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Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival To Host Top Oscar Contenders, Scorsese Docuseries, Honor Filmmakers Jon Alpert, Geeta Gandbhir

Last updated: September 29, 2025 5:30 am
Published: 7 months ago
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EXCLUSIVE: The Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival in Arkansas – the longest-running nonfiction cinema festival in North America – announced its lineup today, a slate packed with many of the year’s top awards contenders, from The Perfect Neighbor to Seeds, Riefenstahl and Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk.

The 34 edition of HSDFF will kick off Friday, October 10 with a gala event and screening of Tom Winston’s Lost Wolves of Yellowstone, about the audacious plan to reintroduce wolves to the famed national park that spans parts of Wyoming, Montana, and Utah. The Centerpiece Gala presentation will be the North American premiere of The Cowboy, directed by André Hörmann, a film about aspiring cowboy Crowley McCuistion that begins with him at age 11 learning to rope and ride, and follows him for the next decade.

HSDFF will close Sunday, October 18 with Move Ya Body: The Birth Of House, Elegance Bratton’s documentary about the underground dance music that emerged from Chicago’s club scene in the 1970s and ’80s. Scroll for the full festival lineup.

The impressive roster of Oscar contenders includes the features The Tale of Silyan, the Tamara Kotevska film recently acquired by National Geographic; NatGeo’s Love+War, directed by Oscar winners Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin; Holding Liat, directed by Brandon Kramer; Come See Me in the Good Light, the multiple award-winning film from Ryan White; Cover-Up, from Oscar winner Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus; Cutting Through Rocks, directed by Mohammadreza Eyni and Sara Khaki; Kim A Snyder’s The Librarians; Natchez, directed by Suzanna Herbert; The Dating Game, directed by Violet Du Feng; Oscar winner Morgan Neville’s Man on the Run, about Paul McCartney’s creative surge in the decade after he left the Beatles; and Yanuni, directed by Richard Ladkani and executive produced by Leonardo DiCaprio.

The Netflix short All the Empty Rooms, directed by Joshua Seftel, is also a top Oscar contender as is Carol & Joy, directed by Nathan Silver. Armed Only with a Camera, the HBO Oscar-contending short directed by Craig Renaud, explores the death of Renaud’s brother, Brent Renaud, a filmmaker and photojournalist who was killed in 2022 while covering the war in Ukraine. The film is particularly meaningful for HSDFF because Renaud grew up in Little Rock and the festival has named one of its top honors for him – the Brent Renaud Career Achievement Award (this year, that award will be presented to filmmaker Jon Alpert; read more about that below).

“In a world that seems, at times, on the verge of spinning out of control,” HSDFF Executive Director Ken Jacobson observed, “I marvel at the fact that something as simple as a gathering of people to watch documentary films on a big screen can feel as miraculous and urgent as it does this year. For 34 years, the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival has brought the best in non-fiction filmmaking to Hot Springs. Our community has responded by welcoming filmmakers and other guests here to join with us in celebrating this remarkable art form. This year, I am struck by the sheer quality and dynamism of the filmmaking, the courage of those willing to share their lives with the filmmakers, and the emotional depths explored through these incredibly diverse stories. If this year’s festival lineup tells us anything, it’s that creativity and truth-telling still remain as vital as ever. From our Opening to our Closing Night and everything in between, I know that our audiences are in for a very special and unique experience.”

A major highlight for cinephiles will be the screening of the first two episodes of Mr. Scorsese, a five-part documentary series on Martin Scorsese directed by award-winning filmmaker Rebecca Miller. The series features Scorsese collaborators Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster, Margot Robbie, Daniel Day-Lewis (Miller’s husband), screenwriter Paul Schrader, editor Thelma Schoonmaker, among others.

Jon Alpert will attend the Brent Renaud Career Achievement Award presentation, which will follow a special work-in-progress screening of his new documentary short The Raging Rabbi on Tuesday, October 14. “Winner of a staggering 17 National Emmy Awards, Jon Alpert has been making extraordinary documentaries on a wide range of topics for six decades,” HSDFF notes. “Nominated for two Academy Awards, Jon has won four DuPont-Columbia Awards, a Peabody Award, and was the first Inductee in the National Emmy Awards Golden Circle (Hall of Fame). Whether shooting films in war zones or capturing intimate and largely overlooked stories at home, Jon has demonstrated documentary filmmaking’s unlimited potential to educate, engage, and enlighten.”

Geeta Gandbhir will receive the festival’s Impact Award at a ceremony following the screening of her film The Perfect Neighbor, which earned her the Directing Award for U.S. Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. Netflix is set to premiere the documentary on October 17.

Gandbhir “is an award-winning filmmaker who began her career in narrative film under the mentorship of Spike Lee and Sam Pollard,” HSDFF writes. “After more than a decade in scripted film, collaborating with masters such as the Coen Brothers and Robert Altman, she transitioned to documentary filmmaking. Geeta directed Katrina: Come Hell and High Water (Netflix, 2025) alongside Spike Lee and Samantha Knowles, a three-part series revisiting post-Katrina New Orleans… Other directing credits include The Devil Is Busy (HBO) — which screens at this year’s HSDFF — How We Get Free (Oscar-shortlisted, HBO), Born in Synanon (Paramount), Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power (Emmy Award Winner, 2023).”

As Deadline reported last week, the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival will play host to many of the most important figures in documentary at its Filmmaker Forum, which runs from Oct. 12-14. As the festival notes, “In this unprecedented year, in which federal government funding has been stripped from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and public media, there is no more urgent time for filmmakers and industry leaders to meet, discuss and raise critical questions about where the documentary field stands and where to go from here.”

This is the full lineup for the 34 edition of the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival:

By the mid-1920s, all known wolf packs had been systematically eliminated from Yellowstone. On January 12, 1995, in an audacious plan launched by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Alpha Female Wolf No. 5 from Canada was carried into Yellowstone National Park, the first step in a project that would dramatically change the course of wildlife restoration in America’s most popular national park. Thomas Winston’s inspiring film captures the wolves’ remarkable journey and the courageous story of Mollie Beattie, director of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, who led the way.

Comparable in scope to such epic longitudinal portraits as 7 Up and Boyhood, director André Hörmann’s The Cowboy sets its sights on the most iconic of all American archetypes — the Western cowboy. In 2015, when we first meet 11-year-old Crowley McCuistion, he’s riding horses and learning how to rope on a Colorado ranch. Over the course of the next ten years, we bear witness as Crowley grows from boyhood to early adulthood and sees his dream of being an American cowboy prove as elusive as a runaway bull.

Tracing the roots of house music, the irresistible form of synth-based dance music that exploded out of Chicago’s underground music scene in the late ’70s and early ’80s, this electrifying documentary celebrates the pioneers and marginalized youth who transformed struggle into rhythm, igniting a joyful revolution that continues to move bodies and inspire people worldwide.

Short film follows CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp as they spend seven years documenting the empty bedrooms of children killed in school shootings. The powerful and emotional film features photographs of these “sacred spaces frozen in time,” aiming to provide a deeper understanding of the impact of gun violence in America.

Armed Only With A Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud

In March 2022, Little Rock-raised filmmaker Brent Renaud was tragically killed by Russian fire while documenting the invasion of Ukraine — the first American journalist killed in the war. Now, three years later, his brother Craig has completed an extraordinary and deeply personal portrait of Brent’s life, career and legacy. The film honors Brent’s unwavering dedication to his craft and sheds light on the dangerous realities faced by journalists working in conflict zones.

Mr. Scorsese – Part 1: Stranger in A Strange Land And Part 2: All This Filming Isn’t Healthy

This thoroughly engaging new three-part series from Rebecca Miller (Maggie’s Plan) goes deep inside the life, art, and career of legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese, with revelatory introspection from the master himself.

Countries: United Kingdom, Germany | Running Time: 102 min

As the United States set its sights on the Moon, a dedicated team worked to make those dreams a reality. These efforts were forever shaped by the tragic loss of the pilots of Apollo 1. Through archival footage and intimate interviews, meet Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee, the team selected to fly the first mission. Director Mark Craig profiles the brave crew and examines the science of space exploration in this harrowing documentary.

Meet E. Jean Carroll. She sued Donald Trump for defamation and battery… and won — twice. But that is just one small part of E. Jean’s story. A highly successful magazine writer, she also penned one of the longest-running advice columns in American publishing.

Churchill Downs is home to the excitement and opulence of the Kentucky Derby. Behind the scenes, a crew of dedicated workers care for the racehorses. Through interviews and observational footage, director Raúl O. Paz-Pastrana invites audiences into the stables to meet the people that make this legendary event possible. Filmed during an entire season at the famous racetrack, Backside presents an immersive look at the world of horse racing.

Countries: United Kingdom, Austria, USA | Running Time: 86 min

In the 1990s, the world was captivated by competing teams of balloonists who sought to become the first to circumnavigate the globe. John Dower’s thrilling documentary follows the ups-and-downs (literally and figuratively) of the odd couple Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones as the two men attempt to make history.

Twisters and cyclones and tornadoes — oh my! Filmmaker Curtis Miller dives headfirst into his own tornado obsession, spinning the storm into more than wild weather, but a full-blown American icon.

In 2015, the fate of a prominent and much photographed lion in Zimbabwe — Cecil, with his striking black mane and golden eyes — became entangled with that of an American dentist named Walter Palmer. The events that unfolded sparked a media frenzy and global outcry over trophy hunting practices. Yet, the simplicity of the outrage stood in stark contrast to the complexity of the reality. Tourism and hunting are major economic drivers in the region, often at odds with the perspectives of wildlife protectors and, especially, the local communities most directly impacted. Cecil urges us to confront the history of colonization, the ethics of conservation, the limitations of legal systems and the impacts of cancel culture.

Colorado Poet Laureate Andrea Gibson has always turned to poetry in moments of upheaval. When diagnosed with terminal cancer, they once again lean on their art, weaving verse into a profound response to mortality. With their wife and fellow poet, Megan Falley, by their side, Andrea prepares for one final, unforgettable performance while reflecting on the life, love, and community that sustained them. Full of warmth, tenderness, and poetic brilliance, this 2025 Sundance Festival Favorite Award winner is a heartbreaking yet life-affirming celebration of creativity, partnership, and the enduring power of words to light the darkest times.

After 20 years of trying, Academy Award-winning filmmaker Laura Poitras (Citizenfour) and Mark Obenhaus finally catch up with arguably the most important investigative reporter of our time, the dogged truth seeker and reluctant participant Seymour Hersh, who broke the My Lai massacre story and many others.

In a small Iranian village, newly elected councilwoman Sara Shahverdi challenges patriarchal traditions — from child marriage to women’s property rights — only to face fierce backlash and life-altering accusations in this gripping portrait of courage and resistance.

Eager to find a lasting relationship, three men in China work with Hao, a popular dating coach, as they search for a partner in this charming, funny and poignant story about modern love. Hao’s methods encourage the men to create an elaborate online persona with staged photoshoots in an effort to attract the attention of potential dates. Director Violet Du Feng’s (Hidden Letters) thoughtful documentary examines the world of online dating and the tension that exists between personal authenticity and digital perception.

Japan — two countries whose distinct cultures, politics, and economies have at times set them on a collision course — found common ground through a shared love of baseball.

What happens when we begin to lose our connection with the natural world? As outside interests seek to exploit the Kiamichi River in southeastern Oklahoma, a group of Indigenous water protectors, community leaders, and activists come together to preserve their home. Director Colleen Thurston skillfully situates deeply personal storytelling within a historical framework detailing the intentional efforts to displace people from their native lands. Drowned Land is a powerful call to restore Indigenous land stewardship and to advocate for the environment no matter where you are.

Kalief Browder was just sixteen when he was accused of stealing a backpack and sent to Rikers Island because his family couldn’t afford $3,000 bail. Though never convicted of a crime, he spent three years behind bars — two in solitary confinement — before charges were finally dropped due to insufficient evidence. Haunted by the trauma, he later took his life at 22. Told in part through his late mother’s poetry, this moving and inventive film is both heartbreaking and profound. More than a tribute, it’s a searing indictment of a broken system that discards lives, fractures communities, and disregards due process.

This moving personal documentary by Karla Murthy pieces together the story of an Indian immigrant to America who raised a family while pursuing an ever-shifting dream. From frequent relocations to a carousel of careers (culminating in a stint in Hot Springs), his choices left indelible marks on those closest to him, including strained relationships and tangled finances. Through the eyes of his daughter, the film explores a legacy that is at once frustrating, and deeply human. By turns tender and candid, it’s a portrait of a father remembered in all his complexity, contradictions, and love.

