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Berlin festival announces this year's competition film slate

The Berlin International Film Festival has chosen 15 films that are part of this year’s competition and will compete for the top Golden and Silver Bear awards

Via AP news wire
Thursday 11 February 2021 13:46 GMT
Germany Berlin Film Festival
Germany Berlin Film Festival

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The Berlin International Film Festival on Thursday announced 15 films that are part of this year's competition and will compete for the top Golden and Silver Bear awards. The festival is taking place in a sized-down, more virtual form due to the pandemic

The selection includes several German contributions and films from France, Romania, Hungary Mexico, South Korea and Japan, among others.

Along the German films are world premieres such as “Fabian — Going to the Dogs,” directed by Dominik Graf, “I'm your man” by Maria Schrader and “Next Door” by Daniel Bruehl.

There's an Iranian-French production called “Ballad of a White Cow” by Behtash Sanaeeha and Maryam Moghaddam and the Korean “Introduction” by Hong Sangsoo.

Japan is presented with the “Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy” by Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Hungary with “Forest — I See You Everywhere" by Bence Fliegauf.

“The disruption brought on by the events of 2020 has led filmmakers to make the most of this situation and create deeply personal films," artistic director Carlo Chatrian said in a statement about the selection.

"This Competition is less rich in numbers but very dense in content and style.”

The film festival is taking place in a revamped form because of the pandemic. Organizers announced in December that the “Berlinale,” traditionally the first of the year’s major European film festivals, will be split into two parts because of coronavirus restrictions.

An online event for the industry, with the jury choosing the winners, is to be held March 1-5. Plans call for a “summer special” to follow June 9-20, at which the public will get a chance to see the winners and a selection of other films. The award ceremony is to take place in June.

The festival also announced last month that it is taking a new approach to the international jury this year. It will do without a jury president, and instead the entries will be judged by six directors whose films won the event’s top Golden Bear award.

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