"Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn" had been revealed as the winner of the Berlin Film Festival's top award back in March, but the awards ceremony was held later due to special pandemic scheduling.
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Berlinale's Golden Bear goes to 'Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn'
Along with Radu Jude's Golden Bear-winning film, find out more about the Silver Bear winners of the Berlin International Film Festival's competition.
Image: Silviu Ghetie/Micro Film 2021
Golden Bear for 'Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn'
Definitely not safe for work: Its opening scene is a homemade sex tape. But for Radu Jude, finding this material more obscene than society's racism, anti-Semitism and nationalism is what's perverse. The Romanian director had won a Silver Bear in 2015 with "Aferim"; this film is for those who enjoy transgressive experiments — like the jury, who praised the way it captures the pandemic's zeitgeist.
Image: Silviu Ghetie/Micro Film 2021
Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize: 'Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy'
Japanese director Ryusuke Hamaguchi's film is built in three episodes centering on female characters. A coincidental love triangle, an unsuccessful seduction trap, and an encounter emerging from a mix-up: The short stories mirror each other, and the work shines through its exquisitely slick mise en scène.
Image: 2021 Neopa/Fictive
Silver Bear Jury Prize: 'Mr Bachmann and His Class'
Maria Speth's documentary is nearly four hours long, but the half-day class is a captivating learning experience. In a multicultural German town, the 64-year-old teacher Dieter Bachmann leads a group of children with roots in 12 countries. "Mr Bachmann and His Class" is a hopeful take on how education can change everything in the thorny concept of integration.
Image: Madonnen Film
Silver Bear for Best Director: 'Natural Light'
Hungarian filmmaker Denes Nagy explores the human soul through this slow-paced World War II drama set in 1943. Instead of being driven by the action of the conflict, the film focuses on the moral dilemma of a Hungarian soldier, allied with Nazi Germany, who is reluctantly called to take command of his company following an ambush.
Image: Tamás Dobos
Silver Bear for Outstanding Artistic Contribution: 'A Cop Movie'
The police force is one of the most controversial institutions in Mexico. Director Alonso Ruizpalacios explores what it means to be a cop in Mexico City in this Netflix production. Combining documentary and role-playing scenes, this is definitely not your typical "cop movie." The Berlinale jury recognized Yibran Asuad's exceptional editing work in this film.
Image: No Ficcion
Silver Bear for Best Leading Performance: 'I'm Your Man'
Director Maria Schrader, renowned for the series "Unorthodox," explores how a rational woman (Maren Eggert) deals with a three-week experiment in which she lives with a humanoid robot programmed to be her perfect romantic partner (Dan Stevens). While most critics praised Stevens for perfectly impersonating an AI man, the jury was most impressed by Eggert's subtle performance.
Image: Christine Fenzl
Silver Bear for Best Supporting Performance: 'Forest – I See You Everywhere'
"Forest – I See You Everywhere" by Hungarian director Bence Fliegauf is composed of a series of vignettes. The first one centers on a girl who confronts her father, accusing him of being responsible for her mother's death. The members of the jury were enchanted by Lilla Kizlinger's performance, which they found "especially strong and memorable."
Image: Akos Nyoszoli and Matyas Gyuricza
Silver Bear for Best Screenplay: 'Introduction'
Even though story of "Introduction" is relatively simple, the jury was charmed by its efficient storytelling, through which "a hidden truth of human life is suddenly revealed, bright and lucid." Revered South Korean director Hong Sangsoo shot a part of his black-and-white 66 minute film in Berlin.
Image: Jeonwonsa Film Co.Production
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The winner of the Golden Bear for best film, Romanian director Radu Jude for Bad Luck Banging Or Loony Porn, was among the international filmmakers who traveled to Berlin to receive their award at the Berlin International Film Festival's award ceremony held on Sunday.
The Silver Bear awards in various categories, along with the Berlinale Documentary Award, the GWFF Best First Feature Award and prizes for films in other sections of the festival, were also handed out on June 13.
A few German works were among the Silver Bear winners. Mr. Bachmann and His Class, a documentary by Maria Speth, won the Silver Bear Jury Prize.
The festival awarded its first ever gender-neutral acting prize — where both male and female actor compete in the same category — to Maren Eggert for her performance in Maria Schrader's I'm Your Man.
Berlinale Summer Special highlights
The Berlinale Summer Special celebrated the return of cinema in Berlin. Here are a few snapshots of the event.
Image: Alexander Janetzko/Berlinale 2021
Berlinale closes with Competition Audience Award
The Berlinale Summer Special ended on June 20 with the Competition Audience Award, and cinema-goers picked "Mr Bachmann and His Class" as their favorite competition film. The nearly four-hour long documentary, which had also won the Silver Bear Jury Prize, follows a teacher and his class of multicultural children. Herr Bachmann himself played the guitar at the premiere of the film.
Image: Alexander Janetzko/Berlinale 2021
Daniel Brühl celebrates with a punch
Actor Daniel Brühl (right) stars in his own directorial debut, "Next Door," alongside Peter Kurth (left), known internationally as Inspector Wolter in the series "Babylon Berlin." In the film, Brühl portrays a famous actor who embodies gentrification in Berlin. It premiered on June 16.
Image: Ali Ghandtschi/Berlinale 2021
Celebrating with social distancing
The Golden and Silver Bear prizewinners were able to travel to Berlin to pick up their statues on June 13, but the ceremony took place outside, with different COVID-related security measures still in place. Here the winners pose with their trophies all while keeping a respectable distance from each other.