Legendary filmmaker Werner Herzog joins Dr. Steve Boyes in his search for rare elephants in this fascinating documentary about the awe and mystery of the natural world. Herzog brings his signature style to his latest work as the quest to find photo evidence of the creatures evolves into a philosophical and lyrical reflection on the search for knowledge and certainty. With beautiful cinematography and a deep well of curiosity, Ghost Elephants celebrates science and the complexity of life on Earth.

Join Emily Harrington as she prepares for her next epic climb: ascending El Capitan in 24 hours. From the extreme toll of training to the desire to start a family, director Jon Glassberg shines a light on the pressures faced by a person completing a high profile feat. This personal documentary offers a thrilling and intimate look at Harrington’s life and career. Featuring interviews with outdoor legends Hilaree Nelson and Alex Honnold, Girl Climber is an exciting look at the pursuit of excellence.

A Healing Journey – Comanche Academy

Directors: Comanche Academy, Kathryn Boyd-Batstone

Country: USA | Running Time: 82 min

After generations of language loss caused by federal policies and forced assimilation, the Comanche Nation is reclaiming its ancestral tongue through a groundbreaking charter school in rural Oklahoma. More than a classroom, the school serves as a site of community healing and nation-building, helping students and elders alike confront and overcome generational trauma. Through an intimate portrait of resilience, the film reveals the enduring strength and hope of a people determined to create positive futures for the next generation by centering culture and within their education system.

On October 7, 2023, Liat Beinin Atzili and her husband were kidnapped during the Hamas attack on Israel, leaving their family shattered and desperate for answers. Shortly after, filmmaker and relative Brandon Kramer began documenting their fight to bring Liat home. What emerges is an unflinching portrait of loved ones navigating anguish, hope, and division as they struggle to remain united. Intimate and deeply personal, the film captures a family wrestling with impossible choices, asking how far we should go for those we love and what it means to hold onto our convictions in the darkest of times.

Known as “The Voice of God,” Barbara Jordan brought cool reasoning and profound oratory to the national stage, shattering barriers as the first Black woman elected to the Texas Senate. Elected to Congress in 1972, her sharp intellect and moral clarity made her a beacon during the Watergate hearings, when she spoke with courage and conviction for the American people. Featuring rich archival footage, including appearances from fellow Southern icons of the era, this moving documentary honors Jordan’s remarkable presence, power, and principles.

Witness the magic of the creative process as acclaimed sculptor James Grashow begins work on a new, major project in this heartwarming documentary about legacy and faith. Over the course of four years, Jimmy creates “The Cathedral,” an impressive wood carving that recreates and recontextualizes Christian iconography.

Three transgender teens and their families navigate the everyday realities of growing up while also confronting the rise of legislation banning gender-affirming care in the United States. Director Gianna Toboni spends a year with the families as they must decide whether to stay in their home state or move to an area that is more compassionate and inclusive. This powerful coming-of-age documentary profiles these remarkable teenagers while also depicting the everyday advocacy that empowers individuals and stands up to intolerance.

K-number is an affecting true-crime documentary that pulls back the curtain on the dark underbelly of South Korea’s adoption industry. Following one adoptee’s deeply personal search for her biological roots, the film uncovers the hidden history of Korean overseas adoption. The title refers to the identification number assigned to each child before being sent abroad to strangers — a haunting symbol of loss and displacement.

As calls for book bans sweep across the United States, more than 850 titles — most centered on race, inclusivity, and LGBTQIA+ stories — are suddenly under fire. Nowhere is the battle more heated than in Texas and Florida, where librarians stand at the frontlines. Fiercely defending the First Amendment, they resist mounting pressures to erase diverse voices from shelves, even as organized efforts push censorship nationwide.

In this gripping follow-up to the acclaimed I Didn’t See You There, filmmaker Reid Davenport turns his lens to the disability rights movement through the story of Elizabeth Bouvia. Once at the center of a landmark Right to Die case, Bouvia fought to end her life while living with the challenges of cerebral palsy. Though her legal battle became a fixture in classrooms and ethics debates, she herself vanished from public view. As Davenport searches for her, he exposes the intimate struggles behind the headlines and the thorny questions of government control, personal autonomy, and the fight for disability rights.

