Below you will find an overview of the Movies that Matter Festival 2025 Award Winners. The Audience Award (made possible by ASN Bank) will be presented on Saturday 29 March prior to the closing film Balomania.
Read the full jury reports here.
The Grand Jury Documentary Award (€ 5.000) went to Tommy Gulliksen’s Facing War, about Jens Stoltenberg’s final year as Nato secretary general. The award also makes this film eligible for nomination for the Academy Award® for Best Documentary Film. The jury, which consisted of Bob Moore, Brian Hill and Justine Nagan, stated that “while the tremendous access granted [them] entry, the tight cutting, edgy score, and consistent commitment to story kept [them] engaged”.
Special Mentions:
Mr Nobody Against Putin by David Borenstein and Pavel Illyich Talankin
Flavours of Iraq by Léonard Cohen
Brazilian-Portuguese drama Manas by Marianna Brennand received the Grand Jury Fiction Award, worth € 5.000. Backed by Walter Salles and the Dardenne Brothers, Manas is set in the depths of the Amazon rainforest, where 13-year-old Tielle grows up with dreams inspired by her older sister’s escape. As she matures, the illusions she clings to begin to crumble, revealing a world of deep-rooted exploitation and abuse. Jury members Mariëtte Rissenbeek, Thomas van Son, and Christopher Zalla called it a “ brilliantly told story” as well as a “spine-chilling experience”.
Special Mention:
Happy Holidays by Scandar Copti
Alina Simone's Black Snow received the main award in the Activist Lens programme, a section showcasing the work of human rights activists from all over the world organised in collaboration with the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Black Snow follows Natalia Zubkova, who, furious about the pollution caused by open-pit coal mines in her home town in Siberia, takes her phone and starts filming. A local phenomenon at first, her fearless reporting soon reaches an ever-growing audience. But when the harassment begins, and her children are threatened, Natalia faces an impossible choice. The jury praised the filmmaker for “dynamically capturing both the intimate family life and personal struggles of Natalia while giving context to lesser-known economic, social, political and environmental crises in Russia”.
Special Mention:
Sudan, Remember Us by Hind Meddeb
In Justice Frame award winner Kamay by Ilyas Yourish and Shahrokh Bikaran, a Hazara family in the mountains of central Afghanistan embarks on a journey for truth and justice after their daughter Zahra mysteriously dies at Kabul University. The jury said the film “stood out for its ability to transport [them] to a hitherto perhaps unfamiliar world through contemplative, poetic storytelling and poignant cinematography”.
Special Mentions:
Antidote by James Jones
The Bibi Files by Alexis Bloom
The award in the Dutch Focus section, made possible by copyright organisation for directors VEVAM, went to Home Game by Lidija Zelovic. Acclaimed filmmaker Lidija Zelovic has been portraying her displaced family in the Netherlands since 1993, when they fled war-torn Sarajevo, exposing the duality that all migrants live with: what is ‘home’? The jury stated the film “offers an invaluable chronicle of 30 years in one family's life, blending playfulness, dynamism, humor, and a sharp, accurate reflection of Europe’s historical development over the past three decade”.
Special Mention:
The Coriolis Effect by Petr Lom
Man Number 4 by Miranda Pennell received the award for Best Short, endowed with € 1.500. Set in Gaza in December 2023, a confrontation with a disturbing photograph on social media triggers questions about what it means to be an onlooker. The jury praised the film for its “courageous and meaningful artistic risks on multiple levels” and stated that the film “speaks volumes about the reason a festival like Movies that Matter is indispensable to highlight voices that are increasingly muffled, if not silenced”.
Special Mention:
Pasta Negra by Jorge Armand
The Education Award, highlights the importance of film in raising the social awareness of children and young people, went to the Dutch documentary short King Ridwan by Sammy Shefa Idris about 20-year-old TikTokker Ridwan, who wants to be taken seriously in his dream of becoming a successful rapper despite his intellectual disability.
Special Mention:
Bezorgd by Ruud Satijn