TALENTS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD

Transcription

TALENTS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD
Talents from all
over the world
We would like to thank our international network for its support:
Australian Film Commission, Colombian Ministry of Culture,
Delegation Wallonie-Bruxelles, Embassy of Argentina in Berlin, Embassy of Japan in Berlin, Embassy of Mexico in Berlin, Embassy of Peru in Berlin, Embassy of Singapore in Berlin, Embassy of Uruguay in Berlin, Radio-TV-Film Department at the
Shih-Hsin University in Taiwan, Svenska Filminstituet
Countries with applicants by country
A
H
Afghanistan
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
B
Bangladesh
Belgium
Bolivia
Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Brazil
Bulgaria
C
Cameroon
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Congo, Democratic
Republic
Croatia
Cuba
Czech Republic
D
Denmark
Dominican
Republic
E
Ecuador
Egypt
Estonia
F
Finland
France
G
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
I
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Ireland
Israel
Italy
J
Japan
Jordan
K
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Korea, Republic of
Kyrgyzstan
L
Latvia
Lebanon
Lithuania
Luxembourg
M
Macedonia
Malaysia
Mexico
Moldova
Morocco
Mozambique
N
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
P
Pakistan
Palestinian Territory
Panama
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
ICELAND
REYKJAVIK
R
Romania
Russian Federation
Rwanda
Viet Nam
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Vancouver
Seattle
Portland
DUBLIN
North America
Edmonton
Regina
IRELAND
Cardiff
Porto
PORTUGAL
LISBON
Seville
MEXICO CITY
Acapulco
BELIZE
BELMOPAN
GUATEMALA
HONDURAS
GUATEMALA CITY
SAN SALVADOR
TEGUCIGALPA
EL SALVADOR
NICARAGUA
MANAGUA
SAN JOSÉ
COSTA RICA
Maracaibo
Cartagena
PRAIA
Manaus
Iquitos
South America
SUCRE
SANTIAGO
Salta
PARAGUAY
MANAMA
ASUNCIÓN
BENIN NIGERIA
GHANA
ABUJA
TOGO PORTO-NOVO
YAMOUS.
ACCRA
ABIDJAN
MALABO
YAOUNDE
BUENOS AIRES
OMAN
DJIBOUTI
Bangalore
KIGALI
LUANDA
ANGOLA
NAMIBIA
RWANDA
LILONGWE
LUSAKA
HARARE
SOUTH AFRICA
Nanjing
Shanghai
TAIPEI
MYANMAR (BURMA)
LAOS
HANOI
VIENTIANE
THAILAND
RANGOON
Shenzhen TAIWAN
HONG KONG
VIETNAM
BANGKOK
CAMBODIA
PHNOM PENH
Asia
MANILA
PHILIPPINES
Cebu
Ho Chi Minh City
(Saigon)
SRI LANKA
KOROR
MALAYSIA
KUALA LUMPUR
Medan
Mar del Plata
ARGENTINA
MAJURO
PALIKIR
BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN
SINGAPORE
VICTORIA
Dar Es Salaam
Palembang
JAKARTA
SEYCHELLES
INDONESIA
YAREN
Ujungpandang
Surabaya
PORT MORESBY
DILI
EAST TIMOR
FUNAFUTI
HONIARA
MALAWI
MADAGASCAR
MAURITIUS
ANTANANARIVO
PORT VILA
PORT LOUIS
SWAZILAND
AUSTRALIA
LESOTHO
Durban
SUVA
Brisbane
Perth
Australia
Oceania
Adelaide
Sydney
CANBERRA
Melbourne
La Plata
TOKYO
PRETORIA
MAPUTO
MBABANE
MASERU
Osaka
Hiroshima
Xi'an
Canton
MORONI
ZIMBABWE
MOZAMBIQUE
BOTSWANA
Johannesburg
SOUTH KOREA
Zibo
SINGAPORE
TANZANIA
DODOMA
JAPAN
PYONGYANG
SEOUL
Dalian
Tientsin
Jinan
Wuhan
DACCA
NAIROBI
ZAMBIA
GABORONE
MONTEVIDEO
MOGADISHU
BUJUMBURA
KINSHASA BURUNDI
Cape Town
MALE
MALDIVES
Vladivostok
NORTH KOREA
BHUTAN
KAMPALA
CONGO, DEMOCRATIC REP.
