Archives
Edition 2019
Films
Festivals and Awards:
Silver Bear Best Actress for Nina Hoss - Berlin International Film Festival
Crew:
Director: Christian Petzold
Screenplay: Christian Petzold
DOP: Hans Fromm
Production: Schramm Film Koerner & Weber, ZDF, ARTE, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg
Screenplay: Christian Petzold
DOP: Hans Fromm
Production: Schramm Film Koerner & Weber, ZDF, ARTE, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg
Narrowly escaping her volatile ex-husband, Yella flees her small hometown in former East Germany for a new life in the West. She finds a promising job with Philipp, a handsome business executive, with whom an unlikely romance soon blossoms. But just as Yella seems poised to realize her dreams, she finds herself haunted by buried truths that threaten to destroy her newfound happiness.
-
Cast:
Nina Hoss, Devid Striesow, Hinnerk Schönemann -
Original Title:
Yella -
Country:
Germany -
Year:
2007 - 89 min Subtitles PT
Festivals and Awards:
Silver Bear Best Actress for Nina Hoss - Berlin International Film Festival
Crew:
Director: Christian Petzold
Screenplay: Christian Petzold
DOP: Hans Fromm
Production: Schramm Film Koerner & Weber, ZDF, ARTE, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg
Screenplay: Christian Petzold
DOP: Hans Fromm
Production: Schramm Film Koerner & Weber, ZDF, ARTE, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg
Director
Christian Petzold

Christian Petzold is a German filmmaker, known as Hitchcock’s successor as master of suspense. In 2000, he directed his first feature-film, The State I Am In, a story about a couple of two German left-wing terrorists, that granted him several awards, of which the German Film Award for Best Film. His next three films premiered at the Berlin Film Festival: Wolfsburg (2003), in the Panorama section, where it won the FIPRESCI award, Ghosts (2005) and Yella (2007, in the official competition. Bárbara (2012) earned him the award for Best Director at the Berlin Film Festival. In the work of Petzold, filmmaker of the “Berlin School”, characters recurrently hide fundamental truths about themselves, thus finding their inner self continuously divided. In paranoia and anxiety, his films tackle forms of productivity and individuality habitual of the neoliberal economic model, questioning the “flexibility” of the labour world, without ever resorting to clichés. His most recent feature-film Undine (2020) won the Silver Bear for Best Actress (Paula Beer) and finds itself competing in the 2020 edition of LEFFEST.