Skip to main contentSkip to navigation

Berlin film festival 2017

  • Director Ildiko Enyedi receives the Golden Bear for Best Film 'On Body and Soul' during the awards ceremony at the 67th Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin, Germany, February 18, 2017.  REUTERS/Britta Pedersen/POOL     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

    Hungarian slaughterhouse love story wins top prize at Berlin film festival

    On Body and Soul took the Golden Bear, beating odds-on favourite The Other Side of Hope, which came away with best director for Aki Kaurismaki
  • Timothy Spall, Bruno Ganz, Kristin Scott Thomas, Cillian Murphy, Sally Potter and Patricia Clarkson at the Berlin premiere of Potter’s The Party.

    Berlin film festival 2017 roundup: an SOS for a world without walls

    Sally Potter’s The Party, Gurinder Chadha’s Viceroy’s House and a magical refugee story from Aki Kaurismäki stood out. But this year’s real Berlinale finds came from Chile and China…
  • Logan film still

    Logan review – Hugh Jackman's Wolverine enters a winter of X-Men discontent

    The third and final Wolverine film is a poignant study of ageing and infirmity, as the arthritic mutant holes up in Mexico with a declining Professor Xavier
  • Agnieszka Holland and Olga Tokarczuk

    Agnieszka Holland: Pokot reflects divided nature of Polish society

    Renowned director says she did not intend to create a political film, but that the plot mirrors her country’s male authoritarianism
  • Stellan Skarsgard and Nina Hoss in Return to Montauk.

    Return to Montauk review – beached affair takes time to connect

  • Joseph Beuys

    Beuys review – Andres Veiel's disjointed film fails to cash in on the artist's riches

  • El mar la mar documentary at Berlin Film Festival 2017 by Joshua Bonnetta J.P. Sniadecki

    How to cross the US-Mexico border: making El Mar La Mar

  • First we take London … BBC1’s miniseries SS-GB, which premiered at the Berlin film festival.

    First look review
    SS-GB review – London is falling in chilling alt-history of second world war

  • Sherwan Haji and Simon Hussein

    The Other Side of Hope review – Syrian refugee story honours Kaurismäki's legacy

    The Finnish screenwriter Aki Kaurismäki employs his usual sensitivity to highlight the experiences of two men who flee their homes and form an unlikely friendship
  • Penélope Cruz and Chino Darín in the film The Queen of Spain (2016)

    The Queen of Spain review – Cruz control: regal method in the madness

    Penélope Cruz rescues this frequently silly comedy, set on a 1950s film set in Franco’s Spain, as a larger-than-life actor in a part-entertaining, part-exasperating tale
  • A Fantastic Woman

    A Fantastic Woman review – timeless trans tale stands alongside Almodóvar

    Rising Chilean director Sebastián Lelio celebrates the endurance of a woman under suspicion of murder in a film that could bring the first major acting award for a transgender performer to Daniela Vega
  • 201715091_6
The Party

Competition 2017
GBR 2017
by: Sally Potter
Kristin Scott Thomas
© Adventure Pictures Limited 2017

    The Party review – conniptions amid the canapés in an observant real-time farce

    Kristin Scott Thomas stars as a shadow cabinet member hosting one of those dos at which shock revelation follows shock revelation, in Sally Potter’s short, smart comedy
  • The Lost City of Z

    The Lost City of Z review: Charlie Hunnam slow-burns down the Amazon, leaving Sienna Miller at home

    James Gray’s introspective tale of adventurer Percival Fawcett’s obsession with a lost Amazonian city is a twist on the familiar Conrad jungle narrative
    • California Dreams review: docu-drama crosses line between art and exploitation

    • Sally Potter: 'The Party is the opposite of Brexit'

    • Erase and Forget: new documentary reveals life story of the real Rambo

  • The Young Karl Marx film still

    The Young Karl Marx review – intelligent communist bromance

    Marx and Engels meet cute in this intense, fervent film about the early development of communism from I Am Not Your Negro director Raoul Peck
  • null<br>Gillian Anderson and Hugh Bonneville in Viceroy's House directed by Gurinder Chadha.

    Viceroy's House review – soapy account of India's birth agonies

    Hugh Bonneville and Gillian Anderson play the Mountbattens in Gurinder Chadha cheekily Downtonised but watchable version of history
  • Pokot (Spoor) film still

    Pokot (Spoor) review – Miss Marple meets Angela Carter in the trackless Polish forest

    Agnieszka Holland’s new film is a mix of forensic crime story and magical realist fairy tale that, adapted from Olga Tokarczuk’s novel, doesn’t always hang together
  • Butterfly Kisses

    Butterfly Kisses review: confident London story of young love and old secrets

    Rafael Kapelinkski’s debut, playing at the Berlin film festival, is a stylish, black-and-white, social-realist pastrol, which proves so adept in comedy a genre-shift might have been in order
About 27 results for Berlin film festival 2017
12
  翻译: