Saturday Afternoon Documentaries 1 + QA

  • Documentary Films Screening
  • Film Screening

Date: February 21, 2026

Time: 12:00 pm – 2:50 pm

Location:

Regal Union Square Theater 1

850 Broadway

New York, New York 10003

Add event to Google Calendar

There will be a Q&A Session with the filmmakers at 2:30 PM. These films have not been rated and some content may not be appropriate for children.

    • Documentary Film Competition

    The Fishing Boats of Kayar

    Directed by: Álvaro Hernández Blanco

    Country: Spain / United States

    Minutes: 30

    Screening:

    Saturday Feb 21, 12:00 PM-2:50 PM – Saturday Afternoon Documentaries 1 + QA

    Friday Feb 20, 1:00 PM-2:35 PM – Friday Matinee – Documentary Shorts

    After 15 years in Spain, Thimbo returns to his Senegalese fishing village, where he is overwhelmed by sensations of nostalgia and uprooting, yearning and resentment. He also grapples with the influence he exerts on the local youth, who see him as a role model and seek to emulate him through a perilous journey to Europe by boat.

    • Animated Film Competition

    A Bear Named Wojtek

    Directed by: Iain Gardner

    Country: United Kingdom / Poland

    Minutes: 28

    Premiere:

    NYC Premiere

    Screening:

    Saturday Feb 21, 12:00 PM-2:50 PM – Saturday Afternoon Documentaries 1 + QA

    A BEAR NAMED WOJTEK tells the fantastic journey of an orphaned Syrian brown bear who was adopted by Polish soldiers during World War II, becoming a beacon of hope and an emblem of their fate.
    • Documentary Film Competition

    Enongo

    Directed by: Kevin Schreck

    Country: United States / Canada

    Minutes: 92

    Screening:

    Saturday Feb 21, 12:00 PM-2:50 PM – Saturday Afternoon Documentaries 1 + QA

    ENONGO is an award-winning, feature-length animation-documentary hybrid and the inspiring story of rapper/producer/Ph.D. candidate, Enongo Lumumba-Kasongo, a.k.a., Sammus. With her autobiographical and afrofuturism-inspired music, Enongo tackles various subjects including (but certainly not limited to) mental health, growing up, and relationships. Through a combination of actuality and animation, the film tells a universally-relevant, intimate, empowering story of identity, artistic creation, and survival. Notably, it is the first feature-length film of any genre in history to have an all-Black women animation team.