The Best Thing You Can Do With Your Life

  • Berlinale 2018: 18 Documentary Films Nominated for Glashütte Original – Documentary Award

    [caption id="attachment_26756" align="aligncenter" width="1000"]Viaje a los Pueblos Fumigados (A Journey to the Fumigated Towns) Viaje a los Pueblos Fumigados (A Journey to the Fumigated Towns)[/caption] This year, for the second time ever, the 2018 Berlin International Film Festival will present the Glashütte Original – Documentary Award.   A total of 18 documentary films from the current program of the Competition, Berlinale Special, Panorama, Forum, Generation and Perspektive Deutsches Kino sections and the special presentation Culinary Cinema are nominated for the Glashütte Original – Documentary Award.  All nominated films will celebrate their world premiere at the Berlinale 2018. The Glashütte Original – Documentary Award is endowed with € 50,000, and trophy funded by Glashütte Original. The prize money will be split between the film’s director and producer.  The prize will be presented during the official Award Ceremony in the Berlinale Palast on February 24. A three-member jury will pick the winner: Cíntia Gil (Portugal) – co-director of the Doclisboa, documentary film festival in Portugal ; Ulrike Ottinger (Germany) -director; and Eric Schlosser –  (USA)investigative journalist, playwright, screenwriter, and filmmaker. The following films are nominated for the Glashütte Original – Documentary Award:

    Competition – Out of competition

    Eldorado Switzerland / Germany By Markus Imhoof

    Berlinale Special

    Viaje a los Pueblos Fumigados (A Journey to the Fumigated Towns) Argentina By Fernando Solanas

    Panorama

    Al Gami’ya (What Comes Around) Lebanon / Egypt / Greece / Qatar / Slovenia By Reem Saleh Až přijde válka (When the War Comes) Czech Republic / Croatia By Jan Gebert Ex Pajé (Ex Shaman) Brazil By Luiz Bolognesi Game Girls France / Germany By Alina Skrzeszewska Obscuro Barocco France / Greece By Evangelia Kranioti Zentralflughafen THF (Central Airport THF) Germany / France / Brazil By Karim Aïnouz

    Forum

    Den’ Pobedy (Victory Day) Germany By Sergei Loznitsa L’empire de la perfection (In the Realm of Perfection) France By Julien Faraut Minatomachi (Inland Sea) Japan / USA By Kazuhiro Soda Premières solitudes (Young Solitude) France By Claire Simon Waldheims Walzer Austria By Ruth Beckermann

    Generation

    Ceres Belgium / Netherlands By Janet van den Brand What Walaa Wants Canada / Denmark By Christy Garland

    Perspektive Deutsches Kino

    The Best Thing You Can Do With Your Life Germany / Mexico By Zita Erffa draußen Germany By Johanna Sunder-Plassmann, Tama Tobias-Macht

