European Film Market, February 09 - 17, 2012

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Spotlights

Berlinale Shorts 

The section Berlinale Shorts showcases about 30 films which compete for the Golden and Silver Bear, the DAAD Short film prize, hosted by the DAAD Berlin Artist programme and the Nomination for the best European Short Film. The Berlinale Shorts is an excellent platform for these artists from across the globe to show their work. more

German Cinema – LOLA@Berlinale 

German Cinema – LOLA@Berlinale showcases the best in current German cinema and remains an important series within the European Film Market. Previously known as the German Cinema series, German Cinema – LOLA@Berlinale presents feature, children's and documentary films longlisted for the German Film Awards (aka Lola) and is a joint project of the Berlin International Film Festival, the German Film Academy and German Films. more

Berlinale - The Competition 

The Competition is the main event of the Berlinale and was the original seed out of which the Festival, in all its many parts, has grown. The first International Film Festival Berlin was envisioned as an international cultural event that was to bring the postwar world to Berlin and Berlin to the world. Obviously this also had its political side. And in fact there was the financial side as well - this was seen as an opportunity to help get the decimated film industry in Berlin back on its feet more

International Forum of New Cinema  

When the political controversy that broke out at the Berlinale in 1970 literally shut down the Competition, the resulting fallout brought to the surface a lot of internal conflict about the identity of the Berlinale itself. The solution was to create a new program, a counter event to the Competition which would be, as founding director Ulrich Gregor put it, "a catch-all for everything dangerous, subversive, or in any way unruly" more

Berlinale Talent Campus 

Part of Dieter Kosslick’s response to taking over directorship of the Berlinale was that he felt that it wasn't enough to just discover and show films. He said that the Festival owed something to the movies themselves, "the business side and the artistic side - which means that we should make an investment in the future of cinema, and this future is the young filmmakers." This idea translated into the creation of the Talent Campus, which in the last 8 years has developed into one of the most energetic and pro-active initiatives of the Berlinale more

Generation 

Of all the major festivals in the world, the Berlinale is unique in presenting a core program section devoted to films for young people. Divided into two competition strands, Kplus and 14plus, Generation offers its young audiences a full range of categories, including shorts, features and documentaries. The prestigious Crystal Bears are awarded for the best films by two young peoples' juries more

Retrospective 

Already in its second year, the Berlinale began presenting a retrospective programme, which the Festival’s founding director Alfred Bauer used to refer to as his "favorite child." At first it was largely nostalgia based and aimed at older audiences, presenting silent films and selections of international classics. In later years it refined its focus, introducing German audiences to the work of Ozu or Brazil's Cinema Nova and bringing "home" the work of German exiles like Billy Wilder and Marlene Dietrich more

Panorama 

Panorama section head, Wieland Speck, likes to say that the Panorama and the Market have been related since birth. And this birth occurred when Moritz de Hadeln took over the directorship of the Berlinale in 1980 and one of his first moves was to give two of the festival sub sections, the Film Messe - later to become the EFM, and the "Info-Schau" - which evolved into the Panorama, independent control over their own programs more

Berlinale Co-Production Market 

Each year, the Berlinale Co-Production Market presents some 35 selected promising feature projects, and arranges about 1000 one-on-one meetings for their producers with interested potential co-producers, sales agents, distributors, and financiers. "Basically everybody working in international co-productions attends the Berlinale and the EFM,", explains Sonja Heinen, head of the Berlinale Co-Production Market, "so it was virtually a 'natural decision' to bundle this potential more
 
 

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