Another Hollywood prize for Fatih Akin's 'In the Fade'
January 12, 2018
This has been a week of Hollywood acclaim for Fatih Akin and his thriller "In the Fade," as a Critics' Choice Award follows on the heels of his Golden Globe. Is an Oscar on the horizon, too?
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German director Fatih Akin's thriller about a woman who seeks justice after the death of her son and her Kurdish husband in a bomb attack has won the Critics' Choice Award for best foreign language film on Thursday.
The Critics' Choice Awards honor achievements in film-making. Some 300 members of the Broadcast Film Critics Association in the US and Canada determine the award winners.
Love and revenge
The German film was in competition with, among others, the Swedish satire "The Square" directed by Ruben Ostlund; Cambodian film "First they killed my Father" by Angelina Jolie and the French AIDS activist drama "120 Beats per Minute."
"In the Fade" is also Germany's official best foreign language Oscar entry this year, competing with eight other foreign language films. The 90th Academy Awards ceremony takes place on March 4.
'In the Fade' and other films by Fatih Akin
Director Fatih Akin takes up the true stories of the neo-Nazi series of murders across Germany in his latest film, "In the Fade." Here's a look back at some of his previous works.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Warner Bros.
A brutal awakening in 'In the Fade'
In Fatih Akin's Golden Globe-winning and Oscar-nominated film, "In the Fade," Katja and Nuri Sekerci (Diane Kruger and Numan Acar) are a happy couple. Nuri's Kurdish background, however, proves reason enough for right-wing radicals to murder him. Akin's movie deals with the series of murders undertaken by the neo-Nazi group National Socialist Underground (NSU) across Germany from 2000 to 2007.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Warner Bros.
Award-winning Diane Kruger
German-born actress Diane Kruger has made a name for herself through international productions; this movie is her German film debut. She took home the best actress prize from the 70th Cannes Film Festival this summer for her starring role in Akin's movie, as a woman who struggles to cope with the loss of her husband and child in a bombing.
Image: Reuters/R. Duvignau
Akin's previous film: 'Tschick'
In 2016, Fatih Akin received positive criticism for his film adaptation of the novel of two young men on a road trip across Germany's countryside, "Tschick" (titled "Goodbye Berlin" in English, picture). That positive feedback was repeated at Cannes in May for "In the Fade."
Image: Studiocanal GmbH
Over-ambitious: 'The Cut'
His previous film, the historical drama "The Cut," premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2014. It was an artistic and commercial flop. The film took up the subject of the genocide of Armenians at the hands of Turkey. Despite the film's ambitious intentions, it was for the most part an anemic historical epic.
Image: pandorafilm
International breakthrough with 'Head-On'
Akin achieved his international breakthrough 13 years ago with the drama "Head-On," which captivated audiences at the Berlinale in 2004. The moving film took home the Golden Bear and established Akin's name as a director who could bring untamed emotion to the silver screen.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
His remarkable debut: 'Short Sharp Shock'
Then 25, the director made his debut in 1998 with the story of three young men in Hamburg's Altona neighborhood. The emotional power of the movie was unseen in German productions at the time. As the main characters had their roots in Turkey, Greece and Serbia, the film embodied an energetic multi-cultural shift developing in the country's cinema.
Image: picture-alliance/IFTN/United Archives
Another win: 'The Edge of Heaven'
After winning prizes in Locarno for "Short Sharp Shock" and in Berlin for "Head-On," Akin's following work, "The Edge of Heaven," was also showered with acclaim. That film won an award for best screenplay at Cannes in 2007.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
A 'Soul Kitchen' full of humor
The director continued to receive awards and acclaim for his movies. In 2009, the Hamburg-based comedy "Soul Kitchen" took home the top award at the Venice film festival. The film, which follows a hapless restaurant owner, his girlfriend and his brother, showcases Akin's strengths: his feeling for dialogue, for unusual settings and a load of humor.
Image: corazon international
A drama about justice: 'In the Fade'
With "In the Fade," Fatih Akin is releasing his ninth film in German theaters. The drama takes on the racism within German society, successfully connecting a political story with a private narrative, without feeling moralistic or didactic. It is a "true" Fatih Akin film, filled with strong emotions.