“Do you ever feel an itch to make movies again?,” we asked Béla Tarr during a lively conversation earlier this year at Berlinale, where he presented a new restoration of his 1994 opus Sátántangó. His response: “No. I am doing a lot of things. I’m not bored and I’m not retired and I still want to go ahead. I think, after The Turin Horse, I cannot say anything. It was about the death of everything. The work is complete. Done.”

Well, it looks like he meant strictly narrative films because the Hungarian director will premiere a new documentary this summer. Commissioned by Vienna’s Wiener Festwochen, where it will screen this June, the festival has announced a new film from Tarr titled Missing People. Made up of only a few shots, the film “presents moving images of society’s outsiders, the impoverished and oppressed, whose lives are contrasted with the opulent surroundings of contemporary Vienna.”

There’s no word yet the length of the project or if this more of a museum installation than a film, but those involved describe as the latter, so hopefully it’ll have a life outside of its premiere location. Check out a synopsis below, along with the first images. (Hat tip to Neil Young.)