‘Mariinka’ Director Talks Spending a Decade in Ukraine to Chronicle How a Country’s Youth Adapts to War in CPH:DOX Opener (EXCLUSIVE)
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To Belgian director Pieter-Jan De Pue, fewer commodities are as precious to a creative as time. The photographer spent seven years in Afghanistan to tell the story of children digging up Soviet mines in the high mountains of Pamir for his 2016 Sundance award-winning “The Land of the Enlightened.” The decade since has seen the […]
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Mar 10, 2026 7:24am PT ‘Mariinka’ Director Talks Spending a Decade in Ukraine to Chronicle How a Country’s Youth Adapts to War in CPH:DOX Opener The ambitious 10-year-long project is Pieter-Jan De Pue's follow-up to Sundance award-winning doc 'The Land of the Enlightened' By Rafa Sales Ross Plus Icon Rafa Sales Ross Guest Contributor Latest ‘Soap Fever’ Director on American Soap Opera Mania in 90s Finland: ‘In Moments of Crisis, People Don’t Need Prestige, They Need Connection’ 10 hours ago From Cheap Erotic Dramas to B-Movies to Weird Wave: ‘The Golden Grip’ Chronicles Half a Century of Greek Cinema Through ‘Tough Guy’ Kostas Stefanakis 18 hours ago ‘Replica’ Director on Falling in Love With an AI Chatbot, and How AI Is Nurturing China’s ‘Affection Gap’ Generation 1 day ago See All To Belgian director Pieter-Jan De Pue , fewer commodities are as precious to a creative as time. The photographer spent seven years in Afghanistan to tell the story of children digging up Soviet mines in the high mountains of Pamir for his 2016 Sundance award-winning “The Land of the Enlightened.” The decade since has seen the filmmaker spend most of his time in Ukraine, where he closely chronicled the lives of six young people in the region for his CPH:DOX opener “Mariinka.” Related Stories Everything We Know About Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’
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