The Prague Post - Political drama overshadows Berlin Film Festival finale

EUR -
AED 4.290251
AFN 73.597192
ALL 95.327012
AMD 434.376173
ANG 2.090961
AOA 1072.417422
ARS 1627.038867
AUD 1.638903
AWG 2.104239
AZN 1.983981
BAM 1.95596
BBD 2.353102
BDT 143.351691
BGN 1.948694
BHD 0.441125
BIF 3463.743448
BMD 1.16821
BND 1.492222
BOB 8.073693
BRL 5.872124
BSD 1.1683
BTN 109.86143
BWP 15.791288
BYN 3.298869
BYR 22896.921277
BZD 2.349802
CAD 1.601359
CDF 2702.070359
CHF 0.919171
CLF 0.026565
CLP 1045.513248
CNY 7.974788
CNH 7.985845
COP 4167.192944
CRC 531.945658
CUC 1.16821
CUP 30.957572
CVE 110.45444
CZK 24.358878
DJF 207.614006
DKK 7.473222
DOP 69.695394
DZD 154.889654
EGP 61.472277
ERN 17.523154
ETB 182.943529
FJD 2.576079
FKP 0.865097
GBP 0.86742
GEL 3.136612
GGP 0.865097
GHS 12.955464
GIP 0.865097
GMD 85.86428
GNF 10251.045077
GTQ 8.931728
GYD 244.452028
HKD 9.152536
HNL 31.09803
HRK 7.534024
HTG 153.052482
HUF 366.316279
IDR 20191.346294
ILS 3.506155
IMP 0.865097
INR 110.147274
IQD 1530.355453
IRR 1539759.545571
ISK 143.818343
JEP 0.865097
JMD 184.435041
JOD 0.828266
JPY 186.614597
KES 151.037468
KGS 102.119454
KHR 4684.523734
KMF 492.984311
KPW 1051.330855
KRW 1731.59137
KWD 0.359587
KYD 0.973679
KZT 542.756586
LAK 25618.851512
LBP 104552.590108
LKR 370.540218
LRD 215.271964
LSL 19.450475
LTL 3.449422
LVL 0.706639
LYD 7.417768
MAD 10.817494
MDL 20.270653
MGA 4842.231576
MKD 61.638444
MMK 2452.962395
MNT 4181.137819
MOP 9.426009
MRU 46.739656
MUR 54.707701
MVR 18.06022
MWK 2029.181056
MXN 20.351506
MYR 4.636047
MZN 74.652681
NAD 19.450876
NGN 1578.625762
NIO 42.885366
NOK 10.912076
NPR 175.777335
NZD 1.995899
OMR 0.449179
PAB 1.1683
PEN 4.049033
PGK 4.979788
PHP 70.961767
PKR 325.693861
PLN 4.241152
PYG 7397.603285
QAR 4.258708
RON 5.091175
RSD 117.4063
RUB 88.637932
RWF 1706.755203
SAR 4.381459
SBD 9.402437
SCR 16.722726
SDG 701.512386
SEK 10.815811
SGD 1.493183
SHP 0.872187
SLE 28.698453
SLL 24496.780762
SOS 667.626749
SRD 43.689915
STD 24179.593966
STN 24.760217
SVC 10.222834
SYP 129.241954
SZL 19.451384
THB 37.94055
TJS 10.982343
TMT 4.094577
TND 3.367362
TOP 2.81277
TRY 52.598381
TTD 7.92068
TWD 36.795138
TZS 3051.947273
UAH 51.323686
UGX 4346.354452
USD 1.16821
UYU 46.203768
UZS 14076.933545
VES 563.934495
VND 30744.373761
VUV 137.88675
WST 3.183839
XAF 656.010499
XAG 0.015565
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.157147
XCG 2.105681
XDR 0.813777
XOF 653.029202
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.764134
ZAR 19.435689
ZMK 10515.294516
ZMW 21.876878
ZWL 376.16323
  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    15.42