Descend into the darkest parts of the ocean with marine biologist Dr. Edith Widder as she embarks on a thrilling and potentially game changing scientific quest: to gather video evidence of bioluminescent lifeforms. Director Tasha Van Zandt showcases the painstaking process of Widder’s work, crafting a documentary that is a love letter to both science and the natural world.

Lynsey Addario’s photos have shown the human face of global conflict for more than two decades. In this intimate portrait, the legendary photojournalist reflects on her personal and professional life as she is called to report on the war in Ukraine. This intimate profile directed by Academy Award winners Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin (Free Solo) follows Addario as she navigates the joys and responsibilities of family and the distance and dangers inherent in her work.

What comes after The Beatles? This rousing music documentary offers an intimate profile of Sir Paul McCartney as he embarks on his next creative journey following his time with the Fab Four. Oscar winner Morgan Neville takes audiences behind the fame, the speculation, and the headlines to witness the craft and the process of creating new music.

In Natchez, Mississippi, antebellum mansions aren’t just historic landmarks — they’re the heart of a thriving tourism industry that fuels the town’s identity and economy. This insightful documentary introduces the many people who keep the tours alive: mansion owners clinging to family legacy, costumed guides reveling in pageantry, park rangers committed to fuller history, and locals pushing for more complex storytelling. Each participant has their own reasons — pride, profit, or passion — making for a fascinating and often contradictory portrait of a community built on memory.

For years, Barry Cooper was a star Texas narcotics officer, famed for busting marijuana dealers with swagger and skill. But when the toll of his aggressive tactics became undeniable, Barry stunned his peers by quitting the force — turning instead to teach the very people he once targeted how to evade the cops, while exposing police corruption. Hailed as a folk hero by cannabis users and branded public enemy number one by law enforcement, Barry’s outrageous reinvention is filled with wild stories, big personalities, and Texas-size spectacle.

One night, a seemingly ordinary Florida neighborhood is forever changed when a woman fatally shoots her neighbor, citing the state’s “stand your ground” law. Was she acting out of fear, or something more sinister? Constructed from extensive police body camera footage, this remarkable documentary pieces together the unraveling of a vibrant community, capturing the devastation that follows in raw, immediate detail. As neighbors grieve and a town struggles to make sense of the violence, the film asks whether such laws truly protect or embolden dangerous manipulators to justify deadly choices.

Sky Hopinka’s immersive documentary carries us into the heart of a day at a pow wow, from the quiet bustle of setup to the riveting final dances. With an intimate and energetic lens, the film pulls back the curtain on this iconic American gathering, and showcases the rhythms that bring the pow wow to life. Behind the camera, Hopinka entwines himself into the narrative, playfully acknowledging his own positionality as a pow wow person while inviting viewers to share in the personal connections that define the event.

Countries: France, Palestine, Iran | Running Time: 113 min

In this harrowing documentary, filmmaker Sepideh Farsi shares the recordings of video calls with her late friend Fatma Hassouna, a Palestinian photographer living in Gaza. Over the course of one year, Hassouna shares her experience of the rapidly deteriorating conditions as Israeli forces continue their assault on Gaza. Even amidst the atrocities and the devastating loss, Hassouna remains defiantly hopeful and forms a deep connection with Farsi. Put Your Soul On Your Hand and Walk is a powerful meditation on friendship and a searing look at the unending violence in Gaza.

In this work in progress screening, Jon Alpert provides an intimate portrait of Yuri Foreman, a man who lives in two worlds that are seemingly at polar opposites. While studying to be a rabbi, Foreman seeks to become the first Jewish athlete in decades to claim a world boxing title.

This multiple award-winning coming-of-age documentary follows 17-year-old Ku Stevens, a runner training alone on the Yerington Paiute reservation in Northwest Nevada, chasing his dream of competing for the University of Oregon. As he pushes his body across the desert landscapes, memories of his great-grandfather Frank Quinn surface, who at eight-years -old ran 50 miles to escape an Indian boarding school. Ku’s pursuit of a collegiate qualifying time becomes inseparable from this family legacy, as he weaves past and present into every stride. Amid the solitude of his training, Ku confronts generational trauma and creates new ways to heal his community through running.

