The 75th Berlin Film Festival kicks off with 'The Light' shining on
politics
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[February 14, 2025]
By LOUISE DIXON
BERLIN (AP) — The Berlin International Film Festival is kicking off on
Thursday with the world premiere of Tom Tykwer’s “The Light,” a timely
tale of a dysfunctional German family and a Syrian refugee.
The festival known as the Berlinale this year comes against the backdrop
of Germany's parliament elections. For Tykwer, it's the third time he
has opened the festival although his most recent success has come in the
form of hit TV show “Babylon Berlin.”
“The Light” infuses drama, political and social commentary, song and
dance — and a migration storyline that Tykwer says he didn’t know would
be so relevant when he started working on the movie three years ago.
“Now that it aligns with the elections and the elections are riding on
the subject so violently, of course, I feel (strongly) that this movie
has a really strong position about it,” he told The Associated Press.
Nineteen films will compete in the main competition lineup, with the
Golden Bear winner to be announced at the closing gala on Feb. 22.
The role of politics
Germany’s national election on Feb. 23, the final day of the Berlinale,
is being held seven months early, after Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s
governing coalition collapsed in a dispute about how to revitalize the
country’s economy.
Efforts to curb migration have emerged as a central issue in the
campaign — along with the question of how to handle the challenge from
the far-right Alternative for Germany, which appears to be on course for
its strongest national election result yet.
Politics remained front and center at a news conference with this year’s
Berlinale international jury, headed up by American director Todd
Haynes.
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And despite an air of pessimism around today’s global politics, there
was positivity around the role of cinema.
Haynes said the Berlinale “has always had a strength of conviction and
an openness to challenging and political discourse and bringing that
into the filmmaking.”
“What’s happening in the world right now has put an extra urgency to all
of that,” he added.
Franco-Moroccan director and jury member Nabil Ayouch added that people
need strong creative voices. “We have to be radical. We have to be
strong in our choices, in our movies,” he said.
Five films to watch
“Blue Moon” is set during the opening night of the musical “Oklahoma!”
and marks director Richard Linklater's return to the Berlinale for the
first time since “Boyhood” premiered at the festival in 2014.
Starring long-time collaborator Ethan Hawke and Margaret Qualley of “The
Substance,” the movie is competing for the Golden Bear.
Rose Byrne stars in ‘“If I had Legs I’d Kick You” alongside A$AP Rocky
and this year’s Oscar host Conan O’Brien.
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The Film Festival, Berlinale International Jury from left, Nabil
Ayouch, Rodrigo Moreno, Maria Schrader, Todd Haynes, Fan Bingbing,
Bina Daigeler, Amy Nicholson and the festival Director Tricia Tuttle
attend a news conference at the opening day of International Film
Festival, Berlinale, in Berlin, Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Ebrahim
Noroozi)
 The anxiety inducing dramedy from
Mary Bronstein, follows Byrne’s character Linda as an exhausted
working mum surrounded by a revolving group of unhelpful bystanders,
colleagues and family. After a hit Sundance world premiere, the
movie gets to join the Berlinale's competition lineup.
Jessica Chastain reunites with Mexican director Michel Franco in the
drama “Dreams,” about a young Mexican ballet dancer played by
real-life dancer Isaac Hernández. Chastain plays a wealthy socialite
who finds her young lover has moved illegally to San Francisco to
pursue both her and his dancing dreams.
Emma Mackey and Vicky Krieps star in playwright Rebecca LenkiewIcz’s
directorial debut “Hot Milk,” also a hot contender. Based on Deborah
Levy’s book of the same name, it’s the story of a girl who meets a
free-spirited traveler when she takes her mother to consult a healer
about her mystery illness in a Spanish seaside town.
And Marion Cotillard plays an actress shooting a film adaptation of
Hans Christina Anderson's fairytale “The Snow Queen” in Lucile
Hadžihalilović’s 70s-set French fantasy drama, “The Ice Tower.”
Fangirl favorites
Though politics may play a part, some Berliners may be simply hoping
to catch a glimpse of their favorite stars.
Timothee Chalamet will undoubtedly cause a stoir the Palast red
carpet for the German premiere of his award-winning biopic “A
Complete Unknown” on Friday — a final push before the Oscars where
Chalamet is up for best actor for his portrayal of Bob Dylan.
Jacob Elordi is also likely to attract a strong fan turnout when he
premieres the new TV series “The Narrow Road to the Deep North” at
the festival.
Justin Kurzel’s much anticipated drama about a World War II hero
haunted by his experiences in a Japanese prisoner of war camp has
it’s red carpet debut on Saturday.
Robert Pattinson will also hit the Berlinale carpet on the same day
for a special screening of Bong Joon-Ho’s long-awaited follow-up to
“Parasite.”
In “Mickey 17,” a sci-fi comedy, Pattinson plays a space traveler
who is sure to bring out fans braving Berlin's sub-zero temperatures
this February.
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