Rio de Janeiro
KENYA
Calcutta
Madras
(Chennai)
COLOMBO
SOMALIA
THIMPHU
Hyderabad
DJIBOUTI
ETHIOPIA
Chengdu
BANGLADESH
INDIA
SANAA
CHINA
KATHMANDU
YEMEN
ASMARA
UGANDA
LIBREVILLE
Curitiba
Porto Alegre
Córdoba Santa Fé
URUGUAY
Rosario
Mendoza
Hyderabad
MUSCAT
Mecca
ERITREA
BANGUI
EQUAT. GUINEA
Africa
Karachi
Taiyuan
NEPAL
ADDIS ABABA
CAMEROON
LOME Lagos
GABON
Vitória
ABU DHABI
BEIJING (PEKING)
Lahore
Delhi
NEW DELHI
DOHA
Medina
Faisalabad
PAKISTAN
Shiraz
Harbin
Shenyang
ISLAMABAD
AFGHANISTAN
Isfahan
KUWAIT
KHARTOUM
N'DJAMENA
WINDHOEK
São Paulo
IRAN
Khabarovsk
ULAN BATOR
MONGOLIA
KASHMIR
KABUL
Qom
SAUDI ARABIA BAHRAIN
Florianópolis
Bahía Blanca
Puerto Montt
AMMAN
JERUSALEM
SUDAN
NIAMEY
SÃO TOMÉ
Recife
Maceió
Aracaju
Salvador
TEHRAN
BAGHDAD
Mashhad
Bombay (Mumbai)
CHAD
OUGADOUGOU
MONROVIA
IRAQ
JORDAN
EGYPT
NIGER
SÃO TOMÉ AND PRINCIPE
Fortaleza
Natal
Belo Horizonte
Antofagasta
ASTANA
KAZAKHSTAN
ASHGABAT
Jeddah
BURKINA FASO
D'IVOIRE
LIBERIA
BRASÍLIA
Cuiabá
Goiânia
BOLIVIA
Irkutsk
Orenburg
RIYADH QATAR
São Luis
BRAZIL
Iquique
CHILE
LIBYA
BRAZZAVILLE
Porto Velho
LA PAZ
BAMAKO
FREETOWN
João Pessoa
Cusco
BANJUL
BISSAU
GUINEA
CÔTE
CONAKRY
Teresina
PERU
GAMBIA
SIERRA LEONE
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
Belém
Arica
ISRAEL
Alexandria
CAIRO
MALI
SENEGAL
DAKAR
GUINEA-BISSAU
QUITO
Valparaíso
CAPE VERDE
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
ECUADOR
Arequipa
TRIPOLI
ALGERIA
NOUAKCHOTT
DOMINICA
ST LUCIA
BARBADOS
GRENADA ST VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
CARACAS
LIMA
BEIRUT
DAMASCUS
MAURITANIA
Trujillo
CYPRUS SYRIA
NICOSIA
LEBANON
WEST BANK
WESTERN SAHARA
Mérida
PANAMA
VENEZUELA GEORGETOWN
Medellín
PARAMARIBO
GUYANA
BOGOTÁ
FRENCH GUIANA
Cali
SURINAME
COLOMBIA
Boa Vista
Guayaquil
GREECE
MALTA
TUNISIA
Marrakech
PORT OF SPAIN
PANAMA CITY
TUNIS
Constantine
Fes
MOROCCO
STO DOMINGO
ST KITTS AND NEVIS
PORT-AUKINGSTON
PRINCE
Oran
RABAT
DOMINICAN
REPUBLIC
Santiago de Cuba
HAITI
JAMAICA
Samara
Voronezh
Volgograd
LIECHTENSTEIN VIENNA
ALGIERS
Casablanca
NASSAU
KIEV
Krasnoyarsk
Novosibirsk
Omsk
Barnaul
Saratov
PRAGUE
Tomsk
Chelyabinsk
Ufa
BERNE
Québec
Montréal
CUBA
Cancún
BELARUS
WARSAW
Ryazan'
Tula
Penza
SWITZERLAND
Milwaukee
Detroit
Boston
Chicago
Cleveland
New York
Salt Lake City
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
Denver
Kansas City Indianapolis
Baltimore
Sacramento
St Louis
San Francisco
WASHINGTON
Memphis
Los Angeles
Atlanta
San Diego
Dallas
Mexicali
Ciudad Juárez
Houston
Austin
New Orleans
San Antonio
THE BAHAMAS
Monterrey
Miami
Culiacán
MEXICO
HAVANA
Tampico
Mérida
BERLIN
GERMANY
Yekaterinburg
Nizhniy Novgorod
Kazan'
UKRAINE
SLOVAKIA
BRATISLAVA
MOLDOVA
BUDAPEST
AUSTRIA
Rostov-na-Donu
CHISINAU (KISHINEV)
HUNGARY
Astrakhan'
SLOVENIA LJUBLJANA
ROMANIA
FRANCE Lyon
Milan
ZAGREB
BELGRADE BUCHAREST
Bordeaux
Turin
CROATIA
MACEDONIA
BOSNIA & HERZ.
