From Hannelore Elsner and Romy Schneider to Julia Jentsch and Nina Hoss, German cinema has produced some superb actresses in recent decades. Here are our favorites.
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KINO favorites: 10 best German actresses
From Hannelore Elsner and Romy Schneider to Julia Jentsch and Nina Hoss, German cinema has produced some superb actresses in recent decades. Here are our favorites.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
#10: Johanna Wokalek
As a high-ranking terrorist, a patient in a psychiatric ward, a country bumpkin, or even the pope, Johanna Wokalek's spectrum is broad. She was born in Freiburg in 1975 and started her career in the theater, where she continues to act. Her most recent big-screen success was in the title role in Sönke Wortmann's church drama, "Pope Joan."
Image: Constantin Film Verleih GmbH / Mathias Bothor
#9: Hannelore Elsner
Hannelore Elsner's debut dates back many years: In 1959, she co-starred with Freddy Quinn in the musical film "Freddy unter fremden Sternen." But then the offers got better and she worked with famous directors like Edgar Reitz and István Szabó. In 2000, Elsner took on the role of her life as the psychologically instable writer Hanna Flanders in "No Place to Go."
Image: picture alliance/dpa
#8: Corinna Harfouch
Before German reunification, Corinna Harfouch was a celebrated stage actress in East Germany. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, she expanded her work to the screen. Harfouch played Magda Goebbels in "Downfall," Madame Arnulfi in "Perfume: The Story of a Murderer" and a mourning mother in "A Year Ago in Winter." She recently appeared as a depressed wife in the 2012 drama, "Home for the Weekend."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Pandora Filmverleih
#7: Caroline Herfurth
"Perfume" and "A Year Ago in Winter" are among Caroline Herfurth's major career successes. The young actress was born in Berlin in 1984 and has already become one of Germany's most in-demand stars. Herfurth is convincing in both dramas and comedies - including the two recent "Fack ju Göthe" films.
Image: picture-alliance/ dpa
#6: Katharina Schüttler
Katharina Schüttler is a very busy actress for television and cinema, as well as stage productions. The slender, petite native of Cologne often surprises audiences with her powerful performances - but is just as convincing in roles that portray nervous, unsure characters. Her recent successes include "Age of Cannibals" and "13 Minutes."
Image: Farbfilm/dpa
#5: Julia Jentsch
The charismatic Julia Jentsch was discovered after appearing in "The Edukators" in 2004 and followed it up with a celebrated performance in "Sophie Scholl - The Final Days." The Berlin-based actress is also in-demand abroad. In 2008, she worked with Polish director Małgorzata Szumowska in "33 Scenes from Life." Most recently, she appeared in "24 Weeks," a trying drama about abortion.
Image: Realfiction Filme
#4: Nina Hoss
Nina Hoss divides her time between the stage and the cinema and has the privilege of choosing her projects selectively. She shines in the theater just as she does on the silver screen. The critically acclaimed actress has worked closely with director Christian Petzold, with whom she's made four films: "Yella", "Jericho", "Barbara" and "Phoenix."
Three icons of German film, three fascinating actresses from three generations, share the third place. Marlene Dietrich (*1901), Hildegard Knef (*1925) and Romy Schneider (*1938) stand for three cinematic eras. Dietrich was a world star, while Knef was the face of post-war film and Schneider won the hearts of the neighboring French, in particular.
#2: Barbara Sukowa
Barbara Sukowa can't be mentioned without bringing up two great directors she's worked with: Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Margarethe von Trotta. With Fassbinder, Sukowa starred in "Berlin Alexanderplatz" and played the title role in "Lola." Sukowa tended to take on heroines with Trotta, playing Hildegard von Bingen, Rosa Luxemburg and Hannah Arendt.
Image: Heimatfilm
#1: Martina Gedeck
Our favorite German actress is Martina Gedeck. The Munich native is a versatile and well liked. She began her career in the 1990s and films like "Rossini," "Bella Martha" and "Atomised" are among her greatest successes. She's also worked with internationally respected directors like Robert De Niro, István Szabó and Bille August.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/C. Charisius
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For the latest edition in our KINO favorites series, we take on the nearly impossible task of picking our favorite German actresses, past and present.
Impossible because if there's one thing German cinema has no shortage of, it's phenomenal actresses. Strong, intelligent woman have been a central feature of much of German film since its inception. In Hollywood, the actress is often just an accessory to her male lead. In German film, she's usually an equal, if not the main player.
The haughty flappers of 1920s Berlin gave way to the no-nonsense "Trümmerfrauen," who rebuilt the country out of the ashes of World War II. Even in films featuring the stereotypical housewife of the 1950s or, in 1980s romantic comedies, flirtatious date-a-holics, female characters in German cinema have had a sharp, intelligent edge. That's all the more true today, where a younger generation of actresses has continued in this very German tradition of being both feminine and tough.
It's a description that fits all the women in our list of favorite actresses. They've played Nazis and rebels, artists and monsters. One was even Pope. What unites them is a keen intelligence paired with raw emotion. These are women that bare all on screen. Their performances are often provocative and frequently divisive. Rarely do they comfort or console.
For this reason, this was probably our most fought-over list. There's something about German actresses that divides fans into camps of love-them or hate-them.
So we expect this list to be controversial and divisive. It stretches from the stars of the 1930s to some of the most exciting and provocative actresses working today.
Bring on the comments and condemnations. Who do you think we've unfairly snubbed, which of our picks doesn't deserve her place of honor? Let us know your own Top 10 by sending us an email at: kino@dw.com. We can't promise you'll change our minds (we're pretty stubborn) but give it your best shot.