way right to the core of German bureaucracy, thus breaking well-established clichés that are prevalent in the East German province.”