https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/CU2506/S00329/international-filmmakers-touch-down-for-doc-edge-festival-2025.htm
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International Filmmakers Touch Down For Doc Edge Festival 2025
Monday, 30 June 2025, 9:32 pm
Press Release: Doc Edge Festival
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Over 40 international filmmakers, producers, and film
subjects are arriving in Aotearoa for the 20th anniversary
of the Doc Edge Festival, and will
available for in-person interviews and panels as their films
make their world and international
premieres.
“As we mark 20 years of Doc Edge,
it’s incredibly powerful to welcome so many international
storytellers to Aotearoa,” says Dan Shanan, Doc Edge
Executive Director. “Their presence here reflects not
only the global strength of documentary filmmaking, but also
our shared belief in the power of real stories to move,
challenge, and connect us all.”
From the heart
of Samoa to the villages of the Mediterranean, from
Bondi’s iconic Icebergs to a beloved Tokyo public pool,
this year’s guests are here to present films that
challenge, inspire, and stir conversation, on everything
from mental health and climate resilience to queer love,
digital hustle culture, war trauma, and
identity.
Among those in attendance:
- A
Quiet Love (IRE) –
Producers Anne Heffernan & Sean
Herlihy. In NZ: 1–5 July.
Three Deaf couples
share intimate love stories in Irish Sign Language,
celebrating resilience and connection through an immersive
soundscape.
- Before
the Moon Falls (USA) –
Director Kimberlee Bassford & Producer
Linda Goldstein Knowlton. In NZ: 24
June–20 July (Bassford), 24 June (Goldstein
Knowlton).
A portrait of Samoan novelist Sia Figiel,
exploring mental illness and its impact on individuals and
communities after a tragic
event.
- Carrousel
(FR) – Director Pascal
Messaoudi. In NZ: 30 June–13 July.
A poetic
look at life in a polluted Mediterranean industrial town,
highlighting community joy amid environmental
decay.
- Food
Delivery (PH) – Director
Baby Ruth Villarama. In NZ: 29 June.
A
banned film revealing the daily dangers faced by Filipino
fishermen and Coast Guard defending their
waters.
- Child
of Dust (CZ, PL, QA, SE,
VN) – Director Weronika
Mliczewska. In NZ: TBC.
A son’s emotional
search for his American father after the Vietnam War,
confronting stigma and identity.
- Click
the Link Below (NO) –
Director Audun Amundsen. In NZ: 11–20
July.
An exposé on the risks and realities of online
marketing through the eyes of a filmmaker chasing financial
freedom.
- The
Dancer (USA) –
Cinematographer Alyssa Brocato. In NZ:
TBC.
The story of a stateless Syrian refugee who uses
dance as survival and returns to war-torn Syria to heal his
community.
- Numakage
Public Pool (JP) –
Director Shingo Ota & Producer
Kyoko Takenaka. In NZ: 29 June–4 July
(Ota), 29 June–3 July (Takenaka).
A community’s grief
over the demolition of their beloved Tokyo swimming pool, a
space of joy and belonging.
- The
Pool (AUS) – Producer
Mary Macrae. In NZ: 1–6 July.
An ode
to Bondi Icebergs, where generations bond over swimming in
the iconic outdoor pool.
- OCEANIA:
Journey to the Center (US)
– Director Natalie Zimmerman
& Co-Writer/Creative Producer Tekinati
Ruka. In NZ: 1–18 July.
A poignant film on
rising seas, cultural survival, and ancestral resilience on
a coral atoll threatened by climate
change.
- Shayni
in the Sky (NZ/NO) –
Director Gabriel Garton & Film Subject
Shayni Couch. In NZ: 30 June–14 July
(Garton), from 12 July (Couch).
A mother’s journey of
grief and healing following the tragic loss of her
BASE-jumper husband.
- Strange
Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror
(USA) – Director Linus
O’Brien. In NZ: from 25 June.
The definitive
documentary on the rise and enduring cult status of the
Rocky Horror Show.
- Yurlu
| Country (AUS) –
Director Yaara Bou Melhem. In NZ:
TBC.
The fight for justice and cultural survival against
asbestos contamination in Western
Australia.
- YUMI:
The Whole World (DE) –
Director Felix Golenko. In NZ: 2–6 July.
Follow three law students from the University of the South
Pacific as they lead a historic campaign to bring climate
justice to the International Court of
Justice.
- Alofa
(AUS) – Director Rachel Lane. In
NZ: 29 June.
A former pastor confronts the challenges of
faith, culture, and sexuality within traditional Samoan
beliefs.
- Mother
of Chooks (AUS) –
Directors Jesse Samos Leaman &
Maite Martin Samos. In NZ: 29 June–13
July.
After loss, Elaine finds unexpected companionship
in chickens, becoming a local legend.
- Where
is Home (IND) – Director
Lamtiar Simorangkir. In NZ: 29 June–11
July.
A boy born behind bars faces new challenges
navigating life after release.
- Nothing
is Impossible: The Primanavia Story
(FJ) – Director Caleb Young. In
NZ: TBC.
Fijian choir Primanavia faces immense odds
preparing for the World Choir Games.
- Kapwa
(USA/PH) – Co-Director Michaela-Ternasky
Holland. In NZ: TBC.
An interactive video
installation exploring cultural erasure within the Filipino
diaspora.
- Doc Edge Superhero –
Ruby Chen, recognised for her outstanding
contribution to global documentary filmmaking. In NZ
now.
Other filmmakers and festival participants
from the likes of Australia, Fiji, India, Sweden, Norway,
and the Pacific are also arriving throughout the festival
season, with many films making their world premieres right
here in Aotearoa.
Doc Edge
2025
continues in Tāmaki Makaurau
until 13 July before moving to Pōneke and Ōtautahi from 16
– 27 July, and online in the Virtual Cinema from 28 July
– 24 August. Media are encouraged to book interviews now
with available international guests.
2025 KEY
FESTIVAL DATES &
VENUES
Industry: 30 June –
3 July, Grand Millennium
Auckland
Auckland: 25 June – 13
July, Bridgeway Cinema, The Capitol Cinema, SkyCity Theatre
and Silo 6
Wellington: 16 – 27
July, The Roxy Cinema
Christchurch:
16 – 27 July, Lumiere Cinemas, Christchurch Art Gallery,
Tūranga Central Library, and the University of
Canterbury
Awards: 3 July, Grand
Millennium Auckland
Nationwide: 28
July – 24 August, The Virtual Cinema
Stay updated
with the latest news and announcements by visiting docedge.nz.
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