Seda: People of the Marsh (2004)
In Seda, a remote peat miners' town in Latvia, time seems to be frozen in the Soviet era. Built in 1952 and inhabited by a multi-ethnic workforce from different parts of the former USSR, it still preserves intact the inflated style of a Stalinist "shock work" construction project. Culturally Seda's people feel like a community apart. Their lingua franca is Russian, and their social life is a mixture of Soviet and Russian Orthodox traditions. They don't want the European Union, they want to live in their own state - the Marshland.
Director: Kaspars Goba
| Editing | Kaspars Goba | Editor |
| Editing | Raimonds Špakovskis | Editor |
| Writing | Kaspars Goba | Writer |
| Editing | Gunta Ikere | Editor |
| Production | Uldis Cekulis | Producer |
| Camera | Kaspars Goba | Director of Photography |
| Sound | Juris Kulakovs | Music |
| Directing | Kaspars Goba | Director |