UZBEKISTAN Almaty (Alma-Ata)
Marseille
SARAJEVO
SERBIA
BISHKEK
ANDORRA
SOFIA
GEORGIA
ROME
TBILISI
ALBANIA
BULGARIA
SKOPJE
KYRGYZSTAN
Barcelona
ARMENIA
BAKU
TIRANA
TASHKENT
ITALY
Istanbul
YEREVAN
MADRID
ANKARA
Naples
AZERBAIJAN
TURKMENISTAN
SPAIN
TURKEY
Izmir
TAJIKISTAN
ATHENS
DUSHANBE
Tabriz
PARIS
Toronto
Guadalajara
MINSK
POLAND
Hamburg
AMSTERDAM
BRUSSELS
OTTAWA
Minneapolis
VILNIUS
BELGIUM LUX.
CZECH REPUBLIC
Winnipeg
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
LONDON
MOSCOW
LITHUANIA
Perm'
Yaroslavl'
RIGA
Edinburg COPENHAGEN
Newcastle
Manchester
NETHERLANDS
St Petersburg
TALLINN
ESTONIA
LATVIA
DENMARK
Belfast
Liverpool
S
Uganda
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
V-Z
OSLO
RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Europe
HELSINKI
STOCKHOLM
UNITED KINGDOM
Glasgow
Calgary
Senegal
Serbia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
T
Taiwan
Tanzania
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
U
SWEDEN
NORWAY
CANADA
Arkhangel'sk
FINLAND
Auckland
Hobart
WELLINGTON
NEW ZEALAND
Punta Arenas
Ushuaia
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
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www.volkswagen.de
page
introduction
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1
05–17
Contents
Editorial Dieter Kosslick
Editorial Frank-Walter Steinmeier
A Welcome from our Partners
What is the Berlinale Talent Campus?
The Worldwide Campus Network
Berlinale Talent Campus Abroad
Campus Alumni at the Berlinale
Foundations
The Passat BlueMotion.
Official VIP Shuttle of the Berlinale Talent Campus #6.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Contents
Editorial
08 Editorial Dieter Kosslick
09 Editorial Frank-Walter Steinmeier
10 A Welcome from our Partners
11 What is the Berlinale Talent Campus ?
12 The World Wide Campus Network
14 Berlinale Talent Campus Abroad
15 Campus Alumni at the Berlinale
16 Foundations
20
Special Focus
Screening Emotions – Cinema‘s Finest Asset
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
36
37
hands-on-training
Volkswagen Score Competition
Portrait: Gustavo Santaolalla
Garage Studio
Portrait: Mike Figgis
The Talent Press
Portrait: Peter Cowie
Script & Doc Station
Portrait: Franz Rodenkirchen
Talent Project Market
Portrait: Sandrine Bonnaire
Berlin Today Award
Why Democracy?
Focus Africa / Portrait: Kate Henshaw-Nuttall
39
44
46
47
52
56
60
63
campus programme
Timetable
Meet the Expert
sat 09: Day 1
sun 10: Day 2
mon 11: Day 3
tue 12: Day 4
wed 13: Day 5
thu 14: Day 6
Index
67 Index of Events
68 Index of Experts
74 Index of Talents
76 Epilogue / Note of Thanks
78 Team / Imprint
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
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2
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4
5
editorial setting us
in motion
editorial message
of welcome
We all love the movies – I guess this might be the basic
­com­mon ground among the circa 20,000 accredited ­partici­-
­­pants of the Berlin International Film Festival and its visitors.