    +1.43%

  • RBGPF

    63.0000

    63

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    36.13

    -0.39%

  • RIO

    -1.4300

    98.85

    -1.45%

  • NGG

    1.3600

    86.96

    +1.56%

  • BTI

    1.1100

    57.28

    +1.94%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    55.63

    -0.13%

  • AZN

    -2.5100

    192.3

    -1.31%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    22.91

    +0.35%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    46.35

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    0.3100

    15.62

    +1.98%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.23

    +0.43%

  • BCC

    1.5800

    83.82

    +1.88%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    24.1

    +1.54%

  • JRI

    -0.1200

    12.88

    -0.93%

Political drama overshadows Berlin Film Festival finale
Political drama overshadows Berlin Film Festival finale / Photo: Ronny HARTMANN - AFP

Political drama overshadows Berlin Film Festival finale

The 76th Berlin Film Festival draws to a close on Saturday after 10 days in which the 22 films in competition were often overshadowed by a row over the role politics should play in filmmaking.

Text size:

The controversy erupted at the beginning of the festival when jury president Wim Wenders answered a question about the German government's support for Israel by saying: "We cannot really enter the field of politics."

At the same press conference he had earlier said that films had the power to "change the world" but in a different way from party politics.

"No movie has ever changed the ideas of a politician, but we can change the idea that people have of how they should live," Wenders, 80, said.

But his comments in response to the question on Israel prompted a storm of outrage.

Award-winning Indian novelist Arundhati Roy, who had been due to present a restored version of a 1989 film she wrote, pulled out of the event, branding Wender's words "unconscionable" and "jaw-dropping".

On Tuesday, a letter signed by dozens of film industry figures, including Javier Bardem, Tilda Swinton and Adam McKay, condemned the Berlin festival's "silence on the genocide of Palestinians".

- Films overshadowed -

The letter, drafted by the Film Workers for Palestine collective, accused the Berlinale of being involved in "censoring artists who oppose Israel's ongoing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and the German state's key role in enabling it".

Director Tricia Tuttle, in her second year at the helm of the Berlinale, has firmly rejected the accusations, describing some of the claims in the letter as "misinformation" and "inaccurate".

She called for "cool heads in hot times" and expressed fears that the controversy was crowding out conversation about the films.

Among the standout entries in the official competition was "We Are All Strangers" by Anthony Chen.

Set in Chen's native Singapore, the film is a moving family drama which playfully satirises the yawning social disparities to be found in the city-state's glittering skyscrapers.

German actress Sandra Hueller, who gained international acclaim for her roles in "The Zone of Interest" and "Anatomy of a Fall", received audience plaudits for her turn as the title character in "Rose" by Austrian director Markus Schleinzer.

The black-and-white drama tells the story of a woman passing herself off as a man in rural 17th-century Germany to escape the constraints of patriarchy.

- Repression in Iran -

Juliette Binoche, playing a woman caring for her mother with dementia, also moved cinemagoers in "Queen at Sea" by American director Lance Hammer, who had not made a feature film since 2008.

Sensitively, the film portrays the devastation Alzheimer's disease inflicts on a patient's loved ones.

"My husband's got dementia, so I have had a lot of background," a visibly moved actress Anna Calder-Marshall, who plays the ailing mother in the film, told a press conference.

The first major event of the film calendar also provided a platform for Iranian filmmakers to address the deadly crackdown on anti-government protests in their home country.

Director Mahnaz Mohammadi, who has spent time in Tehran's notorious Evin prison, presented "Roya", a searing portrayal of conditions in the jail and the traces they leave on prisoners' psyches.

Dissident director Jafar Panahi, who won the Cannes Palme d'Or for "It Was Just An Accident", also spoke from the Berlinale to denounce the Iranian government's repression of protestors, which international organisations say has left thousands dead.

"An unbelievable crime has happened. Mass murder has happened. People are not even allowed to mourn their loved ones," Panahi told a talk organised as part of the festival.

"People do not want violence. They avoid violence. It is the regime that forces violence upon them," Panahi said.

In December he was sentenced to one year in prison and a travel ban in Iran but has expressed his intention to return nevertheless.

F.Vit--TPP