Image: Axel Schmidt/REUTERS/picture alliance
New gender-neutral acting awards
Maren Eggert smiles as she holds the Silver Bear recognizing her performance in the German film "I'm Your Man." The Berlin International Film Festival has eliminated its best actor and best actress categories, giving out instead for the first time two other acting awards on a gender-neutral basis, one for the best lead performance and another one for best supporting role.
Image: Tobias Schwarz/REUTERS
The Summer Special
Due to the pandemic, the Berlinale was split into two separate events. The first part, an online version of the festival, was held in March and restricted to film industry professionals as a replacement for the European Film Market. Now, during the Summer Special from June 9-20, many films are celebrating their actual premiere with an outdoor screening.
Image: Dirk M. Deckbar/Berlinale 2021
Solidarity with political prisoners in Belarus
Aliaksei Paluyan's "Courage," a documentary on the Belarus protests, celebrated its Berlin premiere on June 11. Nobel Prize for Literature winner Svetlana Alexievich and lead opposition politician Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya were special guests at the event. The audience was also invited to hold photos of arrested Belarusian opposition members as a sign of solidarity.
Image: Ali Ghandtschi/Berlinale 2021
Berlin's nightlife, from 1931 to 2021
Dominik Graf's film "Fabian – Going to the Dogs," based on Erich Kästner's classic novel, is set in Weimar-era Berlin, amid an exhilarating nightlife and the looming Nazi takeover of Germany in 1933. While lead actors Saskia Rosendahl and Tom Schilling portray intimate scenes in the film, they played along with the very different rules of conduct of this pandemic year at the premiere on June 10.
Image: Alexander Janetzko/Berlinale 2021
Carlo Chatrian and Mariette Rissenbeek smile
The first Berlin International Film Festival under Carlo Chatrian's and Mariette Rissenbeek's leadership was in 2020. With the pandemic breaking out right after the event, all established Berlinale traditions had to be revised for 2021. After months of uncertainty, the Summer Special opened on Berlin's Museum Island on June 9. "It is a pleasure," said artistic director Chatrian on the red carpet.
Image: Stefanie Loos/AFP/dpa/picture alliance
Monika Grütters: A special festival
Also joining the opening night celebration, Commissioner for Culture and the Media Monika Grütters said she hoped the Berlinale's Summer Special would feel like a "real campfire romance." Cinemas in Germany have been closed since November 2; outdoor screenings have only recently been allowed again. "We'll perhaps enjoy this [festival] like rarely before," said Grütters.
Image: Stefanie Loos/AFP/dpa/picture alliance
The real lawyer in 'The Mauritanian'
The opening film was "The Mauritanian," directed by Kevin Macdonald. Based on the true story of a man who was detained without charge for 14 years in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, the film stars Jodie Foster in the role of internationally recognized criminal defense lawyer Nancy Hollander, who personally introduced the film at the opening event.
Image: Stefanie Loos/AFP/dpa/picture alliance
Mainly German stars
Different cinema greats from Germany also joined the festival's opening — among them director Volker Schlöndorff ("The Tin Drum"). But Hollywood actors, who usually show up on the red carpet, had to stay away this year.
Image: Jens Kalaene/dpa/picture alliance
Summer festival memories for Iris Berben
For many years, the Berlin film festival was actually held in the summer. "This of course reminds me of many years back," German actor Iris Berben, born in 1950, told dpa. In the 1970s, Berlinale organizers decided to hold the festival earlier in the year to give it an edge on Cannes. "I remember there was a lot of grumbling when they moved it to the cold season," added Berben at the opening.
Image: Stefanie Loos/AFP/dpa/picture alliance
A citywide event
The Berlinale's central location is a specially created open-air cinema on Berlin's Museum Island, but the screenings of the festival's selection are held at 16 sites spread out throughout the city, such as this one in the courtyard of the Charlottenburg Palace. Along with the beach chairs, the warm weather contributed to the special atmosphere on the first night of the festival.
Image: Michael Sohn/AP/picture alliance
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The event took place outdoors, on Berlin's Museum Island, where the red carpet is being rolled out for the Berlinale Summer Special, which presents 126 films from its selection in open-air cinemas for the public from June 9-20.
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The Berlinale's pandemic shake-up
Normally, the Berlin International Film Festival's awards ceremony is an event filled with suspense for critics and film fans who closely follow the competition, as they hope that their own favorites will be crowned with the Golden Bear, or at least obtain one of the Silver Bears.
However, things were different this year. In response to the coronavirus pandemic, the festival's organizers divided the Berlinale into two separate events.
The prizewinners were revealed during the first part of the festival in March, an online program restricted to film industry professionals.
The announcement was a very low-key event, with the members of the jury reading their statements from separate hotel rooms, and the winners tuning in through a video link to react to the news.
The prizes are now being handed out three months later during the second part of the festival, the Berlinale Summer Special.
The festival will conclude with the announcement of an additional Berlinale Competition Audience Award on June 20.
Provocative Golden Bear censored in Russia
The Golden Bear winning film, Bad Luck Banging Or Loony Porn, is a sexually-explicit dark comedy about a school teacher who risks losing her job when a personal sex tape starts circulating online and in her school.
The jury said in March that they had picked the film because it "captures on screen the very content and essence, the mind and body, the values and the raw flesh of our present moment in time. Of this very moment of human existence."
Even though the work found a Russian distributor, Russia's Ministry of Culture announced on June 11 that it would not issue a distribution license for Bad Luck Banging Or Loony Porn, according to reports in Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
The ministry said that the Golden Bear-winning work violates Russian laws on pornography.