Edycja: 2025

  • Debate: Between Loss and Hope: Mental Health in the Face of the Climate Crisis

    Debate: Between Loss and Hope: Mental Health in the Face of the Climate Crisis

    Debate: Between Loss and Hope: Mental Health in the Face of the Climate Crisis

    Following the screening of “The Unfixing,” we invite you to a discussion on mental health in the face of the climate crisis. The conversation, combining the director’s personal perspective with the broader context of climate change, will explore the interdependence of the human condition and the Earth.

    Participants will explore phenomena such as climate anxiety, depression, and climate distress, as well as the role of nature and biodiversity in building mental resilience. The discussion will focus not only on challenges but, above all, on finding sources of hope, a sense of empowerment, and opportunities for healing.

    The conversation will be led by Małgorzata Gołota, a journalist and podcaster known for her programs “The End of the World”, “Climate of Change” and “Get Eco.” Her guests will include:

    • Nicole Betancourt, director of the film “The Unfixing,” whose personal experience with illness became the starting point for creating a visual diary connecting the suffering of the body with the condition of the planet.
    • Marzena Cypryańska-Nezlek, social psychologist at SWPS University, expert in climate change, social innovation, and burnout among activists.
    20.09.2025
    18:45
    Kinoteka
  • A Bit of a Stranger

    A Bit of a Stranger

    A Bit of a Stranger

    reż. Svitlana Lishchynska
    Ukraine / Germany / Sweden / 2024 / 90 min / polish premiere

    A poignant, essayistic exploration of identity that reaches beyond Ukraine’s borders. Four generations of Ukrainian women from one family confront how the full-scale Russian invasion has shattered their ethnic identity, embarking on an emotional journey through family memories and history.

    “Can love exist without freedom? Can there be freedom without love?”. Svitlana, a filmmaker born in Mariupol, spent several years documenting the lives of four generations of women in her family—women painfully stripped of their national identity by Moscow’s imperial politics. The full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine brought deep shock to their lives. Svitlana’s daughter Alexandra flees to London with her two-year-old daughter Stephanie, while her mother Valentina remains in Kyiv, keeping contact with Mariupol and her family by phone. Seeking the truth about what really happened in Mariupol, Svitlana discovers how their personal experiences of war intertwine with an urgent search for family history. As events unfold, the three women face difficult questions about the true meaning of patriotism—and whether it is worth dying for. Combining footage from the war with intimate home recordings, the film weaves together the fate of one family with the broader historical and geopolitical context of Russian-Ukrainian relations.

    After the screening there will be a meeting with the film director Svitlana Lishchynska.

    20.09.2025
    18:00
    Kinoteka

    Svitlana Lishchynska

    Svitlana Lishchynska (born 1970, Mariupol) a Ukrainian film director. Svetlana has worked for more than 25 years for the leading Ukrainian TV channels. She directed numerous reality shows and documentary projects. Since 2015, Svetlana has been engaged in film production. She has directed several documentaries and written two full-length feature films.

    Director: Svitlana Lishchynska 

    Producer(s): Anna Kapustina

    Production: Albatros Communicos Film

    Language: Ukrainian, Russian, English

    Subtitles: Polish, English

  • HER Docs Forum 2025

    HER Docs Forum 2025

    HER Docs Forum 2025

    HER Docs Forum is an event for women active in the world of documentary film. The third edition of the Forum will take place on 18–19 September 2025 in Warsaw. Workshops and panel discussions will be led by invited experts from Poland and abroad.


    18.09.2025

    Austrian Cultural Forum, Próżna Street 7/9

    10:00 am – 10:50 am
    Opening of the Forum & conversation with Vibeke Løkkeberg i Mina Nybakke

    Following the screening of Long Road to Director’s Chair by Vibeke Løkkeberg on Wednesday, 17th September, the opening session will continue with a short conversation with authors of the film – Vibeke Løkkeberg i Mina Nybakke. We will explore the presence of women in film and the experiences that shaped the creation of the film.”

    Moderation: Katarzyna Trzaska – Polish Female Filmmakers Association

    11:00 am – 12:30 pm
    Networks of Creative Support

    Supporting women in film and the arts today takes many forms, facing both significant challenges and new opportunities. In this session, we will introduce organizations working at the intersection of film, education, and distribution, which have been strengthening the voices of women and minorities in culture for years. We will discuss their practices and strategies, as well as how we can better join forces to create a shared space for diverse perspectives.

