Berliner Boersenzeitung - Gender flip of film classic opens Berlin fest under virus cloud

EUR -
AED 3.84509
AFN 71.777909
ALL 98.141202
AMD 408.574256
ANG 1.895444
AOA 956.307906
ARS 1050.834504
AUD 1.612295
AWG 1.88697
AZN 1.781792
BAM 1.95518
BBD 2.123426
BDT 125.68012
BGN 1.95544
BHD 0.394556
BIF 3106.673555
BMD 1.046863
BND 1.413279
BOB 7.266764
BRL 6.08667
BSD 1.051666
BTN 88.857002
BWP 14.357787
BYN 3.441808
BYR 20518.511152
BZD 2.119927
CAD 1.463907
CDF 3004.495922
CHF 0.928358
CLF 0.036943
CLP 1019.371919
CNY 7.586823
CNH 7.596382
COP 4597.413202
CRC 534.630353
CUC 1.046863
CUP 27.741865
CVE 110.231075
CZK 25.351929
DJF 187.280573
DKK 7.458552
DOP 63.369892
DZD 139.850155
EGP 52.055675
ERN 15.702942
ETB 131.05999
FJD 2.383654
FKP 0.826307
GBP 0.832863
GEL 2.852699
GGP 0.826307
GHS 16.721854
GIP 0.826307
GMD 74.327594
GNF 9065.210059
GTQ 8.118501
GYD 220.032282
HKD 8.147472
HNL 26.576948
HRK 7.467544
HTG 138.078823
HUF 411.263192
IDR 16654.540506
ILS 3.888614
IMP 0.826307
INR 88.452372
IQD 1377.782549
IRR 44078.158835
ISK 146.099629
JEP 0.826307
JMD 167.02418
JOD 0.742329
JPY 162.076355
KES 135.30763
KGS 90.541947
KHR 4241.735067
KMF 491.658984
KPW 942.176136
KRW 1467.345375
KWD 0.322141
KYD 0.876434
KZT 521.551976
LAK 23036.690094
LBP 94182.614366
LKR 305.992904
LRD 189.834296
LSL 19.030043
LTL 3.091114
LVL 0.633237
LYD 5.13737
MAD 10.518163
MDL 19.150923
MGA 4924.554963
MKD 61.549271
MMK 3400.169584
MNT 3557.239785
MOP 8.431545
MRU 41.826127
MUR 49.0452
MVR 16.174377
MWK 1823.664873
MXN 21.399132
MYR 4.676858
MZN 66.894575
NAD 19.030134
NGN 1770.328441
NIO 38.49315
NOK 11.602768
NPR 142.170924
NZD 1.795014
OMR 0.40304
PAB 1.051666
PEN 3.994832
PGK 4.233697
PHP 61.630383
PKR 292.324522
PLN 4.344295
PYG 8254.380754
QAR 3.83432
RON 4.977308
RSD 117.026668
RUB 106.047711
RWF 1445.075964
SAR 3.930488
SBD 8.761739
SCR 14.258139
SDG 629.686448
SEK 11.599638
SGD 1.409962
SHP 0.826307
SLE 23.643399
SLL 21952.194733
SOS 601.035118
SRD 37.064183
STD 21667.946639
SVC 9.202212
SYP 2630.274077
SZL 19.038413
THB 36.362743
TJS 11.200706
TMT 3.674488
TND 3.327176
TOP 2.451861
TRY 36.201935
TTD 7.138837
TWD 34.080594
TZS 2776.65598
UAH 43.420359
UGX 3885.804091
USD 1.046863
UYU 44.816635
UZS 13457.421913
VES 48.437715
VND 26608.635571
VUV 124.285657
WST 2.922413
XAF 655.764576
XAG 0.033764
XAU 0.000389
XCD 2.829199
XDR 0.802265
XOF 655.74892
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.608951
ZAR 18.964653
ZMK 9423.028407
ZMW 29.000798
ZWL 337.089399
  • RBGPF