We love it as a form of political and artistic ­expression, as an
­in­­tensely social event or simply for its incomparable potential for creating, causing and attending to a multitude of
emot­ions.
This year Subsaharan Africa will be the focus of Germany‘s
cultural cooperation with Africa. Three major events con­
tributed to this: Germany‘s EU Presidency in the first half of
2007, the G8 Summit hosted by Germany in Heiligendamm
in June 2007 and the EU-Africa Summit held in Lisbon in
­December 2007, which produced a Joint Strategy aimed at
­enhancing existing ties and paving the way for future co­­op­eration ­between the two continents. As a result, Ger­many
is dedicating considerably more resources not only to
­politi­cal, security, economic and development cooperation
with ­ Africa but also to cultural affairs. Starting with the
­Berlinale Talent ­Campus 2008, a series of events will ­highlight
our ­relations with ­Subsaharan Africa.
“Screening Emotions – Cinema‘s Finest Asset“ – the title of
this year‘s special focus of the Berlinale Talent Campus aims
at an important feature of filmmaking: setting something
within somebody in motion. Sometimes it is this special
­capacity that even starts off our relationship to cinema: “I
grew up in a family where everyone talks but no one listens.
When I finished my first short film, I invited them to see it,
sudden­ly, they were in complete silence! In that moment I
thought, ’It’s a miracle, my family is listening to me!‘ That‘s
the reason why I make films.“
This is how Fernando Eimbcke once described his initiation
into cinema. The Mexican director was a participant of the
2003 Campus and with it one from over 2,800 filmmakers
from 120 countries who have by now been part of the Ber­
linale Talent Campus – a remarkable number of possible
members of the future world cinema. Travelling around to
prepare the next Berlinale holds a “special” pleasure for my
colleagues and me: We meet alumni all over the world and
are greeted like old friends. In return, we are always happy to
welcome them back to Berlin with their films in the Official
Programme. And this year we are proud to present for the
first time ­ alumni films in the Berlinale Competition pro­
gramme! Lake Tahoe by the very same Fernando Eimbcke
and Ballast by 2004 ­participant Lance Hammer.
In addition to these two films, another 22 films with major
involvement of current or former Talents will be presented in
this year’s Official Selection. This brilliant fact encourages us
to strengthen the role of the Campus as a global network of
communication, passion and creativity. In this year‘s sixth
edition, another 350 young filmmakers will join this fresh
community. A community that begins step-by-step to act
­independently of the real Campus, becoming a virtual one.
But getting back to emotions: Gratitude is our finest asset
when thinking of the group of true partners whose support
makes the ambitious idea of the Berlinale Talent Campus a
reality. Representatively for all we wish to thank long-time
partners like MEDIA – Training Programme of the European
Union, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, Skillset and the UK
Film Council as well as Volkswagen and Euromed Audiovisual
II Programme. Moreover, we are delighted that this year we
have deepened our cooperation with the Federal Foreign
­Office: Together we host a multifaceted “Focus ­ Africa” programme at the 2008 Campus. Without the fruitful cooperation and the courtesy of these partners a vivacious and
spirited project like the Campus including its innovative and
inspiring creative network would never take place.
I wish all Talents, international film experts as well as all
­visitors an exciting, successful, pleasing and, of course,
­emo­­­­t­ionally intense Campus week.
Dieter Kosslick,
Director Berlin International Film Festival
One of the key political challenges facing the future partnership between the two continents is the promotion of “more
accurate images of each other, in place of those that are
dominated by inherited negative stereotypes and that
­ignore the overwhelmingly positive developments on the
two continents“. In view of the importance of this cultur-
al cooperation, I initiated the “Action Africa“ cultural programme, investing an additional 20 million euro in 2008 to
strengthen ties with the education and culture sectors in the
Subsaharan­ region.
Despite the vastness of the African continent and its overwhelming cultural diversity, there is one problem which –
from a European standpoint – is evident no matter where
one‘s journey may be headed. It is the lack of images of the
African continent in the Northern hemisphere or, rather, the
lack of images from Africa which go beyond its depiction in
the news as the continent of natural disasters, famines, war
and poverty. This has far-reaching consequences which can
by no means be regarded as purely cultural. Neither for
­Africans nor for us.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
In Germany, as in most European and Western countries, the
lack of films from Africa should be seen as a serious issue.
