SHARE
COPY LINK

CULTURE

Irish scandals and Pablo’s hippos: What to see at this year’s Berlinale

Thursday will see the opening of the 74th rendition of Berlin's legendary film festival, the Berlinale. From hard-hitting cinema to the off-beat picks, here are some of the films to watch out for.

The facade of the Zoo Palast cinema displays the Berlinale bear.
The facade of the Zoo Palast cinema displays the Berlinale bear. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Fabian Sommer

When the Berlinale kicks off on Thursday, it will open with a bang: Oscar nominee Cillian Murphy will open Berlin’s international film festival with the world premiere of a drama about Ireland’s notorious laundries used as prison camps for “fallen” young women.

“Small Things Like These”, based on the bestselling novel by Claire Keegan and co-starring Michelle Fairley (“Game of Thrones”) and Emily Watson (“Chernobyl”), is one of 20 pictures vying for the festival’s Golden Bear top prize.

Kenyan-Mexican actor Lupita Nyong’o will serve as the first black jury president at the event known as the Berlinale, which is now in its 74th year.

The 11-day cinema showcase, which ranks with Cannes and Venice among Europe’s top festivals, serves as a key launchpad for films from around the world.

The Hollywood Reporter’s Scott Roxborough said the festival’s outgoing director duo, Mariette Rissenbeek and Carlo Chatrian, had been dealt a “difficult hand” with the coronavirus pandemic casting a long shadow over the last three years, keeping many US and Asian participants away.

He told AFP he predicted more “excitement” this year on both the red carpet and at the festival’s sprawling European Film Market, where movie rights are bought and sold for global distribution.

“The old spirit should be back again at this Berlinale,” he said.

‘Stand against injustice’

The eclectic line-up promises a heady mix of A-list stars, hard-hitting political movies and documentaries and quirky arthouse fare to set filmgoers’ hearts a-flutter.

In “Small Things Like These”, Murphy, who is nominated for an Academy Award next month for his turn in the biopic “Oppenheimer”, reunites with Belgian film-maker Tim Mielants, who directed him in the hit series “Peaky Blinders”.

READ ALSO: Germany’s far-right AfD uninvited from film festival opening

Murphy plays a devoted father who unearths shocking secrets about the convent in his town linked to one of modern Ireland’s biggest scandals: the Magdalene laundries, penitentiary workhouses run by the Roman Catholic church from the 1820s until the 1990s.

Cillian Murphy as Bill Furlong

Cillian Murphy as Bill Furlong in a scene from ‘Small things like these’. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/Berlinale | Shane O’Connor

Most of the laundries’ residents were ostracised “fallen women” who had become pregnant outside marriage. Others included rape victims, orphans, prostitutes and the disabled.

“We are confident that this story that allies the kindness to be directed to the more fragile, and the willpower to stand up against injustice, will resonate with everyone,” Chatrian said.

Lifetime award for Scorsese

Adam Sandler will present “Spaceman”, his latest release from a major Netflix deal, about a lonely astronaut who seeks the help of an alien when he becomes estranged from his wife, played by Carey Mulligan.

Mexico’s Gael Garcia Bernal appears in “Another End”, which envisions a technology allowing the bereaved to reconnect with the dead. Cannes best actress winners Renate Reinsve (“The Worst Person in the World”) and Berenice Bejo (“The Artist”) co-star.

Immigration drama “La Cocina” starring Rooney Mara promises to be a “tragic and comic tribute to the invisible people who prepare our food” in the world’s restaurants.

READ ALSO: 7 ground-breaking German movies made by female filmmakers

And in one of the most attention-grabbing titles of the line-up, “Pepe” imagines the inner life of a hippopotamus from Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar’s private menagerie.

Martin Scorsese, nominated for a record 10th time for a best director Oscar for “Killers of the Flower Moon”, is due in Berlin to collect an Honorary Golden Bear for lifetime achievement.

Lily Gladstone and Leonardo DiCaprio in 'Killers of the Flower Moon'

Lily Gladstone and Leonardo DiCaprio in ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’, directed by Martin Scorsese. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/Apple TV+ | –

Iran’s Maryam Moghaddam and Behtash Sanaeeha have said they’ve been barred from travelling to Berlin to premiere their feminist competition entry “My Favourite Cake” while off-screen, protests over the war in Gaza are expected during the festival.

With far-right parties on the march in countries around the globe, the festival will spotlight cinema that examines Germany’s Nazi past.

