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PRODUCTION / FINANCEMENT Lituanie / Estonie / Bulgarie

EXCLUSIF : La documentariste lituanienne Giedrė Žickytė nous parle de son nouveau projet, Für Irena

par 

- Elle suit dans ce long-métrage les dernières années de la vie d’Irena Veisaite, académique en théâtre lituanienne, professeur germaniste et survivante à l’Holocauste

EXCLUSIF : La documentariste lituanienne Giedrė Žickytė nous parle de son nouveau projet, Für Irena
Für Irena de Giedrė Žickytė (© Moonmakers)

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

Lithuanian documentarian Giedrė Žickytė is now working on her new outing, a documentary feature titled Für Irena. Žickytė’s most recent picture, The Jump [+lire aussi :
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, told the convoluted story of Simas Kudirka, a Lithuanian sailor who decides to jump across icy waters onto an American boat in a desperate bid for freedom. It received wide acclaim and took part in a number of international film festivals, such as Warsaw (where it won the Award for Best Documentary Feature), Rome, Palm Springs, Docville (where it picked up the Audience Award) and Doc NYC.

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Für Irena zooms in on the last few years of an extraordinary woman, Lithuanian theatre scholar, Germanist professor and Holocaust survivor Irena Veisaite. “Never take revenge,” Irena’s mother told her before she was executed by the Nazis. These words kept Irena from feeling blind hatred even in her darkest hour. Born in 1928, Irena barely escaped perishing in the Kaunas ghetto. She was taken into the Christian family of a Lithuanian woman who had six children of her own. After the Soviets occupied the country, the woman was deported to Siberia. Losing her two mothers – one Jewish, killed by the Nazis, the other Catholic, sent to the Soviet Gulag – made a huge impact on Irena. In the secret ghetto school, Irena read Schillers Ballads, and after the war, she decided to study German literature. As a survivor of two totalitarian regimes, Irena dedicated her whole life to resolving conflicts between people and cultures, and healing trauma in society.

In detail, the documentary promises to offer “an authentic look into a century of war, atrocities, loss and, ultimately, forgiveness through the eyes of a woman who has lost everything but love”.

Speaking about the project, Žickytė said: “Jerusalem of the North, that’s what Vilnius was called before. More than 95% of Lithuania’s Jewish population was massacred over the three-year German occupation – and that is the highest percentage of Holocaust-related murder in all of Europe. Irena is one of the few who miraculously survived. Twice, in Lithuania’s darkest hours, she was allowed to flee but chose not to.”

Žickytė met Veisaite for the first time seven years ago, and they became friends despite their 52-year age gap: “I was inspired by her unbreakable spirit and exceptional humanity. [...] I started developing the idea of this film a few years ago. I have chosen an observational method to tell Irena’s story – to follow her in the present moment and reveal her story through everyday situations. It’s fair to say that I was learning from her through my film camera. But the pandemic broke out, and I was not able to continue filming, and then the pandemic took her from us… This was, and still is, deeply painful. Consequently, the material we shot during the development stage and at the beginning of the production has become very precious. The captured footage is a testimony of the last few years of this exceptional woman’s life, [and the gap] will be filled with archive materials.

“This film is going to be my farewell letter to Irena – to the woman who made a huge impact on me with her empathy, intelligence, humanism, commitment to understanding the other, and her vigorously open mind. I miss Irena, especially today, when war has returned to Europe. Everything Irena worried about is now bound to come true. Physically, she is not with us any more, but can her wisdom still guide us and help us survive these burdensome times?”

During its development, the project was presented at the DOK Leipzig Co-Pro Market, where it received the Current Time Award (see the news). It has also been selected for the Gap-Financing Market at this year’s Venice Production Bridge (see the news). Confirmed crew members include DoP Eitvydas Doškus (Feature Film About Life [+lire aussi :
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interview : Dovile Sarutyte
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, Peace to Us in Our Dreams
 [+lire aussi :
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), with additional cinematography by Rimvydas Leipus and Rein Kotov, and editor Danielius Kokanauskis (The Jump, Mr. Landsbergis [+lire aussi :
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, State Funeral [+lire aussi :
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]
).

Für Irena is being produced by Giedrė Žickytė for Lithuania’s Moonmakers, in co-production with Pille Rünk, of Estonia’s Allfilm, and Martichka Bozhilova, of Bulgaria’s Agitprop. It received support from the Lithuanian Film Centre, Eurimages, the European Union’s MEDIA programme, the Estonian Film Institute, the Bulgarian National Film Center, the Cultural Endowment of Estonia, Vilnius’ Goethe-Institut as well as Baltic pubcasters LRT and ERR. Its release is slated for 2023.

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(Traduit de l'anglais)

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