I can imagine that if our cinemas and TV stations were to
show films from Africa as regularly as – for example – those
from Asia, and our audiences could laugh at a comedy from
­Ouagadougou, cry over a sad love story from Kampala or be
taken on an exciting tour through Johannesburg‘s underbelly in a thriller, Africa would become so much more real,
­contemporary and interesting. This interest, we all know,
is the starting point and sine qua non condition of any
true partnership – be it within or outside the filmmaking
community.
I hope that the Berlinale Talent Campus #6 will be a ­memo­rable and motivating time for Talents from all over the
world.
Enjoy your time in Berlin.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier,
Deputy Federal Chancellor and
­Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs
a welcome from
our partners
what is the berlinale
talent campus?
A quick glimpse at the various programmes that make up the Campus and what they offer.
Grande Format:
Film Co-ops:
Lectures, panels with stars in the limelight.
The Berlinale Talent Campus and the Goethe-In­stitut
supp­ort film co-ops in Zimbabwe and the Phili­­pp­ines.
Atelier:
Workshops, seminars, case studies.
Hands-on-Trainings (see also p.23-32)
Costas Daskalakis,
Head of the EU MEDIA
programme at the Education,
Audiovisual and Culture
Executive Agency
Petra M. Müller,
CEO Medienboard BerlinBrandenburg, Management
Media Development
Kirsten Niehuus,
CEO Medienboard BerlinBrandenburg, Management
Film Funding
Costas Daskalakis: It comes naturally for the MEDIA programme to be one of the main financial partners of the Berlinale Talent Campus since the beginning. We share the same
objectives and values: training professionals, fostering pro­
jects, networking ­people, opening minds so that talents and
works circulate in Europe and in the world. The MEDIA programme can do a lot for young filmmakers: training, project
development, international distribution. One among the
many interesting ­workshops of the Campus this year will be
the occasion for experienced professionals to explain how
the MEDIA programme has contributed to their success. In
the meantime I wish you a wonderful week at the Berlinale
Talent Campus and… a vibrant international career.
Petra M. Müller & Kirsten Niehuus: Welcome to Berlin! We
hope your week at the Berlinale ­Talent Campus will truly be
a special time and become a pivotal point in your career. You
may end up sleep deprived but the week will most certainly
be full of unforgettable and creative experiences. Exciting
guests and lectures, fantastic films, ­ super networking op­
portunities, and not to mention, the parties!
Janine Marmot: This is the fourth year that Skillset has
­supported the Berlinale Talent Campus. The feedback we
get from previous participants that we have supported at
the Campus is fantastic. Relationships and partnerships
are forged here that Talents will develop throughout their
­careers. To encourage and assist with networking, Skillset
­organises the highly popular speed matching sessions,
10
Janine Marmot, Director of Film, ­Skillset,
Sector Skills Council for
the Audiovisual Industries
Stephan Grühsem, Head of VolkswagenGroup
Communications, external relations and investor relations
t­ ak­ing place every day to help Talents meet informally. We
organise many of the “Meet the Expert“ sessions that give
Talents the opportunity to meet key figures in our industry,
from filmmakers to financiers. We are also running a number
of workshops including the popular “Indie Filmmaker’s
Guide to the Internet“ sessions that share the latest thinking
on how to get your films shown and seen as widely as
­pos­sible, using and exploiting the latest technology and
­ex­ploring new financing models.
Skillset is delighted to be working with the Berlinale again
and hope you have a great week. For more information on
Skillset visit www.skillset.org.
Stephan Grühsem: As a main sponsor of the 58th Berlin International Film Festival, Volkswagen is supporting the Berlinale Talent Campus for the sixth year. In line with our commitment to encourage both young filmmakers and mu­­si­c-
­ians, we announced the Volkswagen Score Competition once
again. This competition for young composers and sound designers is now successfully established, and over the years
we observe the careers of the respective finalists and winners with great interest. In accordance with this year‘s motto
“Screening Emotions“, Volkswagen‘s Head of Future ­Research,
Wolfgang Müller-Pietralla, will discuss with director ­ Aditya
Assarat on the panel “Cinema Inside the Crystal Ball – Future
Thoughts on Filmmaking“ how future issues will influence
both the automotive and the filmmaking world. We are very
happy to be a partner of the Campus and wish all ­participants
an exciting and informative time in Berlin.
