The Antenna Documentary Film Festival will welcome director and producer Penny Lane and writer, programmer, and story consultant Chris Boeckmann as mentors for its 5th Rough Cut Lab.
Bill Code's 'The Lake of Scars' details the relationship between an ageing white former farmer and members of Victoria’s Yung Balug clan of the Dja Dja Wurrung, as they seek to showcase and protect Australia’s largest collection of scarred trees.
Personal reflections of a pivotal moment in modern history, taken from an unwavering Parisian viewpoint, will make their way to this year's Antenna Documentary Film Festival in the form of Ben Ferris' 'In(di)visible'.
Antenna Documentary Film Festival’s DocTalk, a key event on the documentary industry calendar, is back in 2022 with the latest insight into the art, craft and business of documentary making.
Antenna is an international documentary film festival, established in 2011 with the mission to promote, celebrate and champion creative documentary...
The Antenna Documentary Film Festival will celebrate its 10th anniversary by offering up a $10,000 prize for the Best Feature Documentary.
Stretching along the river Ganges rests Varanasi, the holiest of India’s seven sacred cities, and a place where devout Hindus go to die in hopes of achieving moksha - becoming liberated from the cycle of rebirth. Hindu scriptures say that a soul has to undergo 8.4 million rebirths before reaching the human form, the only form one can attain moksha, and dying in Varanasi and being cremated along the banks of the river is believed to be the ideal way of achieving this. Several so-called ‘death hotels’ exist to accommodate believers who abandon their lives and come here in wait for death - some for as long as 40 years.
The NSW government has announced $500K in funding to deliver professional development programs for screen professionals and support film festivals and events.