In 2008, the festival's main
focus "Diversity and Unity" is devoted to the fragile relationship
between cultural levelling and the protection of indentity. The
selected films depict ambivalent phenomena of how diversity affects
politics and culture as well as private, family domains on a global
scale. Would-be unity is formed or destroyed.
A first look at this year's festival programme:
Agenda 08
"Berlin Calling", Hannes St�hr, Germany
Electro
composer Martin (Paul Kalkbrenner) from Berlin, aka DJ Ickarus, tours
the international club scene with his girlfriend and manager Mathilde
(Rita Lengyel): stress, jet-lag, raves, drugs, permanent high tension.
Just before the release of his new album, Ickarus is admitted to the
drug emergency room in a psychiatric clinic, where Dr. Petra Paul
(Corinna Harfouch) urges him to take a break! But Ickarus fails to turn
his back on life in the fast lane... Director Hannes St�hr, who
discovered the acting qualities of internationally renowned DJ Paul
Kalkbrenner in this vibrating, musical film, says of "Berlin Calling":
"It was always our vision to make a film about art & insanity,
love, the daily struggle for survival, relationships, friends, family,
hope, the future, the present, buzzes & the ecstatic, Berlin."
The
film is celebrating its world premiere on the Piazza Grande at the
Festival internazionale del film Locarno. In Hamburg there will be a
premiere party in the club "�bel und Gef�hrlich" within the framework
of the Reeperbahnfestival, featuring DJ Paul Kalkbrenner himself on the
decks. The German cinema release date is 02.10.2008.
"Pazar - Der Markt" ("The Market - A Tale of Trade"), Ben Hopkins, Germany/Great Britain/Kazakhstan/Turkey
"The
Market - A Tale of Trade" tells the story of merchant Mihram, who ekes
out a living with dodgy black market dealings in his village in Eastern
Turkey. When he is offered a job involving the acquisition of
expensive, illegal medicine at high prices, he senses a great
opportunity. With luck he can build up the business he has been
dreaming of for years. But luck is not predictable...
In his
pleasurable documentary "37 Uses for a Dead Sheep", British director
Ben Hopkins worked with amateur actors, a practise that he successfully
repeats in "The Market - A Tale of Trade". A modern tale of dubious
trading, money and the local mafia, i.e. the very complex world of the
international black market. "The Market - A Tale of Trade" is running
in the official competition of the Festival internazionale del film
Locarno. The German cinema release date is 20.11.2008.
"Of Time and the City", Terence Davies, Great Britain
"Children",
"Madonna and Child" and "Death and Transfiguration" were the titles of
Terence Davis' three short films of 1984, subsumed under the "Terence
Davies-Trilogy". In this trilogy the exceptional British director dealt
with his deeply sad childhood - and its dark, compellingly magical
images formed his unmistakeable style. "Of Time and the City" sees him
return to his hometown of Liverpool and to his roots as a filmmaker. He
traces the city's atmosphere, that of today and that of the 1940s and
50s, when he was growing up.
"Of Time and the City" thus becomes
not only an iconographic and musical dictionary, but an emotional work
of nostalgia and longing. One often longs for that which one despises,
that which one fled at an earlier time. Not a documentary, but a poem
of images. A filmic love-song for Liverpool - and a funeral eulogy at
the same time. Filmfest Hamburg shows the first film by Terence Davies
in eight years, one of "the most remarkable and most innovative
author-directors in Europe" (Blickpunkt Film).
Focus Diversity and Unity
"Adhen", ("Dernier Maquis"), Rabah Ameur-Za�meche, France/Algeria (Voil�!)
At
the Berlinale 2002, "Wesh Wesh" by Rabah Ameur-Za�meche, a study of
violence in immigrant ghettos around Paris, was awarded the
Wolfgang-Staudte-Preis for Best Film in the section "Internationales
Forum des Jungen Films". While that film focussed on the life of
foreigners in the fields of tension around high-rise housing estates
and violence, "Adhen" is about the confrontation of modern capitalism
and religion.
Ameur-Za�meche plays the part of Mao, owner of a
palette factory in an industrial zone outside Paris. In an attempt to
emphasize the relationship between work and devotion to Allah, Mao
wants to build a mosque for his employees. Easier said than done, as
the mutual religion does not succeed in bridging the cultural and
regional differences between the Arab workers, which often escalate to
open violence.
Voil�!
"Bonjour Sagan", ("Sagan"), Diane Kurys, France
The
film "La vie en rose", about chanson-singer Edith Piaf, marked the
beginning - now another filmic monument is being raised to a French
icon: writer and bestselling author Fran�oise Sagan (1935 - 2004).
Sagan (played by Sylvie Testud, known in Germany as the French au pair
in "Punktchen and Anton" or as Lara in "Beyond Silence") was the
literary wunderkind of the grande nation; she wrote her worldwide
success "Bonjour Tristesse" (1954) when she was but 18 years old, and
many films have been made after her novels, including "Aimez-vous
Brahms?" (1959) and "De guerre lasse" (1985). The film portrays a
ruptured personality, torn between conformity and rebellion, between
drug addiction and a will for freedom, between loneliness and a
yearning for love. The film was much celebrated by French audiences and
critics alike. The German cinema release date is 08.01.2009.
Made-For-TV-Movies
"Tatort: Auf der Sonnenseite" (literal translation: "Site of Crime: On the Sunny Side"), Richard Huber, Germany
Filmfest
Hamburg presents Mehmet Kurtulus as a new Tatort-superintendent from
Hamburg. The world premiere sees him working on his first case in the
role of Cenk Batu, as the only undercover Tatort-superintendent to
date. He is a soloist, who takes on false identities to solve his cases.
Detective
chief superintendent Cenk Batu (Mehmet Kurtulus) has been working for
months on a risky undercover mission, inspecting the seemingly
respectable businessman Petermann. At this moment, of all times, his
superior Uwe Kohnau (Peter Jordan) sends him to hospital. In the guise
of a Turkish petty thief he is to make contact with the uncle of
knife-wounded 20-year-old Deniz. Officially, Tuncay Nezrem is a
restaurant proprietor and wholesale merchant - unofficially, he is an
up-and-coming clan ruler. Batu earns his trust, but suddenly Petermann
appears on the scene...
Succinct images introduce a team of
intensely acting agents, required to meet unnoticed in public places.
Here the Hanseatic City is displayed in all its facets.
Michel Kinder- und JugendFilmfest (Children's and Youth Film Festival)
"Mutum", Sandra Kogut, France/Brazil
10-year-old Thiago lives with his family in the Brazilian backcountry.
In
Mutum, their village, there is no television, no cinema and there are
no cars. The villagers ride horses or go on foot. Thiago and his little
brother and only friend Felipe live and play in their very own world, a
mixture of inventive imagination and the harsh reality of the adult
world.
When Felipe injures himself while playing, Thiago needs to be very brave.
"Mutum"
is an extraordinarily authentic, semi-documentary feature film about a
countryside and its inhabitants, who themselves took part in the
development of this moving story alongside the actors and lay actors.
"Mutum"
is Sandra Kogut's first full-length feature film, which has been
awarded prizes and honours at film festivals all over the world.
The
16th Filmfest Hamburg takes place from 25th September - 2nd October
2008 in the cinemas CinemaxX Dammtor, Abaton and 3001 cinema.
Further Information
Kati Baumgarten, Claus Friede
Press and Communications
Telephone: 040 - 399 19 00-29 or -17 [email protected] / www.filmfesthamburg.de