The Volkswagen Score Competition: Three selected film
music composers are invited to create new scores for film
clips with professional support and using digital equipment.
The Garage Studio: Digital shorts are produced for internet
release during the Campus week.
The Script & Doc Station: Individual script consulting for
pre­­selected fiction films or documentaries.
The Talent Project Market: Selected budding producers pitch
their projects at the Berlinale Co-Production Market.
The Talent Press: Young film journalists write daily reviews
about the festival under the mentorship of international film
critics.
The Worldwide campus net:
The Campus web platform guides you with ease and speed
through more than 2,500 profiles and work samples of
­current and former Campus participants, ­functioning also as
an effective networking tool for film ­professionals.
In what fields of filmmaking are the Talents of 2008
­involved?
Most of the 350 Talents work in more than one field of
­filmmaking. Participating in this year’s Campus are 270 direc­
tors, 86 scriptwriters, 43 producers, 54 cinematographers,­ 42
­editors, 9 production designers or art directors, 32 sound
­designers or composers, 34 actors, 20 visual artists and eight
­critics or film journalists.
Application to the Berlinale Talent Campus:
Awards:
Short film competition for ­Talents and alumni
(www.berlintoday.de).
Current and former Talents can apply to the Campus for a
second time for only two hands-on-trainings: Talent Project
Market and Berlin Today Award. The online application
to the next Berlinale Talent Campus can be accessed at
www.­berlinale-talentcampus.de in the summer of 2008.
Filmmakers­ are required to apply with a short sample of
work. Current Talent samples can be viewed at various
­ter­minals in the three HAUs. More­over, work samples of all
Talents are ­continuously streamed on the Campus website.
Campus Abroad:
Alumni: Participants at one of the five previous Berlinale
Offshoots of the Campus are taking place in Buenos Aires,
Durban, New Delhi and Sarajevo. Visionary Campus in
Gua­dalajara in March 2008.
­Talent Campus editions.
Berlin Today Award: World premiere of the short films at the
Opening, announcement of the winner at “Dine & Shine“.
Volkswagen Score Competition: Announcement of the win­­­ner during the Closing Ceremony. The Berlin Today Award:
Excursions:
Campus participants meet professionals or visit institutions
in the media capital region, Berlin /Brandenburg.
Stars in the Limelight: director John Waters in 2007
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
11
new heart of the
campus website
The Worldwide Campus Network is the central feature of the Berlinale Talent Campus
website – our online community and international network.
The upcoming Campus #6 marks the next progressive step
in our scope of website initiatives. We strive to enhance our
already existing networking tools to increase visibility of
­future Talent projects; whereby various opportunities for
crew-building, as well as production and funding support,
will be easily accessible.
Naturally, this informal networking between Talents has
­prevailed since the founding year of the Campus, as they can
simply connect and converse with one another through their
online profiles.
During the 2008 Berlinale Talent Campus, the Worldwide
Campus Net will be accessible throughout the day in HAU 1
and HAU 2 at various PC stations. On the BTC website, Talents
are able to access the complete content of the Worldwide
Campus Net by browsing profiles, viewing samples of this
year’s participants, and contacting any Talent directly. In
a­ ddition, the profiles and projects of all Talent alumni are
available and, in the near future, will be joined by the alumni
of all Campus “Satellite“ events around the world.
This new networking tool provides a thorough overview of
current productions in their various stages, encouraging
­Talents to promote selected projects and utilise the Campus
Net to introduce both on-going and completed work.
The “Projects in Development“ section includes the stages
of Pre-production, Production and Post-production, with the
option to publish open crew positions among members of
the Campus network. Ultimately, it’s easier than ever ­before
to establish a collaboration between Talents from various
Campus years and from different regions of the world.
Projects, alumni profiles, and job offers can be ­ accessed,
browsed, and sorted by categories; completed projects can
be presented with pictures and trailers.
The next phase is to integrate out strategic partner net-
work (e.g. MEDIA, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, Skillset,
train­ing institutes, production houses, funding agencies etc.)
into the Worldwide Campus Net. Once these partners get
connected, former Campus participants can conveniently­ find information about film financing, programmes, pro­duc­t­
ions, etc.
