L'IDFA annonce sa sélection compétition
par Savina Petkova
- Du 13 au 23 novembre, la grande kermesse du documentaire va présenter dans la capitale hollandaise près de 250 films venus de 76 pays

Cet article est disponible en anglais.
International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) has just announced the line-up of the main competitions for the festival’s 38th edition. This year marks the inaugural edition for new artistic director Isabel Arrate Fernandez, with close to 250 titles from 76 countries under the festival’s aegis. Newly unveiled selections include the Envision and International Competitions, the entire IDFA DocLab programme, Luminous, Frontlight and the nominees for all cross-section awards. IDFA takes place in Amsterdam from 13-23 November.
Instead of an opening feature film, this year, IDFA will begin with a selection of three boundary-pushing shorts: As I Lay Dying by Mohammadreza Farzad and Pegah Ahangarani, Intersecting Memory by Shayma' Awawdeh, and happiness by Firat Yücel, which, according to Fernandez, will “set the tone for a festival that explores major issues of the present, and which makes room for new voices, fresh forms and unexpected perspectives”.
The International Competition presents 12 films, nine of which are world or international premieres, which transform deeply personal stories into reflections on today’s most pressing issues. The European world premieres are Silent Flood (Ukraine/Germany) by Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk (selected in Cannes' 2022 Directors' Fortnight with Pamfir [+lire aussi :
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interview : Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk
interview : Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk
fiche film]), All My Sisters (Austria/France/Germany/Iran) by Massoud Bakhshi, A Fox Under a Pink Moon (Iran/France/UK/USA/Denmark) by Mehrdad Oskouei, The Kartli Kingdom (Georgia/France) by Tamar Kalandadze and Julien Pebrel, The Shipwrecked (Netherlands) by Diego Gutiérrez, Synthetic Sincerity (UK) by Marc Isaacs and Mailin (Argentina/France/Romania – see the news) by IDFA regular María Silvia Esteve. Mary Stephen's Toronto Centrepiece entry Palimpsest: The Story of a Name (France/Hong Kong/Taiwan), Karima Saïdi's Those Who Watch Over (Belgium/France/Qatar) and Zahraa Ghandour's Flana (Iraq/France/Qatar) are the other European co-productions selected, and the section is rounded off by Lucas Gallo's December (Argentina/Uruguay) and Katy Scoggin's Flood (USA).
Twelve films will also be competing in the Envision Competition, a section that highlights stylistically bold documentaries and their innovative use of cinematic language. The European titles are Trillion (Norway/USA) the new film by Viktor Kossakovsky (recently selected in Berlinale's competition with Architecton [+lire aussi :
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interview : Victor Kossakovsky
fiche film]); Holy Destructors (Lithuania/France/Latvia) by Lithuanian director Aiste Žegulytė (Animus Animalis (A Story about People, Animals and Things) [+lire aussi :
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interview : Aistė Žegulytė
fiche film]); Amílcar (Spain/Portugal/France/Sweden/Cape Verde) by Miguel Eek (Burden [+lire aussi :
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fiche film]), Blood Red (Czech Republic) by Martin Imrich, Confessions of a Mole (China/Poland) by Mo Tan, Fordlândia Panacea (Portugal/Brazil) by Susana de Sousa Dias and Love-22-Love (Netherlands) by Jeroen Kooijmans, as well as two Venice Giornate degli Autori entries (Gianluca Matarrese's I Want Her Dead [+lire aussi :
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interview : Gianluca Matarrese
fiche film] and Morteza Ahmadvand's and Firouzeh KhosrovaniIran's Past Future Continuous [+lire aussi :
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fiche film]). The section is rounded off by Powwow People (USA), the new film by established auteur Sky Hopinka, Our Body Is an Expanding Star (Mexico) by Semillites Hernández Velasco and Tania Hernández Velasco and Treat Me Like Your Mother (Lebanon) by Mohamad Abdouni.
Films across those strands will also be eligible for the IDFA Awards for Best First Feature and Best Dutch Film, as well as the FIPRESCI Award. There is also a prize to be given out across the film programmes, for Best Creative Use of Archive – The Beeld & Geluid IDFA ReFrame Award. The festival juries are yet to be announced.
At the press conference, IDFA announced the selected titles for its Luminous and Frontlight competitions, as well as the IDFA DocLab Competitions for Immersive Non-Fiction and for Digital Storytelling, while the non-competitive DocLab Spotlight section includes critically acclaimed VR and full-dome projects alongside live performances.
“Through [these selected films], we get to be part of the courage of filmmakers and artists who refuse to give up – who keep pursuing their creative vision and their commitment to stories that they feel matter,” Isabel Arrate Fernandez said of the programme during the press conference. The winners of IDFA 2025 will be announced during the awards ceremony on 20 November.
You can browse the detailed list of IDFA’s 2025 line-up here.
(Traduit de l'anglais)
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