Industry News20 March 2026

‘Time And Water’: National Geographic Reteams With Oscar Nominee Sara Dosa On “Beautiful, Painful, Existential Film” – CPH:DOX

'Time and Water' National Geographic Filmmaker [Sara Dosa](https://deadline.com/tag/sara-dosa/) is going from the molten to the melting, from fiery volcanoes to dissolving glaciers. Dosa earned an Academy Award nomination for 2022’s *[Fire of Love](https://deadline.com/video/fire-of-love-national-ge

‘Time And Water’: National Geographic Reteams With Oscar Nominee Sara Dosa On “Beautiful, Painful, Existential Film” – CPH:DOX

'Time and Water'

National Geographic

Filmmaker Sara Dosa is going from the molten to the melting, from fiery volcanoes to dissolving glaciers.

Dosa earned an Academy Award nomination for 2022’s Fire of Love, the story of vulcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft who furthered the world’s understanding of intense geological forces, but whose lives were claimed in a volcanic eruption. In her latest, Time and Water, she returns to the panoramic beauty of nature but this time in the frosty terrain of Iceland. The documentary, which premiered at Sundance, screened several times at CPH:DOX in Copenhagen and plays again at the festival on Sunday.

blogherads.adq.push(function () {

blogherads

.defineSlot( 'medrec', 'gpt-dsk-tab-mid-article1-uid0' )

.setTargeting( 'pos', ["mid-article1","mid","mid-articleX","mid-article","300x251"] )

.setTargeting( 'viewable', 'yes' )

.setSubAdUnitPath("ros/mid-article")

.addSize([[2,2],[300,250],[620,350],[300,251],[501,282],[3,3],[2,4],[4,2],[620,366]])

.exemptFromSleep()

.setClsOptimization("minsize")

;

});

Related Stories

[

](https://deadline.com/2026/03/2026-margaret-mead-film-festival-lineup-1236766744/)[

](https://deadline.com/2026/03/2026-margaret-mead-film-festival-lineup-1236766744/)[

Documentary

](https://deadline.com/category/documentary/)

[

'Time And Water,' 'Nuisance Bear,' 'Whispers In May,' And More Documentaries Slated For Margaret Mead Film Festival

](https://deadline.com/2026/03/2026-margaret-mead-film-festival-lineup-1236766744/)

[

](https://deadline.com/2026/03/queens-ballroom-cphforum-interview-hansen-lin-siyi-chen-1236765264/)[

](https://deadline.com/2026/03/queens-ballroom-cphforum-interview-hansen-lin-siyi-chen-1236765264/)[

Documentary

](https://deadline.com/category/documentary/)

[

'Queens Ballroom' Bows At CPH:FORUM, Hidden Story Of Immigrant Seniors Finding Their Footing In America

](https://deadline.com/2026/03/queens-ballroom-cphforum-interview-hansen-lin-siyi-chen-1236765264/)

“Everything is bigger in Iceland. The landscapes, the elements, the depth of time,” the CPH:DOX program writes of Time and Water. “This is where author Andri Snær Magnason grew up, and where he has lived and worked his entire life. Now he is experiencing something that no one in his family ever dreamed could happen: a dying glacier. The ice is melting, the climate is changing – and with it, everything has changed forever.”

Watch on Deadline

1/1

Skip Ad

Continue watchingafter the adVisit Advertiser websiteGO TO PAGE.cnx-non-linear-ad-container .cnx-ad-bid-slot{position:absolute;top:0;left:0;grid-area:adslot;opacity:0;background:none;width:100%;height:100%}.cnx-non-linear-ad-container .cnx-ad-bid-slot.cnx-ad-bid-slot-selected{opacity:1;z-index:10}.cnx-non-linear-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot{display:flex;position:absolute;top:0;left:0;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:100%;height:100%;overflow:hidden}.cnx-non-linear-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot video,.cnx-non-linear-ad-container video.cnx-ad-slot{background-color:unset}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-bid-slot{position:absolute;top:0;left:0;grid-area:adslot;opacity:0;background:#f4f4f4;width:100%;height:100%}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-bid-slot.cnx-ad-bid-slot-selected{opacity:1;z-index:10}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot{display:flex;position:absolute;top:0;left:0;justify-content:center;align-items:center;width:100%;height:100%;overflow:hidden}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot div{background-color:rgba(0,0,0,0) !important}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot iframe{box-sizing:border-box;border:3px solid #fff !important;color-scheme:none}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot iframe:not([id]){border:none !important}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot-video-type iframe{border:none !important}.cnx-ad-container .cnx-ad-slot video,.cnx-ad-container video.cnx-ad-slot{background-color:#f4f4f4}

if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) {

pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() {

pmcCnx({

settings: {

plugins: {

pmcAtlasMG: {

iabPlcmt: 2,

}

}

},

playerId: '32fe25c4-79aa-406a-af44-69b41e969e71',

playlistId: '0199e506-e642-7728-8264-463efe71337b',

}).render("connatix_contextual_player_div");

});

} else {

// This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it's event time.

window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer();

}

The program adds, “Sara Dosa joins forces with Andri to create a beautiful, painful and existential film about profound changes in both life and the world.”