    Participants:

    • Alexia Ruiz Munoz – EWA Network
    • Charlotte Ducos – SWISS FILMS / Loreley Films, Switzerland
    • Ira Tantsiura – FILMA, Ukraine
    • Alexa Cardas – F-Sides, Romania
    • Katarzyna Trzaska – Polish Female Filmmakers Association

    Moderation: Maria Krauss – Women of Film

    12:45 pm – 2:15 pm
    Motherhood in artistic work

    What is the everyday life of mothers–creators like? What support systems exist in Poland and internationally? Together with the Warsaw Observatory of Culture, which prepared a report on motherhood in creative work, we will explore the experiences, challenges, and strategies for preventing burnout. The conversation will focus not only on difficulties, but also on solidarity, mutual support, and ways to navigate the creative and professional process as mothers.

    Participants:

    • Aleksandra Wiechowska – Warsaw Culture Observatory
    • Agnieszka Strzeżek – illustrator and painter, one of the initiators of the “Mother Creators” collective
    • Jaśmina Wójcik – visual artist, director and author of listening-focused, participatory socio-artistic actions
    • Tereza Simikova – director, producer, consultant

    Moderation: Marta Golba-Naumann – HER Docs Foundation

    2:15 pm – 3:15 pm
    Networking lunch

    3:15 pm – 5:30 pm
    Workshop: Microaggressions in creative environments and the workplace

    The creative industries are dynamic but also contain invisible barriers. Microaggressions—subtle, often unconscious words, gestures, or behaviours—can undermine a sense of belonging and affect creative processes. This workshop will explore what microaggressions are, their forms, and how they affect women in professional settings. Participants will learn how to recognise and respond to them, and how to build more inclusive, supportive environments.

    Format: lecture + interactive discussion + case studies + individual, pair, and group exercises.

    Facilitator: Dr Sandra Frydrysiak (she/her) – cultural studies scholar, sociologist, gender studies expert.


    19.09.2025

    Goethe Institut, Chmielna Street 13A

    10:00 am – 11:30 am
    Meeting with directors Eliza Kubarska and Natalie Haala

    A conversation with the directors Eliza Kubarska and Natalie Haala about the art of documentary filmmaking shaped by journeys across continents and encounters with diverse cultural contexts. Their films emerge from places that are both remote and universal, offering stories that resonate far beyond their origins. The discussion will also touch on the balance between the demands of expeditions and the rhythms of everyday and family life. This meeting invites reflection on passion, resilience, and the search for a personal voice in a rapidly changing world.

    11:45 am – 1:15 pm
    Who tells whose story, and why?

    This talk will focus on representation, diversity, and inclusion in documentary filmmaking, as well as on the complex relationship between creators and protagonists. We will explore how to practice responsible storytelling, create safer creative environments, and account for diverse social and cultural experiences.

    Participants:

    Moderation: Gosia Juszczak – director

    1:30 pm – 2:30 pm
    Moving Narratives: Storytelling and Communication Beyond the Screen

    How do we reach new audiences? How can stories be told across platforms and engage younger generations? This session focuses on innovative distribution strategies, multiplatform storytelling, and building communities around urgent stories.

    This discussion will focus on new forms of distribution and promotion for documentary films, as well as strategies for building communities around important topics. We will talk about multi-platform storytelling, innovative audience engagement tools, and ways to bring documentaries to the places where they are needed most.

    Participants:

    • Karolina Sienkiewicz – Publicist, Distributor, SO FILMS
    • Joanne Popinska – XR filmmaker, documentarian, sociologist, Infinite Frame Media

    Moderation: Anna Ramskogler-Witt – The Good Media Network, Berlin

    2:45 pm – 4:00 pm
    Producer–director collaboration

    Every film is the result of teamwork, with the producer–director relationship being particularly crucial. This session will explore different models of collaboration, ways to navigate conflict, and the opportunities offered by a partnership-based approach in filmmaking.