Before offering this site to a greater professional network of
selected producers and funding agencies, we will allow for a
one-year trail period, in which an emphasis will be placed on
developing the tool within the community and allowing a
body of “work-in-progress“ projects to formulate.
After the 2008 Talent Campus, all alumni will be able to
­locate the Talent Project Market and Script & Doc Station
projects on the Worldwide Campus Net. Additional alumni
projects from previous years are welcome! Archive
A visit to www.berlinale-talentcampus.de is a worthwhile
endeavour for anyone, from curious filmmakers who have
never attended the Campus to seasoned Campus veterans
hoping to catch up on missed events.
Other Campus events are presented as audio lectures or full
transcripts. In connection with detailed programme in­for­
mation, covering all former events, the Campus website provides access to an index of all previous Experts. Browse
through the list of more than 350 professionals and find the
corresponding programme events!
Newsletter
To receive the Berlinale Talent Campus newsletter, please go
to the website www.berlinale-talentcampus.de and register
online.
The 20-minute presentation of the Worldwide Campus Net
will take place daily at HAU 1 (1st floor) from February 10th to
14th, starting at 16.00.
Media Library
The Campus Media Library consists of more than 35 tele­
lectures, transcripts, and audio files, as well as the Campus
Short Film Programmes and the online Garage Studio. The
telelectures (or video lectures) cover previous Berlinale
­Talent Campus presentations from a growing list of film’s
biggest names, including Dante Ferretti, Frances ­McDormand,
Anthony Minghella, Walter Salles and Wim Wenders. The
video lectures cover the Campus events in full and give a
great opportunity to get information on a particular topic,
theme, discussion, or movement within the current ­industry.
The Virtual Services at the Campus website offer a widerange of media content for filmmakers and reflect the diver­­s­
ity of the Campus.
feb 10-14 16:00 H
HAU 1 Presentation of Worldwide Campus Net
During the Berlinale Talent Campus the Worldwide Campus Net is available in HAU 1 and HAU 2 at PC stations
12
The Worldwide Campus Net
1stfl.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
13
Campus Abroad spreading
its wings
campus Alumni we await
your return
“Campus Abroad“ editions are modelled on the Berlinale Talent Campus, retaining at
the same time a regional flavour and outlook. These editions find their support and
services from their local film festivals.
The Berlinale Talent Campus hopes to inspire more and more Talents to send in their film
projects to the Berlin International Film Festival. The number of Talents invited to the
Berlinale increases every year; this year we have the pleasure of congratulating 34 Talents
from around the world on their success.
Since the first Berlinale Talent Campus in 2002, the Campus
has not only become an established and prominent event at
the Berlin International Film Festival, it has also travell­-
ed abroad to select international festivals, functioning in
­partnership with its prototype, the Berlinale Talent Campus. The Sarajevo Talent Campus, one of the newest offshoots of
the Campus, took place for the first time in 2007 within the
framework of the Sarajevo Film Festival. Open to young filmmakers and film students in the final years of their studies, 70
applicants were invited from various East European ­countries.
Similar to the Berlin Today Award, the Sarajevo Talent ­Campus
also recently installed the “Sarajevo City of Film”, a fund for
the realisation of film projects by participants of the Sarajevo
­Talent Campus.
The South African Talent Campus will be hosted for the first
time by the Durban International Film Festival in July/August
2008, shifting from Sithengi/Capetown, which was its
­previous home base. The first Durban Talent Campus will
also be part of the 2008 “Focus Africa“ initiative of the ­Federal
Foreign Office. The various branches of the Goethe-Institut
in Subsaharan­ Africa support the Durban Talent Campus
with a bursary programme for young film professionals from
­countries ­beyond South Africa.
Buenos Aires Independent International Film Festival, invited
around 50 participants from Central and South Amer­i­ca to
benefit from four days of seminars, presentations and
­work­shops. Talent Campus India is held in New Delhi as part of the ­Osian’s
Cinefan Festival of New Asian Cinema where it enjoyed its
fourth successful edition in 2007.
Film Co-Ops, nascent initiatives of the Berlinale Talent
­Campus, the Goethe-Institut and the existing cooperative
­struc­tures in Harare, Zimbabwe and Manila, Philippines, have
been established as a base and support to independent film
­productions. Former Campus participants Rumbi Katedza
from Zimbabwe and Khavn De La Cruz from the Philippines
have been working throughout the year as “Campus Em­
bassies” to put into place this support structure for ­filmmakers
in their respective countries. The activities of the co-ops can
be ­followed on the Berlinale ­Talent Campus ­webpage.
