logo
Thessaloniki Documentary Festival Head on Power of Art to ‘Preserve Reality' With Truth, Democracy Under Threat

Thessaloniki Documentary Festival Head on Power of Art to ‘Preserve Reality' With Truth, Democracy Under Threat

Yahoo06-03-2025

As the Thessaloniki Intl. Documentary Festival prepares to host its 27th edition, which runs March 6 – 16, festival director Orestis Andreadakis sees no shortage of threats to truth, freedom and the values on which the democratic order is based. 'Four months have passed since the [Thessaloniki Intl. Film Festival], but it seems like we're already living in a completely different world — unfortunately, not a better one,' Andreadakis tells Variety.
Likening the times to 'a historical documentary about the 1930s, screened backwards,' he describes world events as 'an educational documentary that taught us nothing. It is a testimony for the horror of fascism and totalitarianism that it seems we have forgotten,' he continues. 'It is a film record of a horrific historical reality that some are trying to repeat in the worst possible way.'
More from Variety
'We Live Here,' About a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site, Boarded by Syndicado Ahead of CPH:DOX Premiere (EXCLUSIVE)
'Adobe of Down,' About a Religious Community in Siberia, Picked Up by Taskovski Ahead of CPH:DOX Premiere (EXCLUSIVE)
Greenwich Entertainment Acquires Peter Miller's 'Marcella,' Sets May Theatrical Release (EXCLUSIVE)
This year's festival begins hardly a fortnight after Russia's war in Ukraine marked its three-year anniversary, and as a tenuous ceasefire in Gaza seeking to put an end to that bloody conflict appears in jeopardy. In the U.S., President Donald Trump has launched an unprecedented assault on personal liberties and political norms in his first six weeks in office. Meanwhile, Europe's continued rightward turn was solidified by recent elections in Germany, where the far-right AfD party secured 20% of the popular vote.
While widespread unrest and uncertainty could make the very notion of a documentary film festival seem quaint, however, Andreadakis insists such events underscore the importance of art as a 'bulwark' against the assaults on our fundamental principles 'as the value of truth is in danger of becoming irrelevant.'
'The art of documentary tries to preserve reality. This is the most important thing in our difficult times. To realize what is truth, what is reality,' he says. The films screening at this year's Thessaloniki Documentary Festival 'portray and unveil what we experience in our precarious times.'
The festival kicks off March 6 with 'About a Hero' (pictured), director Piotr Winiewicz's AI-assisted documentary that takes aim at German auteur Werner Herzog — who has been loudly dismissive of artificial intelligence — by creating an artificial version of a Herzog film. The closing film, Shoshannah Stern's 'Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore,' which arrives fresh off a well-received Sundance premiere, tells the story of the titular, trailblazing actor who in 1986 became the first deaf person to win an Oscar.
Across the festival's three main competition sections and diverse programming strands, a total of 261 documentaries will be screened, including 72 world, 40 international and 11 European premieres. Among them are 71 feature and short films from the host nation, reflecting Andreadakis and the programming team's commitment to the Thessaloniki Doc Fest as a 'showcase of the Greek industry.'
Highlights from the international competition, which sees 10 films vying for the Golden Alexander, include a trio of documentaries coming off Sundance premieres — 'Coexistence, My Ass!,' Amber Fares' portrait of Israeli activist and comedian Noam Shuster Eliassi; Jesse Short Bull and David France's 'Free Leonard Peltier,' about the Native American activist who spent nearly half a century in prison; and Gianluca Matarrese's 'GEN_,' about an unconventional doctor at a fertility clinic in Milan — as well as Juanjo Pereira's 'Under the Flags, the Sun,' which follows the discovery of an audiovisual archive documenting Paraguay's 35-year dictatorship, which debuted at the Berlin Film Festival.
World premieres in the main competition include 'Sculpted Souls,' the latest documentary from veteran Greek filmmaker Stavros Psillakis, which follows a Swiss dentist who's spent nearly three decades treating lepers in Greece for free, and 'Child of Dust,' by Polish filmmaker Weronika Mliczewska, about the child of an American soldier left behind during the Vietnam War who seeks to reconnect with his father in the U.S.
Other festival highlights include a screening of Steve Pink's 'The Last Republican,' which follows the efforts of former Republican politician Adam Kinzinger to bring Donald Trump to justice after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, as well as a sidebar dedicated to the rise of artificial intelligence which includes a screening of Tilda Swinton's directorial debut, 'The Hexagonal Hive and a Mouse in a Maze.'
An honorary Golden Alexander will be awarded to French filmmaker Nicolas Philibert, who will deliver a masterclass on March 8, and whose prolific career will be celebrated with a screening of films including BAFTA nominee 'To Be and To Have' and Berlin Golden Bear winner 'On the Adamant.' American documentary filmmaker and multi-hyphenate artist Lauren Greenfield will also be honored with a tribute to her award-winning body of work that includes Sundance prizewinner 'The Queen of Versailles' and her most recent project, the documentary series 'Social Studies.' Greenfield will deliver a masterclass on March 13.
The festival's 27th edition begins just days removed from massive protests on the two-year anniversary of the Tempe railway disaster that claimed 57 lives, with hundreds of thousands of Greeks taking to the streets in what have been described as the country's largest protests since the fall of the military junta in 1974.
The Tempe tragedy, which took place on the eve of the festival's 25th edition, prompted the organizers to cancel that year's opening ceremony amid an unprecedented national outpouring of anger and grief. Two years later, with memories of that tragic day still fresh, more protests are planned in Thessaloniki and across Greece, as the country seeks justice for the tragic loss of so many lives.
Against that backdrop, this year's festival hopes to accomplish what so many documentary filmmakers set out to achieve: to bear witness, spark debate, speak truth to power, and provide some measure of comfort and community in tumultuous times.
'Thessaloniki is a city that carries memory and history. It's a place that knows about geopolitical tensions, and the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival has always been a place of dialogue, of freedom, of culture,' says Andreadakis. 'This is the most important thing. Because art is one of the most powerful weapons of democracy.'
The Thessaloniki Intl. Documentary Festival runs March 6 – 16.
Best of Variety
New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
Oscars 2026: First Blind Predictions Including Timothée Chalamet, Emma Stone, 'Wicked: For Good' and More
What's Coming to Disney+ in March 2025

