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Berlinale Film Fest Special tackles tough subjects

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  • Berlinale Film Fest Special tackles tough subjects

    Hollywood Reporter, CA
    Jan 26 2007


    Berlinale Special tackles tough subjects

    By Scott Roxborough

    Jan 26, 2007

    COLOGNE, Germany -- Politics past and present, an apocalyptic fantasy
    set in modern-day Russia and the art of cooking a good meal are among
    the highlights of this year's Berlinale Special, the gala sidebar of
    the Berlin International Film Festival.

    "I Have Never Forgotten You -- The Life and Legacy of Simon
    Wiesenthal," Richard Trank's documentary on the legendary Nazi
    hunter, will have its world premiere in Berlin. The documentary,
    narrated by Nicole Kidman, includes previously unseen archival
    material as well as interviews with Wiesenthal's closest friends and
    family.

    Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean and founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center,
    who co-wrote and co-produced the film, will attend the premiere.

    Another highly political film, "The Lark Farm," from Italian brothers
    Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, will debut in the sidebar. Starring Paz
    Vega, Germany's Moritz Bleibtreu, Arsinee Khanjian and Angela Molina,
    the film focuses on an Armenian family in Turkey in May 1915 as the
    Ottoman Empire orders the expulsion and widespread slaughter of the
    Armenian minority.

    The events, which many regard as an act of genocide, are at the
    center of a heated debate in Europe. Turkish-Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink, one of the most outspoken critics of the mass killings,
    was assassinated earlier this year by a young man who accused him of
    "insulting Turkey." Thousands of mourners attended Dink's funeral in
    Istanbul this week.
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    Krisztina Goda's "Children of Glory" takes a slightly different look
    at European politics, examining the infamous water polo match between
    the Soviet Union and Hungary at the 1956 Olympic Games. The match,
    held shortly after the Soviets violently crushed the Hungarian
    uprising, has been called the bloodiest ever played as even the
    spectators attacked the Soviet players.

    A more personal look at politics comes from Jay Anania, whose "Day on
    Fire" chronicles the lives of five very different people who meet by
    chance on a winter's day in New York.

    Other films screening at the Berlinale Special program include
    "Sakuran," the debut feature from Japanese photographer Mika
    Ninagawa; Fernando Perez's "Madrigal," a look at the theater
    community in modern-day Cuba; and the documentary "Comrades in
    Dreams," from German director Uli Gaulke, which follows film fanatics
    from around the globe.

    Food and Zen are the focus of Doris Doerrie's docu "How to Cook Your
    Life," which looks at the principles of Zen Buddhism and how they can
    apply to cooking dinner. It features California Zen master Edward
    Espe Brown.

    Finally, for pure escapism, the Berlinale Special program will
    feature the international premiere of Timur Bekmambetov's "Day
    Watch," the second installment in his fantasy adventure series. The
    first film in the series, "Night Watch," had its international
    premiere at the festival in 2005 and broke all boxoffice records in
    Russia.
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