This year's edition of the festival, which has
never been shy of broaching sensitive political themes,
highlighted Brazilian films in the program that had anticipated
the country's hard swing right in last year's presidential
election.
"Sometimes art has to be political," said director Dieter
Kosslick, who bows out this year after his 18th Berlinale.
"In the case of Brazil we see how films took a seismographic
reading of the mood of the country before the current president
was elected," he added.
Brazilian director Wagner Moura's "Marighella", screened out of
competition, tells the story of writer Carlos Marighella's
resistance to and 1969 death at the hands of a military
dictatorship that toppled a democratic government, in a story
that uncomfortably echoes President Jair Bolsonaro's rise.
French director Juliette Binoche, herself a Silver Bear winner,
chairs the main competition jury in the festival, which owes its
political sensibility to its 1951 birth in a divided city that
straddled the front lines of the Cold War.
Squarely in that tradition lies Polish director Agnieszka
Holland's Mr. Jones, telling the story of Welsh journalist
Gareth Jones, whose 1930s reports from the Soviet Union exposed
the horror of famine in Ukraine, despite governments and rival
reporters who tried to silence him.
China is also strongly represented in the main competition, with
Wang Xiaoshuai's So Long, My Son exploring the lives of two
couples living through the revolutionary economic changes that
have transformed China since the 1980s.
Also screening outside the competition is United States director
Adam McKay's Vice, about the reign of Dick Cheney as the U.S.'s
most powerful vice-president.
"This is the film you have to see in order to understand the
presidency," said Kosslick, before recommending, to laughs from
the audience, a festival screening of Charles Ferguson's
documentary "Watergate - Or How We Learned to Stop an Out of
Control President" about the fall of Richard Nixon.
The festival also includes for the first time works produced by
the streaming services that are a rising force in the film
world, including Spanish director Isabel Coixet's Netflix
production Elisa y Marcela, about a woman who disguised herself
as a man to marry her female lover in 1901.
(Reporting by Thomas Escritt, editing by Ed Osmond)
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