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Diddy's Ex-Girlfriend Cries in Court Alleging 3-Day Sex Sessions With Male Escorts That Made Her ‘Feel Disgusting'
Diddy's Ex-Girlfriend Cries in Court Alleging 3-Day Sex Sessions With Male Escorts That Made Her ‘Feel Disgusting'

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Diddy's Ex-Girlfriend Cries in Court Alleging 3-Day Sex Sessions With Male Escorts That Made Her ‘Feel Disgusting'

A woman who dated Sean 'Diddy' Combs from January 2021 to August 2024 broke down in tears on the witness stand at his criminal trial as she recounted enduring three-day sex sessions with male escorts that were allegedly arranged by Combs. Testifying under a pseudonym, 'Jane' said Combs pressured her into participating in these so-called 'hotel nights,' drug-fueled sexual performances that closely resemble the 'freak-offs' that Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura described. More from Variety Judge Scolds Diddy for 'Nodding Vigorously' to the Jury, Threatens to Remove Him From Courtroom Diddy Auditioned to Play James Brown in 'Get on Up,' Lost Part to Chadwick Boseman Donald Trump, Asked About Pardoning Diddy, Says 'I Would Certainly Look at the Facts' and That 'He Used to Really Like Me a Lot' Jane described one 'hotel night' that involved three rounds of sexual intercourse with one escort over the course of 18 hours. Immediately afterward, Combs allegedly left the hotel. Jane said she was 'so high' from ecstasy given to her by Combs and felt 'lonely.' Jane said 'hotel nights' became a weekly occasion during parts of her relationship with Combs. The longest 'hotel night' Jane remembers having lasted more than three days without sleep. She said the shortest of such encounters lasted 12 hours, and a typical 'hotel night' spanned 24 to 30 hours. Jane said she told Combs multiple times that she did not want to have sex with other men, and that he was 'dismissive' of her concerns. An audio recording from a hotel room in which Jane asked that an escort wear a condom was played in court. In the recording, Combs is heard brushing off Jane's request. Jane testified that on another occasion, Combs looked at her and said, 'You better not ask for a fucking condom' as an escort prepared to begin intercourse with her. Jane testified about one 'hotel night' that occurred on her birthday. She was eating at Nobu, having great one-on-one time with Combs, when he mentioned there would be 'entertainment' after dinner — a 'gulp moment' for Jane. They went to a hotel after the meal, where Combs gave Jane a necklace for her birthday. Then, an unfamiliar man entered the hotel suite. 'I just accepted it,' Jane said of the 'hotel nights.' The sexual routine became muscle memory for her. 'I've done so many of these, I just know how to tune out,' Jane said. 'I just put my thoughts away [and] tune into someone else. Somebody who can perform.' Through heavy cries, Jane described the alleged encounter as 'invasive.' 'I didn't want to do this on my birthday,' she said. After the escort finished, Combs and Jane moved to a different hotel suite, where Combs was 'sweet' and gave her another gift, alongside flowers, cake and balloons. She remembered another escort suddenly entering, and they had 'hours and hours' of sex. 