    Participants:

    • Katarzyna Malinowska – Head of Young Creators Programs, Munk Studio
    • Zofia Kujawska – Producer

    19.09.2025

    Kinoteka

    16:00
    Debate: Experiment in Cinema – How it is Done in Europe

    In Poland, the dissemination of experimental cinema remains relatively niche, while in countries such as Austria or the Netherlands there are far more channels for promotion, exhibition, and distribution, enabling it to reach a wider audience. What facilitates the functioning of experimental cinema in different contexts, and what limits it? What strategies, challenges, and opportunities do creators and distribution companies face?

    Participants:

    • Isabella Reicher – sixpackfilm, Austria
    • Edith van der Heijde – EYE Filmmuseum, Holandia
    • Claudia Slanar – Diagonale Festival, Austria
    • María Vera – Kino Rebelde, Portugalia/świat

    Moderation: Weronika Zalewska and Ewelina Węgiel

    18.09.2025
    10:00
    Austrian Cultural Forum, Próżna Street 7/9
    19.09.2025
    10:00
    Goethe Institut, Chmielna Street 13A

    HER Community

  • Debate: Experiment in Cinema – How it is Done in Europe

    Debate: Experiment in Cinema – How it is Done in Europe

    Debate: Experiment in Cinema – How it is Done in Europe

    In Poland, the dissemination of experimental cinema remains relatively niche, while in countries such as Austria or the Netherlands there are far more channels for promotion, exhibition, and distribution, enabling it to reach a wider audience. What facilitates the functioning of experimental cinema in different contexts, and what limits it? What strategies, challenges, and opportunities do creators and distribution companies face?

    The discussion will feature renowned experts representing different professional fields:

    • Isabella Reicher (sixpackfilm, Austria)
    • Edith van der Heijde (EYE Filmmuseum, Netherlands)
    • Claudia Slanar (Diagonale Festival, Austria)
    • María Vera (Kino Rebelde, Portugal/International)

    During the talk, we will explore various models of experimental cinema circulation – from national promotion and public funding, through institutional support, to festival circulation and strategies for international distribution. The panelists will share how these systems function in their countries and offer practical advice and inspiration for creators, producers, curators, and distributors.

    19.09.2025
    16:00
    Kinoteka
  • And Don’t Call Me Crazy

    And Don’t Call Me Crazy

    And Don’t Call Me Crazy

    reż. Dorota Skupniewicz

    The protagonist, who is treated at a mental health facility, carries out the vivisection of the psychiatric care system. Physicians do not have enough time to get to know and understand their patients. They formulate easy-to-classify diagnoses, prescribe pills and ‘normal’ life, such as work, family and stabilisation. The main character is trying to escape this reality by listening to interesting discussions on mental illnesses conducted by people with bird heads. The film provides a sad review of the healthcare system in which a diagnosis is for doctors, while for patients it signifies stigmatisation and the treatment of symptoms, not looking for causes.

    21.09.2025
    16:00
    Kinoteka

    Dorota (dorotes) Skupniewicz

    Filmmaker based in Belfast (Northern Ireland). Grown up during start of brutal capitalism in Poland, after systematic change in her country. This strongly affected her view of the World and the Art. Most of her life focused on activism connected with Human Rights and the Earth. Graduated Animation faculty on the University of Arts in Poznań. Connected with organisation IDHA NYC.

    Director: Dorota Skupniewicz

    Język: Polish

    Subtitles: English

  • Tenderness

    Tenderness

    Tenderness

    Another edition of Tenderness is ahead of us – the performative evening accompanying HER Docs Film Festival – a celebration of feminist non-fiction cinema. Free entry!

    We’ll meet on Friday, September 19, at 9:00 PM at Złota Milonga – the Argentine tango school in Warsaw’s Krasiński Garden – to dance, experience art together, and enjoy the late summer nights.

    Evening plan:

    • 21:00 start
    • 21:15 ACT I Duo Seraphim Jagna Nawrocka & Pau Woźniczka
    • 21:45 Katarzyna Korytowska DJ set
    • 22:40 ACT II Masquerade Atelier Planeta
    • 23:20 Kitty Sarcasm DJ set
    • 01:20 ACT III Where Does Our Love Come From? Filip Kijowski

    Performances in three acts:

    Jagna and Pau are performers, choreographers, and visual artists. They merge fiction with the physical experience of the body, transforming ecofeminist theories into empowering languages of performance. They search for gestures and symbols with healing powers and for scores for rituals of love.

