this human world: SHAKEN GROUNDS, SHIFTING SKIES
30 min., OmeU
As the narrative unfolds, it shifts focus to seismic zones, where tectonic instability is no longer purely natural but increasingly shaped by human activity: climate change, groundwater extraction, mining, and waste.
Created by the artist collective Shaken Grounds, this film investigates how art can register and respond to the deep entanglements between humanity and a destabilized Earth. Shaken Grounds, Shifting Skies offers a poetic journey through landscapes that are at once ancient and contemporary, challenging viewers to reconsider where—and how—we find ground when the very crust beneath us is trembling.
this human world: LILLY
93 min., eOV
this human world: SCARECROW
84 min., OmeU
Scarecrow is a story of hope, love, and art. The film tells the story of Lida, a third-generation Armenian refugee from Turkey to Iran. Lida is a gifted ballet dancer, but ballet is forbidden for women in her homeland. When she is no longer allowed to dance, she retreats to the Caspian Sea coast to work as a scarecrow—an absurd, poetic image of someone who has lost her own wings. In her solitude, she meets a soldier, and a tender, vulnerable love story blossoms between them. But even this love cannot completely free Lida from her inner darkness. Matarsak is the story of a woman who, despite pain, loss, and prohibitions, searches for freedom and beauty. Will she find her way back to dance? Filmed in northern Persia on the Caspian Sea, the film combines poignant emotions with stunning images of a region where nature and longing intertwine.
this human world: KNOW HOPE
74 min., OmeU
Addam Yekutieli, often referred to as the “Israeli Banksy,” prefers to avoid such mystification. Under his pseudonym Know Hope, he creates fragile, humanoid figures in public spaces that use empathy as a political language. With them, he questions the myths and narratives of a fragmented Israeli society—and as a result, increasingly finds himself in conflict. Know Hope accompanies an artist who fights against cynicism and the hardening of a polarized world in favor of radical empathy.
this human world: THE LIONS BY THE RIVER TIGRIS + Talk
92 min., OmeU
In Mosul after the destruction of the city by ISIS. Three men whose lives revolve around memory and forgotten culture: Bashar, a fisherman who wants to protect the ruins of his family home from looters. Fakhri, a former soldier and collector of Iraqi artifacts, who wants to save the artistic evidence of the past. Fadel, a violinist who has vowed to fill Mosul with music again after years of prohibition. The focus is on the contested doorframe decorated with lions, which becomes a symbol of both tenacity and the survival of culture.
this human world: YALLA PARKOUR
89 min., OmeU
When filmmaker Areeb sees a video of young men doing parkour on the beach in Gaza, memories come back. The liveliness of the young runners contradict the explosions heard in the distance. Areeb gets in touch with the parkour runners, including Ahmed. Together, they make their way through the devastated Gaza Strip, where he finds it difficult to imagine a future for himself.
this human world: AN OCTOPUS DESTROYED THE MOON + Talk
90 min., OmeU
this human world: OF DOGS AND MEN
82 min., OmeU
Dar is played by an actress, but the destroyed kibbutz is real and so are the survivors she encounters. The rocket streaks in the sky are not special effects, as the film was shot at the original locations just a few weeks after October 7.
this human world: THE VIENNESE SPORT CLUB
72 min., OmeU
Ein Wiener Sport Club is a cinematic kaleidoscope of community, inclusion, and transformation, showing how sport can be more than goals and scores—a place where the future is already being imagined.
Ein Wiener Sport Club is more than a football documentary. It is a poetic portrait of one of Vienna’s last true cult clubs, rooted in the 17th district between morbid charm and leftist resistance. The film explores a world where football becomes a social mirror and a utopian space of possibility. At its heart is the Friedhofstribüne, a vibrant meeting place where activists, artists, queers, retirees, and dreamers turn fandom into political art and collective ritual. Here, football is reimagined through anti-fascist banners, LGBTQ+ projects, and refugee support, creating a living social utopia. The film follows the people who bring WSC to life: Emina, captain of the women’s team fighting for equality; Frida, a young fencer uniting sport and activism; Stefanie, a queer artist promoting FLINTA visibility; Wolfgang, the idealist president; Alan, a devoted father; and Roland, the blind announcer whose voice captures every game.
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tickets
8,50 EUR Normalpreis
6,50 EUR SchülerInnen, Studierende, Ö1 Club
5 EUR Kinder (bis 12 Jahre), Klubmitglieder
bei über 120 Min. + 1 EUR
Online-Reservierung bis 1 Stunde und Abholung bis 30 Minuten vor Filmbeginn.