'By the time he left, it was morning,' Jane said. She testified that Combs brought in a third escort immediately afterward. On one occasion, Jane testified, she performed a 'hotel night' without taking drugs. After having sex with two male escorts, she went to the bathroom and threw up. As a third escort entered the hotel room, she recalled Combs telling her, 'You'll feel better now that you've thrown up. Let's go.' In a text message from September 2023 that was read in court, Jane told Combs, 'I don't want to play this role in your life anymore … it's dark, sleazy and makes me feel disgusting.' Jane's testimony began on Thursday afternoon, when she told the jury that she met Combs while on a girls' trip in Miami in 2020. At the time, Combs was romantically involved with one of Jane's friends, and he invited them on a boat and to his house. She called him 'Ernie' and he called her 'Bert,' nicknames based on the 'Sesame Street' characters. Jane and Combs started a romantic relationship in January 2021, and Jane found him 'super charming,' 'passionate' and 'larger than life.' She told him that she had previously been in a relationship with one of his friends, and that she had a child with someone Combs disliked. A month later, Combs took Jane on a trip to the Turks and Caicos Islands, when he allegedly gave her the drug ecstasy 10 times over the course of nine days. Over the next few months, they met up every other week and had lots of sex. She said Combs often gave her cash payments, sometimes up to $10,000, as a loving gesture. Things changed in May 2021, when Combs began opening up to Jane about his sexual fantasies. Early one morning, they had been up for 24 hours straight on ecstasy and MDMA, and they were having sex for nearly 15 hours while watching pornography. 'He really wanted me to fantasize or talk about other men,' Jane said. She recalled Combs saying, 'I can make this fantasy a reality,' and, within a couple of hours, he brought her to a hotel room that was being set up by assistants. Combs hired a male escort named Don to come to the hotel, and he had Jane dress up in lingerie and 'big stripper heels,' as she called them. Jane described being high on drugs as Combs instructed her to pour baby oil on Don and then perform oral sex on him. Things escalated, and soon enough Jane was undressing and having intercourse with Don. After he ejaculated, she had sex with Combs. Jane said this experience 'exhilarated' her because 'it was taboo.' 'I had a good time with my partner,' she said. But 'that night opened a Pandora's box in our relationship,' Jane said. 'It was a door I was unable to shut.' Soon, having sex with other men became 90% of her time spent with Combs, Jane said. These 'hotel nights' could involve multiple rounds of sex with male escorts and with Combs, and they could span up to 30 hours without sleep. Jane said she told Combs 'many times,' both in writing and verbally, that she did not want to have sex with other men, a concern that Combs allegedly brushed off. When Jane moved from the East Coast to Los Angeles in 2021, Combs paid her $10,000 rent. When she expressed hesitancy about his sexual preferences, Combs insinuated that they could break up and he would stop paying her rent, she testified. Thus, she said she felt 'obligated' to 'perform' for him. In the September 2023 text, Jane told Combs that she felt the 'hotel nights' were 'the only reason you have me around and pay for the house.' Earlier in the trial, Combs' longtime ex-girlfriend Ventura alleged that over the course of 11 years, Combs used violence and threats of blackmail to coerce her into 'freak-offs,' drug-fueled sex parties with male escorts that lasted days at a time. Combs is pleading not guilty to charges of sex trafficking and racketeering. If convicted, he faces a possible life sentence in prison. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Animated Program — Can Netflix Score Big With 'Arcane,' 'Devil May Cry' and the Final Season of 'Big Mouth?' What's Coming to Netflix in June 2025

Lisa Kudrow Reveals Why She Might 'Avoid' Joining 'The White Lotus' Season 4
Lisa Kudrow Reveals Why She Might 'Avoid' Joining 'The White Lotus' Season 4

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Lisa Kudrow Reveals Why She Might 'Avoid' Joining 'The White Lotus' Season 4

