Blog

Discovering Evil: The Proximity of The Propagandist

Marcell Szalontai Wednesday, 19 November 2025.
Luuk Bouwman in his film, The Propagandist revives fragments of history on the silver screen, encouraging us to reflect on whether the past is ever fully behind us. Today’s digital environment offers a wide range of possibilities when filmmakers working with analogue and digitized moving images. Contemporary documentaries tend to reinterpret the use of archival materials.

PERSONAL IS POLITICAL IS CINEMA: Cinema as a Place for the Exploration of the Political Self

Pavla Banjac Wednesday, 19 November 2025.
Arjun Talwar’s Letters from Wolf Street is the Indian-born, Polish-based director’s attempt at a dialogue between his Indian and immigrant selves and between his artistic and political selves, through filmmaking— simultaneously inscribing itself into both Indian and Polish cinema’s histories.

The Comfort of Illusion

Davtyan Mariam Sunday, 16 November 2025.
Escapism has always been one of the most common coping mechanisms when reality is too difficult to face. But how far can we go in our attempt to escape? Make It Look Real by Danial Shah is a Pakistani–Belgian film portraying a photo studio in Pakistan where people have their pictures edited. In the film, the photo studio serves as a small sanctuary for people’s hidden desires – some ask to...

About the collective power in the face of corporate behemoths

Aziz Hariz Mohamed Sunday, 16 November 2025.
In a world where corporate giants generate unimaginable profits, it is easy to forget the individuals who make this possible: the workers whose labor sustains these corporations but who themselves remain in the shadows. Union (dir. Brett Story & Stephen Maing, 2023) sheds light on these hidden figures by following the creation of the Amazon Labor Union (ALU), the first independent union...

A Structural Approach as Ethical Response to Morally Void Testimony

Nikolett Kovács Sunday, 16 November 2025.
Perpetrator documentary as a subgenre emerged with Marcel Ophüls’s The Sorrow and the Pity (1969), which interviewed German officers and French collaborators alongside resistance fighters. This documentary and its influence basically established that understanding historical crimes requires engaging with those who committed them, not just with survivors. Luuk Bouwman’s The Propagandist (2024)...

What Makes Art Art?

Yewon Shin Sunday, 16 November 2025.
Watching Danial Shah’s Make It Look Real, one frequently encounters scenes that invite comparison between the director Danial and the protagonist photographer, Sakhi. Both work with a camera, yet their conditions diverge in pay, equipment, and workplace. When Sakhi earns about 0.5 dollars per print, Danial recalls earning about 100 dollars per image a decade ago while shooting for newspapers....

Value of the Forgotten in The Long Road to the Director’s Chair

Gülce Hamamcı Saturday, 15 November 2025.
“...And yet we are strong and we are smart. And we are weird, and we laugh… And we are crazy… And that throws them completely off the track.” It is 1973. Vibeke Løkkeberg, a Norwegian filmmaker, travels to West Berlin with a small film crew to document the First International Women’s Film Seminar. The footage they captured remained lost for almost fifty years. It is 2025. After the...

Individual and Collective Perspectives in Union

Evan English Saturday, 15 November 2025.
Brett Story and Stephen T. Maing’s 2024 documentary Union details the story and struggle of members at Amazon’s JFK8 facility in their historic attempt to form a labor union. The documentary seems to be primarily interested in giving viewers a front row seat to the action as the movement develops, revolving specifically around Chris Smalls, the charismatic and ultimately divisive founder of the...

Fitting In — Why Bother?

Emma Eichler Thursday, 13 November 2025.
We’re told from the beginning that assimilation is the golden ticket. Learn the language, pick up the customs, and voilà; you’re in. You belong. Except, as Arjun Talwar shows in his documentary Letters from Wolf Street (2025), it’s not that simple. No matter how polished your assimilation act is, you’ll always be seen, and treated, as an outsider. I wanted to explore the strange paradox of...