Berlin International Film Festival.Berlin: where politics meets pathetic fallacy pathetic fallacy n. The attribution of human emotions or characteristics to inanimate objects or to nature; for example, angry clouds; a cruel wind. . If you believe in the pathetic fallacy, the frigid temperatures during the 53rd Berlin International Film Festival had much to say about what was happening outside the cinemas. Even while the noble and hopeful official festival motto, "towards tolerance," beamed from the festival posters and advertisements, the shadow of the impending im·pend intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends 1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending. 2. war on Iraq darkened dark·en v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens v.tr. 1. a. To make dark or darker. b. To give a darker hue to. 2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy. 3. and made colder the proceedings. Whatever the warmth and power of the films, however well meaning the festival vibe under the perpetually positive director Dieter Kosslick, the coldest Berlin weather in years seemed to express that something larger and more forbidding was underway beyond the festival's privileged perimeter. Despite 500,000 people marching for peace up the Unter den Linden Unter den Linden ("under the linden trees") is a boulevard in the centre of Berlin, the capital of Germany. It is named for its linden (lime in British English) trees that line the grassed pedestrian mall between two carriageways. to the Brandenburg Gate Brandenburg Gate The only remaining town gate of Berlin, it is located at the western end of the avenue Unter den Linden. Carl G. Langhans (1732–1808), who built the gate (1789–93), modeled it after the propylaeum of the Athenian Acropolis. , the apprehension that George W. was hell--bent on bomb-dropping sent a palpable chill down the spine of the entire Berlinale. Also ominous was the sudden collapse and death of Daniel Toscan du Plantier, head of Unifrance, in the lobby of the Grand Hyatt, the official festival hotel. Beyond the realpolitik realpolitik Politics based on practical objectives rather than on ideals. The word does not mean “real” in the English sense but rather connotes “things”—hence a politics of adaptation to things as they are. of the U.S.-Iraq tango, politics is always prominent at the Berlinale, both in the selection of films and in the discussion of the works themselves. No sunny seaside Mediterranean retreat la Cannes, the Berlin festival--tough, engaged and Teutonic--was, after all, founded as a political act of resistance during the Cold War and it continues to be a forum for debate about the tangled state of things in the now reunified Germany and beyond. Indeed, the Golden Bear (the festival's top prize) was awarded this year to In This World, Michael Winterbottom's potent political drama about two young Afghan refugees Afghan refugees (known as Muhajir Afghans in South Asia) are people who fled Afghanistan after the Soviet invasion in 1979 and during the civil war that followed. Since the early 1980s to the late 1990s, there were approximately 3 million Afghan refugees staying in trying to get to England. Wolfgang Becker's Good-Bye, Lenin! squarely and humorously confronts the end of the Gold War on the consciousness of one family. Inevitably, perhaps, there was also the annual array of the usual Berlinale suspects: documentaries about the Holocaust, personal/political diary films about the crisis in the Middle East and portraits of Germany in transition. In addition to the films, there was also Cinema for Peace, a special gala fundraising dinner attended by A-list stars such as Dustin Hoffman Noun 1. Dustin Hoffman - versatile United States film actor (born in 1937) Hoffman to raise money and awareness to stop the Bush administration from launching a war in you know where. If George W. can be said to represent one aspect of the American presence--political and otherwise--in Berlin, then Hollywood is another. As usual, the Berlinale's Official Competition, not to mention its opening and closing night films, was stacked with Hollywood films. Opening the festival with Chicago and closing it with Gangs of New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , the Berlinale's competition included Spike Lee's 25th Hour, Spike Jonze's Adaptation, George Clooney's Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, Alan Parker's The Life of David Gale and Steven Soderbergh's Solaris. Moreover the Hollywood star The Hollywood Star was an idiosyncratic gossip tabloid published on an erratic schedule in Hollywood, California by William Kern, who wrote much of the magazine under the pseudonym "Bill Dakota. power assembled by the festival was impressive, rivalling even Cannes with appearances by Richard Gere, Kevin Spacey spac·ey adj. Slang Variant of spacy. Adj. 1. spacey - stupefied by (or as if by) some narcotic drug spaced-out, spacy unconventional - not conventional or conformist; "unconventional life styles" , Nicholas Cage and a combative George Clooney, who went on the offensive at the Solaris press conference when one journalist described the film as "boring." Clooney's impassioned defence of his film was as refreshing as it was surprising, given the usual sycophancy syc·o·phan·cy n. pl. sy·co·phan·cies The fawning behavior of a sycophant; servile flattery. Noun 1. sycophancy - fawning obsequiousness of press conferences with mega-movie stars. Canada's presence in Berlin 2003 was understated but significant. Atom Egoyan was the president of the jury, the first time ever for a Canadian, and he also presented Ararat at special public screenings. Two minority Canadian co-productions dotted the Competition: Madame Brouette, directed by Senegal's Moussa Sene Absa and Spanish director Isabel Coixet's My Life without Me, starring the incandescent Sarah Polley. Terrance Odette's Saint Monica enhanced the Kinderfilmfest, while Richard Kwietniowski's Owning Mahowny, Thom Fitzgerald's The Event, fleana Pietrobruno's Girl King and Keith Behrman's Flower & Garnet bolstered the Panorama section. The official Canadian reception, organized by Telefilm tel·e·film n. A film produced for television broadcasting. Noun 1. telefilm - a movie that is made to be shown on television Canada, was also notable, featuring a remarkable live performance by the powerhouse Quebec cellist and singer Jorane. Her performance so dazzled certain foreign producers that business cards were exchanged and sound track commissions appear in the offing coming; arriving in the foreseeable future. visible but not nearby. See also: Offing Offing . As the host nation for the festival, Germany has much to be proud of. Its cinema continues to impress, even in a year without films by Tom Tykwer or Thomas Arslan. The annual showcase of German films yielded several fine works, including Identity Kills, Half Rent, They've Got Knut and This Vey Moment. China, too, had an impressive showing, with humanist gems such as Cala, My Dog! and the extraordinary Remnants, a three-hour documentary about the social problems of modernization. With these works, one can almost forgive perhaps the worst film of the festival, the utterly execrable Chinese drama The Old Testament. That other old Cold War "enemy," Russia, also offered some accomplished pieces, including The Suit, a bittersweet bittersweet, name for two unrelated plants, belonging to different families, both fall-fruiting woody vines sometimes cultivated for their decorative scarlet berries. tale of three young men and their desire for a better future. In fact, new Russian cinema was given a spotlight program at the Berlinale, highlighting the new work, much of which is shot digitally, coming out of that nation's troubled film industry. By design and by geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics n. (used with a sing. verb) 1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation. 2. a. accident, the 2003 Berlin International Film Festival did register the importance of moving towards tolerance in our troubled world. At another level, it also revealed that we are now rapidly approaching the end of filmmaking, per se. Almost every "film" I watched was shot with a digital camera and transferred to 35 mm, with varying degrees of aesthetic success. From Canada to China, from Russia to Hollywood, the cinematic apparatus is going, going, gone digital. The new image-making technologies promise much, but, as always, must be applied to meaningful stories; and such is not always the case in Berlin and elsewhere. Nevertheless, some things remain the same in the "new Berlin": those unmistakable ravens still mass in the cold skies over the city; the Potsadmer Platz is still ugly; and we still huddle in the cinemas dreaming of better times and better films. In 2003, however, we had something else to wish for--that those same skies where ravens fly will not soon be filled with missiles. Tom McSorley is the executive director of the Canadian Film Institute in Ottawa and a contributing editor to Take One. |
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