Lisa Kudrow revealed that she would love to work with Mike White during a conversation with Parker Posey for Variety's Actors on Actors series When Posey said Kudrow should join season 4 of The White Lotus, the Friends alum expressed hesitation for taking on a role that is "too dark" Kudrow also revealed that she might not be White's "cup of tea," but joked that she'd let Posey know if she was offered a partLisa Kudrow might've just landed her next role. The Friends alum, 61, sat down with Parker Posey for the June 6 episode of Variety's Actors on Actors series, where they reflected on their careers and opened up about recent projects. As they talked about Posey's fan-favorite role on season 3 of The White Lotus, she questioned if Kudrow would join the next installment of the iconic series. 'Work with Mike White?' Kudrow replied, naming the show's creator. 'Yes. That's a quick answer. I love Mike White.' Although her interactions with White have been limited to hanging out with him at a party, Kudrow revealed that she is also a big fan of his work. 'Brad's Status was my favorite movie of that year,' she said of the 2017 comedy, which White wrote, directed and acted in. 'I emailed him to let him know because I had to. It was so good, I had to, and I don't do that a lot.' 'Lisa, you should be in season 4 [of The White Lotus],' Posey, 56, chimed in. 'You need to be a part.' Gushing over her character Victoria Ratliff, a wealthy North Carolina wife and mother of three who is unaware that her husband's business is under investigation during their vacation in Thailand, added that Kudrow needs to experience the power of the show's writers as they uncover 'the complexity of people.' 'Well, we'll see,' Kudrow joked. 'I'm not asked, but I'll have to let you know.' When Posey highlighted White's unpredictable storylines, the No Good Deed star admitted that she 'might not be his cup of tea.' 'Which is allowed to happen,' she noted. 'But no, I'm a huge Mike White fan.' 'I know you're his cup of tea,' Posey interjected. 'I'm going to text him after this to ensure that you know that you are!' Still, Kudrow had some hesitation about how she would fit into the series. 'I do get nervous about inhabiting things that are too dark,' she confessed. 'I try to avoid that.' Variety confirmed that The White Lotus has been renewed for a fourth season in January 2025, a month before the premiere of season 3, which broke records with 6.2 million viewers tuning in for the finale in April. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The White Lotus is currently streaming on Max. Read the original article on People

Why Listening to VOA in a Closet Saved a Family: Lessons from Alex Fink's Childhood in Soviet Moldova
Why Listening to VOA in a Closet Saved a Family: Lessons from Alex Fink's Childhood in Soviet Moldova

Time Business News

time2 hours ago

  • Time Business News

Why Listening to VOA in a Closet Saved a Family: Lessons from Alex Fink's Childhood in Soviet Moldova

In the USSR, access to uncensored news was strictly forbidden. For many, foreign radio broadcasts such as Voice of America (VOA) served as a vital connection to the outside world. Alex Fink , founder of the news platform OtherWeb, recalls how his family would secretly gather in a broom closet to listen to VOA broadcasts. For them, tuning in was not just about receiving information. It was an act of quiet defiance, a source of hope, and a reminder that freedom of thought still existed beyond the walls of repression. As the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, Moldova was one of the 15 republics that made up the Soviet Union. The central government in Moscow controlled nearly every aspect of life, including the economy, the media, and individual freedoms. Private enterprise was outlawed, and the state dictated what could be said, heard, or believed. Citizens were expected to follow the Communist Party's ideology without question, and dissent was met with severe consequences. In such an environment, access to unfiltered news was extremely limited. Foreign radio stations such as Voice of America (VOA) were officially banned, and those caught listening to them faced punishment. Yet for many, these broadcasts served as a crucial lifeline. They offered a rare and precious window into the world beyond the Iron Curtain, providing not only information but also a sense of connection, truth, and hope. For Alex Fink's family, the closet became a sanctuary where they could quietly listen to Voice of America without the constant fear of being discovered. Late at night, with the volume barely audible, they tuned in to news from the other side of the Iron Curtain. What they heard was more than just information. It brought a sense of solidarity and hope. Listening to VOA was an act of silent defiance. It was a way to claim the right to know, to think freely, and to hold on to their humanity in a system designed to take it away. Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s had introduced policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring) in a bid to give the Soviet system a new lease of life. The reforms liberalized freedom of speech and curbed government intervention. But they also revealed the inherent flaws of the Soviet system and fueled ambitions for more freedom. For the vast majority of Moldovans, like Alex Fink, it was a time of upheaval and transformation. Increased freedom meant increased access to information and increased awareness of the world outside. But it meant political turmoil and economic hardship as the old order disintegrated. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Moldova underwent a dramatic transformation. The country gained independence, but the transition to a market economy was challenging. Economic hardship and political instability led many Moldovans to leave the country in search of work and a better life abroad. Alex Fink was among those who left, driven by the hope of building a freer and more secure future in America. Life was not easy, but it was fueled by a desire for opportunity and self-determination. His journey reflects the experience of many Moldovans who continue to seek a better life beyond their homeland. VOA's influence on Alex Fink's life shows the importance of an independent and unbiased media. Access to objective news in information-deprived societies is critical to informed decision-making and protecting the autonomy of individuals. Today, the issue of political interference in the media and media freedom remains a thorn in Moldova's side. All of this, despite the legacy of the people who lost everything so that they could have access to the truth, serves as a reminder of the value of freedom of the press in the long run. Alex Fink's testimony to having listened to VOA in a closet is a poignant tribute to the strength of the human spirit and the irrepressible human desire for freedom and truth. It is in remembrance of the immense difference that access to information can make to citizens of oppressive regimes and families. As we consider his testimony, we remember the role that a free press plays in democracy and human rights. TIME BUSINESS NEWS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store