    59.6900

    59.69

    +100%

  • BCC

    2.9500

    140.36

    +2.1%

  • CMSC

    0.1200

    24.64

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    -0.1700

    63.1

    -0.27%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    33.7

    +1.04%

  • AZN

    1.0600

    64.26

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.04

    -0.23%

  • BTI

    -0.1000

    36.98

    -0.27%

  • RIO

    0.1800

    62.57

    +0.29%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.52

    +1.49%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.23

    0%

  • RELX

    0.6500

    45.76

    +1.42%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    6.79

    +2.65%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    8.84

    -1.13%

  • CMSD

    0.1850

    24.445

    +0.76%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    26.68

    -1.2%

Gender flip of film classic opens Berlin fest under virus cloud
Gender flip of film classic opens Berlin fest under virus cloud

Gender flip of film classic opens Berlin fest under virus cloud

A gender-swapped update of a German cult classic on Thursday opened the Berlinale, Europe's first major international film festival of the year, which organisers are staging as a live event despite surging coronavirus infections.

Text size:

"Peter von Kant" by acclaimed French director Francois Ozon adapts Rainer Werner Fassbinder's melodrama "The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant", which premiered at the event 50 years ago.

It is one of 18 films from 15 countries vying for the Golden Bear top prize, which will be awarded Wednesday from a jury led by Indian-born American director M. Night Shyamalan ("The Sixth Sense").

Ozon, 54, one of the leading lights of European gay-themed cinema, said the love triangle set in the claustrophobic atmosphere of the title character's sumptuously decorated home was the perfect pandemic project.

"It was during the French lockdown when all French directors wondered whether they'd be able to continue working" that the idea was born, he told reporters.

He and his small cast of actors including Denis Menochet, Isabelle Adjani and Hanna Schygulla, now 78, who played the cruel young seductress in the original, hunkered down together for rehearsals and filming.

- 'Like a ship's captain' -

Calling himself a "Fassbinder fetishist", Ozon said the German director had told an autobiographical story about love and dominance but "hidden" behind a female character in the then daring lesbian romance.

Ozon said he decided to transform the title character from a woman fashion designer to a male film director who falls hard for a young actor to probe his own life and work.

"There's something universal about dominant relationships," he said, noting that the question of who had the upper hand was "not binary" and often evolves over time.

"But a director has to ask himself how he deals with his power. So I used this text to ask these questions of myself and the audience."

Menochet, also co-starred in Ozon's "By the Grace of God" about paedophilia victims in the Catholic Church, which won the Berlinale's runner-up prize in 2019.

While Fassbinder was notoriously tyrannical on set, Menochet said Ozon was firm but not unfair.

"He's impatient, like a ship's captain," he said with a smile.

- 'Excited' -

Berlin ranks with Cannes and Venice among Europe's biggest film festivals and prides itself on being most welcoming to the general public, selling thousands of tickets to red-carpet premieres and screenings across the city.

This time, organisers of the Berlinale, which started in 1951 as a Cold War culture showcase for the divided German capital, have imposed a raft of precautions to audiences safe.

Shyamalan ("The Sixth Sense") told reporters he was "just so excited to watch these movies".

"I'm feeling like a kid here and these guys are the perfect partners in crime," he said.

The jury also includes Japan's Ryusuke Hamaguchi, whose "Drive My Car" is now nominated for four Oscars, and Tunisian-French producer Said Ben Said, who praised the decision to go ahead with the festival.

"Cinema for me has always been like a religion, and as a cinephile I have always been a very religious man... For a religious man, the church is the most important place."

Last year, the Berlinale competition was staged strictly online, just as the first vaccines were rolling out across Europe.

This time it will screen around 250 films, a quarter fewer than in previous years, with limited cinema capacity, as well as vaccine, testing and mask requirements and a shorter competition run.

The Berliner Morgenpost warned of a "catastrophe" if the festival turned into a "superspreader event", while weekly Die Zeit called it "irresponsible" and "backward" not to have an online programme.

Scott Roxborough, Europe bureau chief for The Hollywood Reporter, also questioned the festival's choice, saying it arose from deep anxiety about the future of movie-going in the face of streaming's rise.

"Most theatres will have reopened or partially reopened but we still haven't seen a real bounce back of arthouse movies, of independent movies in the way that a lot of people had hoped," he told AFP.

(T.Renner--BBZ)