    ACT I Duo Seraphim

    We saw a great white snail with human breasts. Today we devour the heart of the earth, to feed you thick, white milk. Straight into living mouths. The animal will quench thirst.

    Planeta (Yogini Giri) is a nomadic artist and yogini of Ukrainian origin whose practice is rooted in a symbiotic view of the world. She loves mountains, temples, forests, fire, and desert. She runs Atelier Planeta – a project combining sustainable fashion and performance. She co-creates the artistic duo Yevnusha with Indian poet Banu and is a member of the LIOS Labs Community.

    ACT II Maskarada Atelier Planeta to improwizacyjny fashion performance.

    An improvisational fashion performance. A butterfly, a bird, a wild rhododendron, fire, a little monkey, and goddess Lakshmi will present clothes from Atelier Planeta’s latest collection, as well as a truly unique piece – a dress that had been waiting more than 20 years for its presentation.

    Performers: Hypovolaemia, Duo Seraphim, Filip Kijowski, Taras Gembik, Pola Salicka, Natalia Ratyńska, Marcel, Planeta (and perhaps a few more surprises…).

    Filip Kijowski (he/him) is a socially engaged artist, performer, activist, and choreographer. Depending on the context, he explores the factors contributing to embodied community. Using queer theories, movement practices, and improvisation, he facilitates group processes through workshops. Founder and initiator of Biblioteka Azyl. Currently studying MA Dance: Participation, Communities, Activism at The Place – London Contemporary Dance School.

    ACT III Skąd bierze się nasza miłość?

    “In a dream I had recently, the whole world dances the Macarena, and at the same time…” – To close the evening, I want to invite everyone back onto the dancefloor, into our hearts.

    DJ sets:

    Kitty Sarcasm – a digger since childhood, a DJ by vocation, and recently also a producer. In her sets, she blends many genres of electronic music with a focus on Global Bass – from broken sounds from South America to Ghetto House. Kitty Sarcasm breaks rigid divisions and tests the limits of music purists. As a DJ, she has gained recognition for her unconventional, boundary-breaking selection, appreciated on both the Polish and international scene, including the UK show Keep Hush. She plays in Poland and abroad, and as a touring DJ she has accompanied performances of international rappers such as Aunty Rayzor and Nah Eeto. Currently, she co-creates the underground event series LBC S.A., and previously was a member of the DJ collective BITE.

    Katarzyna Korytowska – co-founder of HER Docs and curator of Tenderness.
    Occasionally, she plays ultra-danceable music that heats up dancefloors for friends – from Warsaw, across the Błędów Desert, to Berlin and Sicily.

    FREE ADMISSION thanks to the support of the creative production house SHOOTME Visual Artists.

    19.09.2025
    21:00
    Złota Milonga Klub Tanga Argentyńskiego
  • Smile

    Smile

    Smile

    reż. Katarzyna Bialik
    Poland / 2025 / 1 min

    Pulling braids, snapping a bra strap, catcalling on the streets. He is teasing you, because he likes you. That’s a compliment. Anger makes you ugly. Smile. That’s how I-as a woman-was raised in a patriarchal culture. Learned, that being attractive in men’s eyes is more important than my integrity and sense of security. That I don’t have the right to feel fear and anger, because it’s ‘wrong’. And my pain is just a price I pay for being desired. Overdrawn smile-mask is a symbol of dissociation from true feelings. Taking it off-a manifestation of opposition and emancipation.

    21.09.2025
    16:00
    Kinoteka

    Katarzyna Bialik

    Reżyseria: Katarzyna Bialik

    Scenariusz: Katarzyna Bialik

    Zdjęcia: Alicja Klich

    Montaż: Alicja Klich

    Dźwięk: Katarzyna Bialik

    Producent_ka: Katarzyna Bialik

    Produkcja: Katarzyna Bialik

  • Hope

    Hope

    Hope

    reż. Franciszka Sutryk
    Poland / 2025 / 3 min 41 sec

    Hope is a short, experimental documentary about the search for identity, the exploration of one’s roots, and the rediscovery of the past. It tells the story of a journey to the director’s ancestral Polish region of Podlasie in search of mythicized Slavic witches – szeptuchy – and in search of answers. Unexpectedly, in a circular motion, it leads us to another source – a forgotten childhood love.

