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Nice’s Festival du Documentaire Scientifique Showcases Local Heritage and Distant Horizons

Visual for Festival du Documentaire Scientifique in Nice - courtesy Ville de Nice

Thomas Pesquet’s journey to the International Space Station. Prehistoric cave paintings that revolutionized our understanding of early humans. Sunken temples and shipwrecks lying beneath the Mediterranean’s azure waters. These are just some of the stories waiting to unfold at Nice’s second Festival du Documentaire Scientifique, running 17-21 November at the Maison des Associations Garibaldi.

Building on the success of last year’s inaugural edition, the week-long event reflects Nice’s deep ties to marine research and Mediterranean archaeology and emphasizes themes that resonate with the region’s scientific heritage – particularly oceanography and prehistoric studies from the Côte d’Azur’s famous archaeological sites, but also the space industry in neighbouring Cannes. 

Courtesy Ville de Nice

The festival opens on 12 November with a preview screening of Gil Kebaili’s Planète Méditerranée (2019), with the director in attendance. From 17-21 November, daily programming explores four major scientific themes: space exploration and astronomy, archaeology and ancient history, biodiversity and nature, and human prehistory. 

The 17 November screening of Thomas Pesquet: Objectif France (2023) is bound to be a major draw. Although France’s answer to Neil Armstrong will not be able to personally attend, he represents the kind of high-profile scientific figure the festival aims to showcase. The astronomy-focused day also includes roundtable discussions with planetary scientists.

Video via France Télévisions on YouTube

But space is only the beginning. Each day of the festival takes audiences into a different realm: the depths of the Mediterranean on 18 November, where archaeologists are piecing together 3,000 years of submerged history particularly relevant to this coastal city; the natural world on 20 November, exploring everything from mysterious rings around Cap Corse to humanity’s complex relationship with animals; and time travel back to the mists of time on 21 November, with films on Neanderthal predecessors and the stunning Chauvet cave paintings. The event concludes with an awards ceremony recognizing outstanding scientific documentaries. The sessions offer audiences the opportunity to engage directly with the people who dove to those shipwrecks or studied those ancient sites. 

Wednesday, 12 November at 3:30 PM – Preview

Monday, 17 November from 1:30 PM – Astronomy and Universe

Video via Le Point Culture on YouTube

Tuesday, 18 November from 1:30 PM – Archaeology and History

Wednesday, 19 November, 2:00-4:00 PM – Roundtable

Thursday, 20 November from 1:30 PM – Nature and Biodiversity

Video via Les DOC’S on YouTube

Friday, 21 November from 1:30 PM – Prehistory and Human Origins

The 2nd edition of the Festival du Documentaire Scientifique runs from Monday 17th to Friday 21st November at the Maison des Associations Garibaldi in Nice

Admission: Free, subject to available seating

Maison des Associations Garibaldi 
12 ter Place Garibaldi
06300 Nice

Tel: + 33 (0)4 97 13 41 71 

All images courtesy Ville de Nice

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