New films by Richard Linklater, Lucile Hadžihalilović, Radu Jude and Berlinale ubiquitous Hong Sang-soo will compete for this year’s Golden Bear. Here’s the lowdown on one of the most promising Berlinale line-ups in recent years.
The 75th Berlin International Film Festival has unveiled the 19 Competition titles and films selected for its new competitive Perspectives strand – which highlights first fiction features.
It’s already looking like one of the most promising line-ups we’ve seen in years.
This year’s Berlinale, helmed for the first time by new director Tricia Tuttle, will feature new films from Richard Linklater (returning to the festival after 2014’s Boyhood), Golden Bear winner Radu Jude and Lucile Hadžihalilović.
Hadžihalilović will present The Ice Tower, a French fantasy drama starring Marion Cotillard. It follows a star of a film production of The Snow Queen who bewitches a young runaway, and is the follow up to her mesmerizing film Evolution (one of our Best Films of the 21st Century) and 2021’s Earwig.
American filmmaker Richard Linklater’s Blue Moon follows the last days of Lorenz Hart, one-half of the songwriting team Rodgers & Hart. It stars Ethan Hawke, Andrew Scott and The Substance star Margaret Qualley.
As for Romania’s Radu Jude, who won Berlin’s Golden Bear in 2021 with Bad Luck Banging Or Loony Porn, he returns with Kontinental ’25 – a dark comedy which tackles issues like the housing crisis and the rise of nationalism.
Elsewhere, Mary Bronstein’s If I Had Legs I’d Kick You starring Rose Byrne will feature in Competition, as well as Dag Johan Haugerud’s Dreams (Sex Love) – the Norwegian director’s trilogy capper, following his Berlinale and Venice Film Festival-premiering first two chapters Sex and Love.
The only debut feature in Competition is Hot Milk from the UK’s Rebecca Lenkiewicz – the adaptation of Deborah Levy’s novel which explores the knotty complexities of motherhood.
There is only one documentary in Competition this year: Timestamp from Ukrainian director Kateryna Gornostai, who won Berlin’s Crystal Bear in 2021 with Stop-Zemlia. Her latest film chronicles the educators in wartime.
It’s looking like a strong year for French productions and co-productions, with five Competition titles vying for the Golden Bear this year: Ari by Léonor Serraille; The Safe House by Lionel Baier and the final film by the late French comedian Michel Blanc; Reflection In A Dead Diamond by Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani, which promises “sex and ultraviolence” according to today’s press conference; the aforementioned Timestamp by Kateryna Gornostai; and The Ice Tower by Lucile Hadžihalilović.
And of course, it wouldn’t be a Berlinale without the returning director Hong Sang-soo. The South Korean director returns with his eighth film to compete for the Golden Bear: What Does That Nature Say To You. The director has already won four Silver Bear’s in the past five years with The Woman Who Ran, Introduction, The Novelist’s Film and A Traveler’s Needs.
Of note is that eight of the 19 films in Competition are directed or co-directed by female-identifying directors – up from six last year. This once again shows that the Berlinale is head and shoulders above the likes of Cannes and Venice in terms of gender representation in Competition strands.
As previously announced, the festival will open with Tom Tykwer’s Special Gala Out of Competition film The Light. There will also be Bong Joon Ho’s sci-fi dark comedy Mickey 17 in the same section – his first film since the Oscar-winning Parasite.
US director Todd Haynes will preside over this year’s jury.
Stay tuned to Euronews Culture for our full Berlinale 2025 preview.
Here is the Berlinale 2025 line-up:
Competition
Ari (Fr-Bel) – Léonor Serraille
Blue Moon (US-Ire) – Richard Linklater
The Safe House (Switz-Luxe-Fr) – Lionel Baier
Dreams (Mex) – Michel Franco
Dreams (Sex Love) (Nor) – Dag Johan Haugerud
What Does that Nature Say to You (S Kor) – Hong Sangsoo
Hot Milk (UK) – Rebecca Lenkiewicz
If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (US) – Mary Bronstein
Kontinental ’25 (Rom) – Radu Jude
The Message (Arg-Sp) – Iván Fund
Mother’s Baby (Austria-Switz-Ger) – Johanna Moder
The Blue Trail (Bra-Mex-Chile-Neth) – Gabriel Mascaro
Reflection In A Dead Diamond (Bel-Lux-It-Fr) – Hélène Cattet, Bruno Forzani
Living The Land (China) – Huo Meng
Timestamp (Ukr-Lux-Neth-Fr) – Kateryna Gornostai
The Ice Tower (Fr-Ger) – Lucile Hadžihalilović
What Marielle Knows (Ger) – Frédéric Hambalek
Girls On Wire (China) – Vivian Qu
Yunan (Ger-Can-It-Palestine-Qat-Jor-Saudi) – Ameer Fakher Eldin
Perspectives
The Settlement (Egy-Fr-Ger-Saudi-Qat) – Mohamed Rashad
Shadowbox (India-France-USA-Spain) – Tanushree Das, Saumyananda Sahi
BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions (US) – Kahlil Joseph
Where the Night Stands Still (It-Phil) – Liryc Dela Cruz
The Devil Smokes (and Saves the Burnt Matches in the Same Box) (Mex) – Ernesto Martinez Bucio
Two Times João Liberada (Port) – Paula Tomás Marques
Eel (Tai) – Chu Chun-Teng
How to Be Normal and the Oddness of the Other World (Austria) – Florian Pochlatko
Little Trouble Girls (Slovenia-It-Cro-Ser) – Urška Đukić
Mad Bills to Pay (or Destiny, dile que no soy malo) (US) – Joel Alfonso Vargas
Growing Down (Hun) – Bálint Dániel Sós
Punching The World (Ger) – Constanze Klaue
We believe You (Bel) – Arnaud Dufeys, Charlotte Devillers
That Summer In Paris (Fra) – Valentine Cadic
Berlinale Special Gala
The Light (Ger) – Tom Tykwer (Opening Film)
Mickey 17 (US-S Kor-UK) – Bong Joon Ho
The Thing With Feathers (UK) – Dylan Southern
After This Death (US) – Lucio Castro
A Complete Unknown (US) – James Mangold
Late Shift (Switz-Ger) – Petra Volpe
Islands (Ger) – Jan-Ole Gerster
Köln 75 (Ger-Pol-Bel) – Ido Fluk
Lurker (US-It) – Alex Russell
Berlinale Special Series Gala
The Narrow Road to the Deep North (Australia) – Justin Kurzel
Berlinale Special
Ancestral Visions of the Future (Fr-Lesotho-Ger-Saudi) – Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
Das Deutsche Volk (Ger) – Marcin Wierzchowski
Honey Bunch (Can) – Madeleine Sims-Fewer, Dusty Mancinelli
All I Had Was Nothingness (Fr) – Guillaume Ribot
No Beast. So Fierce. (Ger-Pol-Fr) – Burhan Qurbani
Leibniz – Chronicle of a Lost Painting (Ger) – Edgar Reitz, Anatol Schuster
The Best Mother in the World (Bra-Arg) – Anna Muylaert
A Letter To David (Isr-US) – Tom Shoval
My Undesirable Friends: Part I – Last Air in Moscow (US) – Julia Loktev
The Old Woman With The Knife (S Kor) – Min Kyu-dong
Shoah (Fr) – Claude Lanzmann
Berlinale Special – Honorary Golden Bear
Friendship’s Death (UK) – Peter Wollen
The 75th Berlin International Film Festival takes place between 13-23 February.
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