• News
  • Videos
  • Adobe Premiere Tips
  • About
  • FocusPulling.com
Menu
  • News
  • Videos
  • Adobe Premiere Tips
  • About
  • FocusPulling.com
Home  /  Uncategorized  /  FIPRESCI Announces Finalists for Documentary Grand Prix
17 February 2026

FIPRESCI Announces Finalists for Documentary Grand Prix

Written by Paul Moon
Uncategorized Comments are off

Five films will compete for the inaugural FIPRESCI Documentary Grand Prix. The International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) announced today that 2000 Meters to Andriivka, Fiume O Morte!, Mr. Nobody Against Putin, Orwell: 2+2=5, and The Perfect Neighbor as the finalists for the first edition of the critics’ spotlight on documentary film. This year’s winner will be named at Poland’s Millennium Docs Against Gravity in May.

2000 Meters to Andriivka, directed by Mystslav Chernov, takes audiences along for a harrowing trek with Ukrainian civilian soldiers as they seek to reclaim a village from Russian invaders. Igor Bezinović’s Fiume O Morte!, meanwhile, offers an inventive reclamation of history as present-day citizens of Rijeka, Croatia revisit the city’s past as a free state unsuccessfully occupied by dictator Gabriele D’Annunzio, whom the citizens reinterpret through performance. Mr. Nobody Against Putin, directed by David Borenstein and Pavel Talankin, draws upon the latter’s defiance of Putin’s propaganda campaign through school curricula.

Similarly, Raoul Peck’s Orwell: 2+2=5 explores the contemporary resonance of the British author’s prescient exploration of propaganda and the panopticon, while Geeta Gandbhir appropriates the power of the all-seeing-eye in The Perfect Neighbor to tell a chilling story about a community under siege, seen through police bodycams, dashboard lenses, and surveillance footage.

Mr. Nobody Against Putin and The Perfect Neighbor are currently nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, while 2000 Meters to Andriivka, Fiume O Morte!, and Putin were all submitted represent Ukraine, Croatia, and Denmark, respectively, in the Oscar race for Best International Feature.

The international organization launched the FIPRESCI Grand Prix in 1999, naming the best film of the year as voted on by affiliated film critics worldwide, but no documentary has ever won in the history of the prize. This year’s inaugural documentary prize considers all docs that screened in eligible festivals in 2025.

The post FIPRESCI Announces Finalists for Documentary Grand Prix appeared first on POV Magazine.

Paul Moon
Connect on Facebook Connect on Twitter Connect on Linkedin

H. Paul Moon is a filmmaker based in New York City and Washington, D.C. whose works concentrate on the performing arts. Major films include “Sitka: A Piano Documentary” about the craftsmanship of Steinway pianos, “Quartet for the End of Time” about Olivier Messiaen’s transcendent WWII composition, and an acclaimed feature film about the life and music of American composer Samuel Barber that premiered on PBS. Moon has created music videos for numerous composers including Moondog, Susan Botti and Angélica Negrón, and three opera films set in a community garden. His film “The Passion of Scrooge” was awarded “Critic's Choice” by Opera News as a “thoroughly enjoyable film version, insightfully conceived and directed” with “first-rate and remarkably illustrative storytelling.” Further highlights include works featured in exhibitions at the Nevada Museum of Art and the City Museum of New York, PBS television broadcasts, and best of show awards in over a dozen international film festivals.

 Previous Article How Corey Feldman Vs. the World achieved the impossible
Next Article   Why CBS Didn’t Broadcast Stephen Colbert’s Interview With James Talarico

B&H Search Engine Banner


B&H Photo - Video - Pro Audio














© Copyright 2022 by Zen Violence Films LLC, all rights reserved. To read the site privacy policy and ethics statement, click here.