“Treasure” features Stephen Fry and Lena Dunham in a drama about a Holocaust survivor and his daughter who return together to his Polish hometown and Auschwitz.

German drama “From Hilde, With Love” starring Liv Lisa Fries (“Babylon Berlin”) tells the true story of a couple at the heart of the “Red Orchestra” resistance group in 1942.

With reporting by Deborah Cole

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

BERLIN

Warning of toxic smoke after fire breaks out at Berlin factory

More than 180 firefighters wearing protective suits were on Friday tackling a major blaze at a metal technology firm in Berlin's Lichterfelde area as authorities warned of toxic smoke.

Warning of toxic smoke after fire breaks out at Berlin factory

The blaze broke out in the first floor of metal technology factory ‘Diehl Metal Applications’ on the Stichkanal in Lichterfelde, south-west Berlin around 10:30 am.

On Friday afternoon, a fire brigade spokesperson said an area of over 2,000 square metres was on fire in the four-storey building.

As of 5 pm, the fire was reportedly still not under control.

According to the spokesman, the fire had spread to the roof, with parts of the building collapsing.

As the company also stores and processes chemicals in various quantities, there are concerns over harmful fumes in the smoke. 

“We can confirm that chemicals are also burning in the building,” said the fire service. “Sulphuric acid and copper cyanide were stored there. There is a risk of hydrogen cyanide forming and rising into the air with the smoke.”

Hydrogen cyanide is a highly toxic substance.

The Berlin state government said that residents “in the affected areas of the toxic fumes caused by the fire” were warned through the NINA warning app at midday.

People walk in the area near the fire in Berlin on Friday. Residents have been urged to stay inside and keep their windows closed.

People walk in the area near the fire in Berlin on Friday. Residents have been urged to stay inside and keep their windows closed. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christoph Soeder

The Berlin fire department also said on X that people in a large area of Berlin and the outskirts, shown on the map in this tweet, should keep their windows and doors closed, turn off air conditioning and avoid smoky areas. People have also been asked to avoid the area. It includes a large part of the Grunewald forest. 

In the immediate vicinity, hazardous substances had been measured. According to a fire and rescue spokesperson, no injuries have been reported. 

A spokesman for Diehl Metall, to which the plant belongs, said on request that the chemicals mentioned were also only kept in small quantities at the plant.

According to the Diehl spokesman, the location is used for electroplating parts for the automotive industry. The Diehl Group is a large arms company; however, no armaments were produced at the Berlin plant, Nitz said.

Emergency response authorities requested the help of the in-house fire brigade from the firm Bayer, which is familiar with fighting against chemical fires, Berlin newspaper Tagesspeigel reported. 

Which areas are most affected?

Pupils and teachers from nearby schools have been sent home as a precaution, while several shops around the site have closed. 

On Friday afternoon, a warning message popped up on many mobile phones with a shrill sound, according to which there is “extreme danger”.

“After evaluating the weather conditions and the corresponding wind direction, the flue gases move from the scene of the incident in a northerly direction,” the fire department told the German Press Agency (DPA).

Flames seen at the fire in Berlin's Lichterfelde on Friday.

Flames seen at the fire in Berlin’s Lichterfelde on Friday. Shops around the area closed. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christoph Soeder

According to the fire department spokesman, however, it was not initially clear at what distance the smoke could still be hazardous to health.

Parents of students at the Fichtenberg-Gymnasium in Steglitz received an e-mail stating that classes had been stopped and all students had been sent home. However, the local Abitur or end of school leaving exams continued with the windows closed.

Surrounding roads were closed while flames leapt into the sky, according to a DPA reporter on site.

A neighbouring supermarket was completely enveloped in white smoke. The surrounding area is a mixture of commercial area, allotments, housing estates and shopping centre. According to eyewitnesses, the smoke appeared to be heading north.

The fire department published a map on which the affected areas are marked. Parts of Spandau, Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf and Reinickendorf, among others, can be seen. People should avoid the affected area and drive around it as much as possible, the fire department suggested. Even if no smoke is visible, windows and doors should remain closed and ventilation and air conditioning systems should be switched off, it said.

In the immediate vicinity of the fire, the police made announcements with a megaphone and called on people to leave the streets, go home and keep windows closed.

The cause of the fire has not yet been established. 

With reporting by DPA, Paul Krantz and Rachel Loxton.

SHOW COMMENTS