Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa has established himself as one of Europe’s leading filmmakers, producing numerous award-winning documentaries and feature films over a twenty-five-year career. In his work, he dares to dispassionately consider the most painful and important pages of history without compromising the current social and political agenda. Film critic Jonathan Romney will speak with Sergei about his oeuvre, cultural background, artistic method and thoughts on the contemporary geopolitical context.
This event is part of Witnessing History, a comprehensive programme celebrating the multifaceted oeuvre of Sergei Loznitsa, taking place from 2–10 June.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Sergei Loznitsa is a Ukrainian film director who was born in 1964 in Baranovichi (USSR). He grew up in Kyiv, where he graduated from the Kyiv Polytechnic and worked as a scientist. In 1997, he graduated from the Russian State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK) in Moscow, where he studied feature filmmaking. Sergei Loznitsa has been making films since 1996, and by now he has directed 26 award-winning documentaries and four fiction films. In 2018, Loznitsa received the prize for Best Directing of the Un Certain Regard section of Festival de Cannes for his fourth feature film, Donbass (2018). Sergei’s feature-length documentaries Maidan (2014) and Natural History of Destruction (2022) had their world premieres at Festival de Cannes, while The Event (2015), Austerlitz (2016), The Trial (2018), State Funeral (2019) and The Kiev Trial (2022) were presented at the Venice International Film Festival. Sergei Loznitsa continues to work in both documentary and fiction genres.
Jonathan Romney is a film critic based in London. He writes for Sight & Sound, the Observer, Financial Times, Screen Daily and Film Comment, and is visiting tutor at the National Film and Television School.