Leni Riefenstahl remains one of cinema’s most controversial figures — hailed for her artistry, condemned for her propaganda. This probing documentary explores her life and career while confronting questions of complicity, responsibility, and power: who gets to tell history, and at what cost? Drawing on Riefenstahl’s own words to reveal hypocrisy and self-mythologizing, the film utilizes archival footage and photographs to make history feel alive, immediate, and unsettlingly urgent.

For generations, Black farmers in the American South have cultivated the land, only to be left behind by programs meant to support them. Seeds follows multigenerational families determined to preserve their heritage despite mounting obstacles — navigating lawsuits, shifting federal promises, and the changing landscape of modern agriculture. With patience and power, the film gradually reveals how an unequal system threatens livelihoods, legacies, and the broader future of American farming.

History is made when Sarah McBride is elected to the House of Representatives and she becomes the first transgender person to serve in Congress. Join McBride on her journey from the campaign trail to Washington DC in this powerful political documentary. Director Chase Joynt (Framing Agnes) accompanies McBride through the triumphant highs and devastating lows in the life of a public servant chronicling everything from a celebratory call from President Biden to harassment on Capitol Hill.

In rural North Macedonia, a farmer is confronted by the harsh realities of a changing economy and must chart a path forward for himself, his family, and the land he stewards. Nicola finds a renewed sense of self amidst these hardships as he cares for an injured white stork. Academy Award-nominated director Tamara Kotevska (Honeyland) tells a story both folkloric and startlingly frank, exploring poignant parallels between the cultural fabric of a region and the lived experience of a people trying to survive in an increasingly unstable financial situation.

Set on the bullet-scarred bobsled track of Sarajevo, The Track follows three close friends — Mirza Nikolajev, Zlatan Jakić, and Hamza Pleho — and their devoted coach, Senad Omanović. Together, they chase their Olympic dreams on crumbling infrastructure left behind from a war that scarred both their country and its people. In a generation still reckoning with the legacy of conflict, their story unfolds as a true underdog journey driven by grit, resilience, and the hope of carving a future on a track built from the past.

Julia Sweeney’s character Pat became a popular figure on Saturday Night Live in the 1990’s, even inspiring a feature film. Pat’s androgynous characteristics subverted gendered norms at time, but how is the character be perceived by contemporary audiences? With humor, ingenuity and pathos, director Ro Haber reflects on Pat’s complex legacy in the representation of trans and queer stories in media, ensuring that trans voices are centered in the process.

Countries: France, Netherlands, Belgium | Running Time: 96 min

Katya is determined to save her younger sister from the trauma of her own childhood. Having built a life for herself as a welder, Katya is prepared to do what it takes to help her family. However, her efforts to build a better life for her sister are complicated when she is forced to make a life-changing decision. In this masterfully crafted profile of Katya and her sister, director Anastasiya Miroshnichenko has painted a powerful story about sisterhood and the sacrifices we make for the people that matter most to us.

Upon her husband’s death, Kenyan widow Rodah was not met with comfort by her in-laws but with eviction, forcing her from her home and claiming the land for themselves. Refusing to accept this injustice, she fought a long and difficult battle to win back what was rightfully hers. Emerging as a determined advocate, she now dedicates her life to helping other widows do the same. Her work reveals the clash between tradition and progress, as patriarchal customs strip women of dignity and stability.

Countries: Austria, Brazil, USA, Canada, Germany | Running Time: 112 min

Both a brilliantly crafted portrait and an edge-of-your-seat thriller, Yanuni documents Juma Xipaia, the first female chief of the Xipaya people in the Brazilian Amazon, and the fight to protect her ancestral land. This riveting documentary offers unprecedented access to the fight against illegal miners and Xipaia and her allies’ activism to protect the forest, a beacon of biodiversity and the lungs of the earth.

A young life is transformed by the kindness of two librarians.

On Tomb-Sweeping Day, a Chinese teacher guides students through a unique death education class: burying the ashes of the unnamed. This tender short honors life while confronting mortality with grace and reverence.

Members of a close-knit community in Mexico City hope for the opportunity to host and care for beloved statues of the Baby Jesus that rotate from home to home each year.

As Belfast’s streetlights shift from amber to LED, two workmen and their apprentice carry out the task while residents question the replacement — illuminating how even small shifts can reveal a community’s resistance to change.