    21.09.2025
    16:00
    Kinoteka

    Franciszka Sutryk

    Frania (they/them, 2003) comes from contrasting environments: the Podlasie countryside and Warsaw. They are currently studying Experimental Film at the Academy of Art in Szczecin. In their work they explore various short film forms, such as documentary, animation, video art, and found footage. In their work, they focus on tangibly close topics: their relationships, memories, emotions, body, and history. Guided by the principle that the more intimate something is, the more universal it becomes (Carl R. Rogers), they try to capture and explore the broader contexts and patterns of their experience, to show its universality and commonality. The aim of their work is to bring the potential viewer closer to their own experience, towards themselves.

    Their filmography includes titles such as: i kochanie (and darling) – a short experimental film about generational trauma, the experience of war and the passage of time, shown at the ASPOL exhibition in Paris; Widok (View) – a stop-motion animation created from materials cut out of Polish magazines and newspapers, referring to John Berger’s theory, the film explores the theme of femininity, shown at the UnArchivefest festival in Rome; for movement – a 360° film, an immersive experience exploring movement and dance, taking the viewer through various dance spaces, from dark clubs to brightly lit, mirrored studios; Foria – an intimate video art piece focusing on the theme of gender dysphoria, in which the body is fragmented.

    On the other side of the camera, he participated in projects such as the film active/passive directed by Jana Górska (shown at the Post P_rn Arts Fest in Warsaw and the Porn Film Festival Amsterdam) and Poliamoryczne Ogródki Działkowe by Danielka Weiss.

    Reżyseria: Franciszka Sutryk

    Scenariusz: Franciszka Sutryk

    Zdjęcia: Franciszka Sutryk

    Montaż: Franciszka Sutryk

    Dźwięk: Franciszka Sutryk

    Producent_ka: Franciszka Sutryk

    Produkcja: Franciszka Sutryk

    Język: Polish

    Subtitles: English

  • In My Day

    In My Day

    In My Day

    reż. Iga Lis
    Poland / 2024 / 12 min

    A visual poem exploring the intergenerational experience of love. Through intimate, real-life phone calls between grandmothers and their granddaughters, we are invited into the heart of personal confessions, where stories of heartbreak, enduring love, and loss unfold. The film paints a universal portrait of womanhood, shaped by love’s complexities across time. At its heart, In My Day is a reflection on the shared experiences that connect generations of women.

    21.09.2025
    16:00
    Kinoteka

    Iga Lis

    Polish filmmaker. Upon receiving a bachelor’s degree in History from the London School of Economics in 2021, Iga channeled her social initiatives into her film work. She wrote and directed short films on environmental topics and co-founded projects aimed at increasing voter turnout among the Polish youth. Age and the stages of human life are concepts at the heart of Iga’s work, reflected in her short film In My Day (2024) and documentary feature film Bałtyk (2025).

    Director: Iga Lis

    Scenariusz: Iga Lis

    Zdjęcia: Nadia Szymańska

    Montaż: Tomasz Naruszewicz

    Dźwięk: Bartosz Kruczyński

    Producent_ka: Julia Grzeszczak

    Produkcja: Lumiere Lab

    Język: Polish

    Subtitles: English

  • The Whale Visited Me Today

    The Whale Visited Me Today

    The Whale Visited Me Today

    reż. Matylda Maciejewska
    Poland / 2025 / 2 min 51 sec

    The Whale Visited Me Today is an abstract, metaphorical portrayal of a person overwhelmed by everyday life and exhausted by an existence that leaves no room to breathe. The phrase “You can’t breathe here on earth either” becomes a metaphor for inner tension and a burden that is hard to shed. It is a film about how difficult it can sometimes be to simply exist.

    21.09.2025
    16:00
    Kinoteka

    Matylda Maciejewska

    Reżyseria: Matylda Maciejewska

    Scenariusz: Matylda Maciejewska

    Zdjęcia: Matylda Maciejewska

    Montaż: Matylda Maciejewska

    Dźwięk: Matylda Maciejewska

    Muzyka: Franciszek Puk

    Producent_ka: Matylda Maciejewska

    Produkcja: University of the Arts Poznan

    Język: Polish

    Subtitles: English