    Culinary Cinema

    The Green Lie Austria By Werner Boote

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  • 14 Films to Compete in Perspektive Deutsches Kino 2018 at Berlin International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_26432" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Sebastian Rudolph. Whatever Happens Next. Regie/director: Gerd Conradt Whatever Happens Next[/caption] 14 films, including six full-length fiction and four documentary films, will compete for the Kompass-Perspektive-Preis, endowed with 5,000 euros, at the 2018 Berlin International Film Festival.  In addition, a neighborhood film project that focuses on Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz in Berlin will be a guest at Perspektive Deutsches Kino 2018. Sure, you can always take off. Soon. Right now. Or later. You could just be gone, just steal away from a fully furnished life. But then what happens? Everyone has thought about it but very few actually do it: leave their intended path. It’s risky, it’s exciting, it’s brave and whimsical. Paul Zeise (Sebastian Rudolph) goes for it in the debut film Whatever Happens Next (produced by The StoryBay, Salzwedel) by director Julian Pörksen. Paul travels across the country crashing funerals and parties, moves in with off-the-wall Nele (Lilith Stangenberg) for a while, and generally floats around in the wonderland we call life. A short film by director Julian Pörksen was presented at Perspektive Deutsches Kino in 2012. Whatever Happens Next is his first feature-length fiction work. Director Susan Gordanshekan is also returning to Perspektive Deutsches Kino with her debut feature Die defekte Katze (A Dysfunctional Cat, produced by Glory Film, Munich). The film tells the story of an Iranian couple who only begin to get to know each other after entering traditional marriage, and then fall short of success when faced with the challenges of life together in Germany. The story is about liberating oneself from different lifestyle ideals and giving love a second chance. The debut film Verlorene (Lost Ones, produced by VIAFILM, Munich) by Felix Hassenfratz takes us deep into provincial Baden, where everyone knows everybody and the siblings Maria (Maria Dragus) and Hannah (Anna Bachmann) live alone with their father (Clemens Schick) following the death of their mother. Director Felix Hassenfratz is well acquainted with the environment and tells a small town story where fear of the unknown is just as strong as a yearning for it. The horror/love story Luz is the graduation film by director Tilman Singer and production designer Dario Méndez Acosta from the Academy of Media Arts Cologne. Luz, a young taxi driver from Latin America, stumbles into a police headquarters with the last of her strength. She’s being pursued by a demon, who is determined to finally be close to his beloved. Tilman Singer describes the work as an erotic 16mm thriller that plays with audience perception. Three more documentary films have also been selected for the Perspektive program. In The Best Thing You Can Do With Your Life (produced by Zita Erffa, Petruvski Films, in Tegernsee, with co-production by the HFF Munich), director Zita Erffa asks her brother László about his motivation for entering a Legion of Christ monastery. Eight years after his departure, she can finally visit him and ask why he left her alone in her family. For both, the camera functions as a catalyst to find harmony. The political documentary  Impreza – Das Fest (Impreza – The Celebration, produced by DREIFILM, Munich) also takes a highly personal approach. Her aunt’s 50th wedding anniversary is an opportunity for director Alexandra Wesolowski to visit her family in Poland. But instead of being about the party, the conversations she documents soon focus completely on politics. In Überall wo wir sind (Everywhere We Are, produced by Veronika Kaserer) director Veronika Kaserer follows a family after the death of one of its members – the parents who lost a son and a sister who lost a brother. In the organisation of daily activities and the narratives of the protagonists, battling or grieving, we see the “pact with death” become a “pact with life”. The 22-minute fiction film Kein sicherer Ort (No Safe Place, produced by Filmmagnet, Munich, with co-production by the HFF Munich) by director Antje Beine supplements the mostly mid-length program with one more young protagonist. Through the eyes of 10-year-old Marie (Lucia Stickel), we see what it means when you’re not allowed to be a child in the place you call home. The series Film Wanderungen (Film Walks) completes the Perspektive Deutsches Kino program. The project was invited to Perspektive 2018 as a guest. What does “neighborhood” mean? And what is “home”? In the summer of 2017, 140 residents of the Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz area in the Mitte district of Berlin were interviewed. On the second Berlinale weekend, audiences are invited to take a trip through the living rooms of those residents to watch films together, and engage in conversation. On Berlinale Publikumstag, February 25, 2018, Perspektive Deutsches Kino will present the winning work in the fiction film competition “Max-Ophüls-Preis 2018”, and the winner of the documentary film competition First Steps Award 2017 (Ohne diese Welt, directed by Nora Fingscheidt).

    The Best Thing You Can Do With Your Life By Zita Erffa Documentary World premiere

    Die defekte Katze (A Dysfunctional Cat) By Susann Gordanshekan With Pegah Ferydoni, Hadi Khanjanpour, Henrike von Kuick, Constantin von Jascheroff, Arash Marandi Feature film World premiere

    Impreza – Das Fest (Impreza – The Celebration) By Alexandra Wesolowski Documentary German premiere

    Kein sicherer Ort (No Safe Place) By Antje Beine With Lucia Stickel, Kristina Pauls, Robin Sondermann Medium-long feature films World premiere

    Luz By Tilman Singer With Luana Velis, Jan Bluthardt, Julia Riedler, Nadja Stübiger, Johannes Benecke Feature film World premiere

    Verlorene (Lost Ones) By Felix Hassenfratz With Maria Dragus, Anna Bachmann, Clemens Schick, Enno Trebs, Meira Durand Feature film World premiere

    Whatever Happens Next By Julian Pörksen With Sebastian Rudolph, Lilith Stangenberg, Peter René Lüdicke, Christine Hoppe, Eike Weinreich Feature film World premiere

    Überall wo wir sind (Everywhere We Are) By Veronika Kaserer Documentary World premiere

    Films announced so far:

    draußen (outside) By Johanna Sunder-Plassmann, Tama Tobias-Macht Documentary World premiere

    Feierabendbier (After-Work Beer) By Ben Brummer With Tilman Strauß, Julia Dietze, Johann Jürgens, Christian Tramitz Feature film World premiere

    Kineski zid (Great Wall of China) By Aleksandra Odić With Elena Matić, Tina Keserović, Faketa Salihbegović-Avdagić, Anja Stanić, Mugdim Avdagić Medium-long feature film German premiere

    By Sophia Bösch With Sofia Aspholm, Lennart Jähkel, Lars T. Johansson, Ingmar Virta, Ivan Mathias Petersson Medium-long feature film World premiere

    Rückenwind von vorn (Away You Go) By Philipp Eichholtz With Victoria Schulz, Aleksandar Radenković, Daniel Zillmann, Angelika Waller Feature film World premiere

    Storkow Kalifornia By Kolja Malik With Daniel Roth, Lana Cooper, Franziska Ponitz Medium-long feature film World premiere

    Guest Projects:

    Film Wanderungen (Film Walks) 27 participants Doc-series

    Ohne diese Welt (Without This World) By Nora Fingscheidt Documentary

    Award winner “Max-Ophüls-Preis 2018” for Best Feature Film

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