The project reunites Dosa and producer Shane Boris (Oscar nominee for Fire of Love and Oscar winner for Navalny) with National Geographic. At the CPH:Conference earlier this week, they took the stage with NatGeo’s Carolyn Bernstein, EVP Documentary Films, to discuss their collaboration on Time and Water. Dosa explained she first met her protagonist, an Icelandic author and filmmaker, while working on her 2019 film The Seer and the Unseen, which also took place in Iceland.

L-R Moderator Anthony Kaufman, National Geographic EVP Carolyn Bernstein, director Sara Dosa, producer Shane Boris.

Matthew Carey

“When we were making that film, everybody told us, ‘You must meet Andri Snær Magnason.’ He’s a celebrated writer, a poet, sci-fi writer, public intellectual. He even was enlisted to run for president. So, all to say we were very excited to meet him on that film,” Dosa told the moderator, journalist and programmer Anthony Kaufman, adding that the idea for Time and Water came from reading an article Magnason wrote titled “How Do Say Goodbye to a Glacier?,” which examined the death of Okjökull, an Icelandic glacier that was declared moribund after it shed layer after layer of thickness due to climate change.

blogherads.adq.push(function () {

blogherads

.defineSlot( 'medrec', 'gpt-dl-mid-article-inject2-uid1' )

.setTargeting( 'pos', ["mid-article2","mid-articleX","mid-article","mid","300x251"] )

.setTargeting( 'viewable', 'yes' )

.setSubAdUnitPath("ros/mid-article2")

.addSize([[300,250],[300,251],[620,350],[2,4],[4,2],[620,366]])

.exemptFromSleep()

.setClsOptimization("minsize")

;

});

“I read that [article] and I just felt like it was such a profound question to ask at this time of the climate crisis when so many of us are grappling with how do we make sense of these unfathomable losses?” Dosa said. “Being a writer whose work that I loved so dearly, he seemed like the perfect guide through these troubling times.”

National Geographic

Boris also produced The Seer and the Unseen, very much an independent production. The fortunes of director and producer changed with Fire of Love, which Sandbox Films supported and NatGeo later acquired out of Sundance.

“That was the first time we got paid for our work and we could make a film, have a budget and a schedule that we could keep,” Boris said. “We also didn’t imagine ever working with NatGeo when we made that film. It was beyond our wildest expectations.”

When Bernstein and her team saw the finished Fire of Love at Sundance, she recalled, “We were completely captivated in a way that happens rarely, actually. We said, ‘We must do whatever we can to make this film a National Geographic film.’ So, in my recollection, we met, we fell in love and then we started working together.”

Maurice and Katia Krafft from ‘Fire of Love’

National Geographic/NEON

As Bernstein noted during the CPH:DOX conversation, NatGeo only backs about four films per year.

“There are things that, all across our slate, each of our films have in common. We talk about science, adventure, and exploration as being three of the big kind of subject areas for our brand, for our films,” she said. “If you think about Fire of Love — science, adventure, and exploration are all there in a really big way. Yes, the film is a collage, a pastiche, it’s an art project, but it’s also a hero’s journey, which is something that I’m always very focused on, about people or a person, but in this case, two people who are on some kind of journey. There are obstacles along the way that they have to overcome. There are highs and lows and a story that feels both incredibly specific and universal at the same time is another thing I’m always looking for… Fire of Love was a total no-brainer for us. I did not have to fight for it. I didn’t have to convince anyone. I showed it to my boss and she said, yes, go, go, go. It was a movie that was a perfect bullseye for our brand.”

National Geographic

Conflict is a critical part of almost every cinematic story, be it nonfiction or fiction. But on Time and Water, there was a notable absence of that between the filmmaking team and the executives, the panelists agreed. “We never had an argument or a real conflict,” Bernstein insisted. “It doesn’t mean that everything I tell them I’m thinking or feeling when I see a rough cut, they say, ‘Oh my God, this is an amazing idea. We should definitely do that.’ I don’t expect them to do that. There are things that make sense to them and things… where you were like, ‘That’s interesting, but that’s not the journey that we’re on. That’s not the vision, that’s not exactly what Sara’s vision is.’”

Boris did acknowledge that some ‘input’ can sting.

“When you get a note and you’re early on in the process, it sometimes hurts,” he conceded. “You deliver a cut and you think that you’re making progress. And sometimes there’s a note that says, ‘That’s not working.’ And that can be disruptive to your process. And that happened on Time and Water. We’re going in a direction, and we think that’s the direction and we get outside feedback and the directions weren’t aligned.”

blogherads.adq.push(function () {

blogherads

.defineSlot( 'medrec', 'gpt-dsk-tab-mid-articleX-uid2' )

.setTargeting( 'pos', ["mid-articleX","mid-article","btf","300x251"] )

.setTargeting( 'viewable', 'yes' )

.setSubAdUnitPath("ros/mid-articleX")

.addSize([[300,250],[300,251],[620,366]])

.exemptFromSleep()

;

});

A monument is unveiled on August 18, 2019 at the site of Okjökull, Iceland’s first glacier lost to climate change in the west of Iceland.

JEREMIE RICHARD/AFP via Getty Images

By way of example, he

Source: deadline.com

Related Opportunities

Get stories like this in your inbox

Weekly deadline alerts, new opportunities, and industry insights for African filmmakers.

More News