From a Polish newspaper kiosk, fleeting encounters unfold: customers chat, share worries, or simply pass through. This charming short captures everyday routines with wit and warmth, revealing how small moments quietly shape our lives.

Palestinian-American Nassib journeys back to his ancestral land, where tending to his family’s ancient olive trees becomes an act of remembrance, belonging, and renewal.

The weekly radio show “Your Opinion, Please!” invited listeners across Montana to share what was on their mind in the early 2000s. This absorbing documentary shares audio from the trailblazing show and creates an intimate portrait of a people and the place they call home.

Two jokesters in Arkansas begin to report football scores for a fictional high school, Village Academy, to the local media and a simple prank evolves into something much bigger.

Three Haudenosaunee seed keepers weave ancestral knowledge with contemporary rematriation practices, centering food sovereignty in the path toward cultural sustainability.

An avid group of cyclists chart a path to ride across the state of Arkansas. Along the way, their bonds deepen and they learn about the land they call home.

Arkansas artist V.L. Cox reflects on the personal nature of her work as she begins to craft a new installation inspired by the history of an abandoned church.

A daughter returns to eastern Kentucky to excavate her father’s filmmaking legacy.

Growing up on the Mississippi Choctaw reservation, Carly Keats stood out as a stickball player before transitioning to a college career as a standout on the University of Arkansas women’s basketball team.

Spend a charming, and unforgettable, afternoon with Oscar nominee Carol Kane and Joy, her mother and roommate, as they revisit memories, hold music lessons, and tell stories from their lives.

In this lyrical self-reflection, filmmaker Nathan Willis leans into the tremor of his young-onset Parkinson’s and the fragile beauty of Super 8mm film, finding meaning in their shared imperfection.

Created in 48 hours, this observational short chronicles an afternoon in the life of three high school students the day after graduation, as they confront anxieties and possibilities about the future before them.

Ah, the iconic sandwich: peanut butter and… pickles?! Don’t knock it until you try it! In this delightful short, Dwight Garner shares his recipe for the unlikely combo.

Clinic staff and volunteers work to support the reproductive rights of their Arkansas community following the overturn of Roe V Wade.

When their South Florida trailer park is slated for closure, three older friends face eviction and uncertainty, clinging to community and one another as they search for a place to call home.

Meet New York City’s most eccentric driving instructor: foul-mouthed, unorthodox, and wildly effective. Between curses and chaos, she turns nervous students into licensed drivers.

After missing a Paralympic medal by just 1/100 of a second in 2016, Lizzi Smith channels her heartbreak into fierce determination, setting her sights on second chances.

Educators and students face challenges from the State of Arkansas as high schools prepare to offer AP African American Studies courses in this thought-provoking documentary about education and history.

When an aging dreamer’s bouncy house business falters, he turns to his steadier sibling for help — risking old resentments resurfacing in this poignant short about family, second chances, and the fragile ties that hold us together.

Frank Duca Funeral Home has been a family-run business for three generations. As times change, the Duca family must now decide how to best adapt their business model to serve their clientele.

The color of the Chihuahuan desert outside El Paso, Texas and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Red Sands is home to a vibrant community of off-roaders: charging through the landscape in extravagant pastel and neon trucks.

Muscogee artist Dana Tiger and her family made waves with their bold expressions of contemporary Native art. Following years of hardship in the family, Dana revitalizes their iconic t-shirt line, breathing new life into a legacy of creativity.

After escaping an abusive relationship, Victoria starts anew in Nairobi, lifting children’s spirits — and her own — with her balloon business. This tender short captures her journey toward healing, independence, and the rediscovery of joy.

Made in America by the Hands of Immigrants. These powerful words showcase the core values of Manolo Betancur’s bakery in North Carolina. As the number of ICE raids begin to increase in his community, Betancur boldly stands with his neighbors.

This powerful short captures the extraordinary work of those providing care under constant threat in an Atlanta abortion clinic — revealing the vulnerability, resilience, and courage required to safeguard women’s health in a time of crisis.

A brutal assault could have silenced her. Instead, a young woman reclaims her voice, channeling creativity and conviction into a fight for legislation that safeguards survivors and reshapes how justice is pursued.

Led by 80-year-old Sallie Smith, a fearless group of Alabama grandmothers trade retirement for resistance, battling the state’s largest power company and its toxic coal ash pond threatening their waterways, health, and future.

A daughter returns to eastern Kentucky to excavate her father’s filmmaking legacy.

In a borough of Mexico City, families take turns caring for Baby Jesus icons.

The story of the iconic electronic music group Yello and their classic 1980’s hit song.

An unconventional sandwich that speaks to the power of food to connect us all.

A portrait of NYC’s most iconic driving instructor.

Intimate audio recordings trace a season in the daily life of Corinne and Tiana, two Black womxn whose tender partnership reveals the beauty, compassion, and resilience of love shared in everyday moments.

Countries: France, Morocco, Italy, Qatar | Running Time: 26 min

In L’mina, residents of a Moroccan town step into meticulously crafted sets to reenact the mining operations that define their community

What’s more delightful — the various patterns stamped on manhole covers, or the eccentric man who can’t stop admiring them?

The Last Jews of Guantanamo (Los Últimos Judíos De Guantánamo)

An intimate portrait of a Jewish community in Guantánamo, Cuba.

Meet the people behind the technology guiding self-driving cars in this innovative documentary that uses screen-recordings and interviews to showcase how humanity is still in the driver’s seat.

A visually striking journey through digitized 1920s communist film negatives, archivist Ting Su unearths echoes of her past, linking generational labor struggles to her family’s own story in China.

In 1972, biologists were surprised to discover that a large number of nesting Channel Island seagull pairs are female. The “lesbian seagulls” spark a media frenzy during an era influenced by the LGBTQ+ rights movement.

A couple plan to be cryogenically frozen so that they can be reunited even after death. The plan becomes complicated when Alan meets someone new after his wife passes away.

As a child, Danielle Ferrante knew nothing about her father. All she had was one photograph. Over time, Ferrante learns the complicated truth about her father’s absence, his incarceration, and the legacy he leaves behind.

A theater production of Hitchcock’s The Birds. A weekend in a Frank Lloyd Wright house. A birthday party among friends. These moments, captured on VHS, are revisited decades later as their creators watch them in a mobile archiving project.

Through rich archival footage and a personal lens, this heartfelt short honors the groundbreaking work of Appalshop, where young people in Eastern Kentucky used cameras to authentically portray Appalachian life and reclaim their community’s story.

Made in America by the Hands of Immigrants. These powerful words showcase the core values of Manolo Betancur’s bakery in North Carolina. As the number of ICE raids begin to increase in his community, Betancur boldly stands with his neighbors.

Two jokesters in Arkansas begin to report football scores for a fictional high school, Village Academy, to the local media and a simple prank evolves into something much bigger.

Members of a close-knit community in Mexico City hope for the opportunity to host and care for beloved statues of the Baby Jesus that rotate from home to home each year.

Ah, the iconic sandwich: peanut butter and… pickles?! Don’t knock it until you try it! In this delightful short, Dwight Garner shares his recipe for the unlikely combo.

Muscogee artist Dana Tiger and her family made waves with their bold expressions of contemporary Native art. Following years of hardship in the family, Dana revitalizes their iconic t-shirt line, breathing new life into a legacy of creativity.

The weekly radio show “Your Opinion, Please!” invited listeners across Montana to share what was on their mind in the early 2000s. This absorbing documentary shares audio from the trailblazing show and creates an intimate portrait of a people and the place they call home.

A woman turns to taxidermy to process grief, transforming roadkill into art. This eccentric yet tender short uncovers an unexpected path through loss, discovering beauty in the bizarre and honoring love through the most unlikely of materials.

In rural North Carolina, eccentric artist Freeman Vines hand-carves guitars, chasing a sound he first created decades ago. This lyrical short profiles a visionary craftsman steeped in myth, music, and mystery.

A group of queer athletes train for the Gay Games in this joyful documentary about figure skating and creating more inclusive spaces within the world of sports.

The music group Yello captured the style and attitude of the 1980s in their song Oh Yeah. The tune became an instantly recognizable sensation after it was included in Ferris Beller’s Day Off. Meet the musicians behind the smash hit in this charming documentary.

Country: USA | Running Time: 16 min Meet Mato Wayuhi. The young Lakota musician brings his distinct voice and style to all of his projects including the beloved TV series Reservation Dogs. Go behind the scenes as he works on his album Stankface Standing Soldier.

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