Zelenskiy urges film stars at Berlinale to take sides and support
Ukraine
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[February 17, 2023]
By Thomas Escritt
BERLIN (Reuters) -Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged
filmmakers to take sides in what he termed a battle between freedom and
tyranny, drawing a parallel in his speech opening the Berlin Film
Festival between Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the Berlin Wall.
Zelenskiy recalled his own experience as an actor, urging colleagues to
"break the fourth wall" by directly addressing their audiences.
"For many years Potsdam Square was divided by the Berlin Wall," he said
via video link. "Today Russia wants to build the same wall in Ukraine: a
wall between us and Europe, to separate Ukraine from its own choice for
its future."
Now in its 73rd year, the Berlinale owes its reputation as the most
political of the main film festivals to its origins as a divided city on
the front lines of the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the West.
Art could choose to take sides or remain neutral, which was tantamount
to backing tyranny, said Zelenskiy, whose experiences on the very first
days of the invasion a year ago are the subject of a Sean Penn
documentary, "Superpower," that will premiere at the festival on Friday.
The festival's opening gala was briefly interrupted by activists from
Last Generation gluing themselves onto the red carpet in protest against
environmental degradation.
Stars attending this year include director Steven Spielberg, musician
Bono, and actors Fan Bingbing and Anne Hathaway, who was one of many
shown blinking back tears as Zelenskiy spoke.
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Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
addresses the audience on a TV screen during the opening gala of the
73rd Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin, Germany,
February 16, 2023. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch
Hathaway, who stars as a therapist
whose own demons are as serious as any of her patients' in Rebecca
Miller's "She Came to Me", the festival's opening film, hailed
Zelenskiy as a "hero of our time".
This year's festival will include a focus on pro-democracy protests
in Iran as well the conflict in Ukraine. Films backed by the Iranian
and Russian governments are banned.
"Berlin is the city that broke the wall - the actual wall," said
French-Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani, a jury member. "This
year that is very important for us, for the people of Iran. We are
fighting for freedom and we don't give up."
"Full disclosure: I'm kind of shaking," jury president Kristen
Stewart told a news conference when asked how she felt about
choosing a winner from among the 19 films in the main competition.
Outside the main competition, films hailing from Mexico to Australia
will be screened, tackling topics from race and history in the
United States to gender transition and sexual identity.
(Reporting by Thomas Escritt; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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