Juliette Binoche hails starring role for women as Berlin filmfest opens
Last updated on: 07 February,2019 10:09 pm
The Berlinale will show nearly 400 movies from around the world with 17 vying for Golden Bear.
BERLIN (AFP) - Europe’s first major film festival of the year, the Berlinale, kicked off Thursday with jury president Juliette Binoche welcoming an unprecedented line-up of female directors.
The 11-day event prides itself on being the most politically engaged of the A-list cinema showcases, presenting 400 movies from around the world, most on hard-hitting topical themes including rising extremism and economic exploitation.
But its red carpet promises a steady stream of glamour too with Christian Bale, Diane Kruger, Tilda Swinton, Catherine Deneuve, Jonah Hill, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Casey Affleck all awaited in the frosty German capital.
French Oscar winner Binoche, 54, is leading a six-member panel choosing the winner of the prestigious Golden and Silver Bear prizes, to be awarded at a gala ceremony on February 16.
Last year, with the #MeToo movement against abuses of power roiling the industry, the innovative docudrama "Touch Me Not" about sexual intimacy by Romania’s Adina Pintilie clinched the top honours.
For the first time this year, seven out of the 17 contenders are women -- a more than 40-percent share that eclipses rivals such as Cannes and Venice, which have come under fire as chummy men’s clubs.
The top festivals have long faced pressure to boost their female representation as they serve as gatekeepers to international distribution, awards and box office cash.
‘Big step forward’
Binoche welcomed the more diverse selection, saying it was long overdue and sent a message beyond the world of cinema.
"I think that’s a good step forward, 10 years ago was not like that," she told reporters. "Open minds -- it’s a good sign."
British producer, director and actress Trudie Styler, 65, who is also on the jury, said the Berlinale had long championed films by under-represented groups but that this year’s line-up was "not only courageous but a big step forward".
Denmark’s Lone Scherfig, who made the Oscar-nominated coming-of-age tale "An Education" in 2009, started the festival with the premiere of her film "The Kindness of Strangers".
The bittersweet drama stars Zoe Kazan ("The Big Sick") as a mother of two fleeing domestic violence who has to rely on her fellow New Yorkers for help, in a cast including Andrea Riseborough ("The Death Of Stalin") and Bill Nighy ("Love Actually").
"This is about a woman who is stronger than she thinks," Scherfig, 59, told reporters.
She said that as cosmopolitan New York is "kind of everybody’s capital", it was the right backdrop for a story about how societies deal with their most vulnerable members.
"(The characters) are not political creatures but the film and the backdrop -- the juxtaposition of very luxurious New York and the soup kitchens -- is, I hope, a way to address political issues in a kind of intimate way."
Nighy, who also appeared in Scherfig’s 2017 feel-good movie "Their Finest", said that given the "current climate" where the two films are set -- in the United States and Britain -- he welcomed her upbeat message.
"I think any film currently that emphasises those things which unite us rather than those things that divide us... is not only desirable, it’s essential," he said.
Gay marriage in 1901
In June, festival chief Dieter Kosslick will be succeeded after 18 years at the helm by Carlo Chatrian, the current head of Switzerland’s Locarno film festival, and Mariette Rissenbeek, the Dutch director of German Film, which promotes homegrown movies abroad.
Kosslick, 70, will be handing over the reins at a time of growing competition from streaming services.
He told AFP he saw scope for cinemas to "co-exist" and thrive, even as box office receipts fell 14 percent in Germany alone last year.
After winning the Golden Lion top prize at the Venice film festival in September with "Roma", Netflix will enter the Berlin race for the first time with the drama "Elisa and Marcela".
The picture by Isabel Coixet ("The Bookshop") is based on the true story of two women who pioneered gay marriage in Spain in 1901 by posing as man and wife.
For his last edition, Kosslick has opted to make a parting political statement, offering to buy tickets for leaders of the far-right Alternative for Germany party to a screening of "Who Will Write Our History?", a documentary about the Warsaw Ghetto.