With these outposts, the Campus community is multiplying
year after year, resounding the spirit and exemplary ­cinematic
potential that exists the world over.
An exciting recent development is the Visionary Campus
Guadalajara, a five-day event from March 10 to 14, 2008 to
acquaint young filmmaking professionals in the region with
the concept of the Berlinale Talent Campus and inform them
about the first-ever Talent Campus Guadalajara to take place
in 2009. Visionary Campus Guadalajara, a section of the
Guadalajara International Film Festival, will offer the selected
70 young audiovisual artists and filmmakers from Mexico,
­Central America and the Caribbean, and also Colombia
­workshops and master classes by approximately 50 eminent
documentary filmmakers.
With a focus on the relationship between cinema and music
in its various forms, the Universidad del Cine’s third Buenos
Aires Talent Campus is scheduled from April 10 to 13, 2008. The 2005 and 2007 Talent Campus, in cooperation with the
14
Three Talents, one film – that is The Amazing Truth of Queen
Raquela. It all fell into place when director Olaf de Fleur Johannesson and screenwriter Stefan Schaefer met at the very
first Campus in 2003. Since then they have worked together
on three film projects, The Amazing Truth of Queen Raquela
was the first of the trio. Going through the Talent database,
they located one of their producers for the film, former ­Talent
Arleen Cuevas from the Philippines. Since the film is set mostly in the Philippines, the Campus’ vast database seemed the
most likely place to look for a producer from the country. This
was about three years ago; today the film is where it should
be: in the 2008 Berlinale Panorama programme.
The possibility to network not only with well-established
filmmaking experts but also with co-Talents is one of the objectives of the Berlinale Talent Campus. The success of transnational collaborative film projects mirrors our ambition in
creating this platform for like-minded film professionals.
­Another such example can be seen through the production
of Divizionz. Co-director Donald Mugisha (2006) from Uganda
got in touch with producer/sales agent, Adolf El-Assal from
Luxemburg through the Talent Database, and also encouraged 2008 South African Talent and co-director of the film,
James Taylor, to apply to the Campus. Divizionz will screen in
the Forum section of the Berlinale 2008. Three other Alumni
films are featured in the Berlinale Forum – The Muzzled Horse
Of An Engineer In Search Of Mechanical Saddles, Corridor #8
and Tatil Kitabi.
The news gets even better – the Competition programme of
the 58th Berlin International Film Festival includes ­Ballast, a
film by American Lance Hammer, former Talent director­ of
the 2004 Campus, which celebrates its international ­premiere
at the Berlinale. There’s more still: first Campus participant,
­director Fernando Eimbcke from Mexico returns to the Berlinale with his ­second feature film, Lake Tahoe, which also enjoys its world premiere in Competition. This is the first time
ever that former Talent films have been invited to ­compete at
the Berlinale, and we rejoice in all your successes.
Juliette Binoche and Dan Fainaru at the 2007 Sarajevo Talent Campus
Photo: Sarajevo Film Festival
This year’s Panorama section comprises another two Alumni
films, I am From Titov Veles by Macedonian director Teona
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Strugar Mitevska (2004), and Japanese filmmaker Naoko
­Ogigami’s Megane (2004).
Four Alumni films – Flower In The Pocket, September, Take 3 and
Meditations On A Name – enrich the Berlinale ­ Generation’s
programme. Perspektive Deutsches Kino features films by
three former Talent directors, Lea by Steffi Niederzoll (2006),
Football Under Cover by Ayat Nayafi (2005) and Robin by
­Hanno Olderdissen. The shorts, Dreznica by Anna Azevedo,
Traces by Rachel Zisser, Mompelaar by Marc Roels and ­Udedh
Bun by Siddharth Sinha, will highlight the programme of
the Berlinale Shorts – don’t miss your chance to watch these
films.
All in all, 34 former Talents with various contributions re­
present 24 films invited to different sections of the ­Berlinale
2008. We hope this serves as an encouragement to all former
and current Talents to keep at it! We are sure we’ll be hear­-
ing from you and welcoming you back to ­ Berlin shortly.
For information on submitting your films to the ­ Berlin
­Inter­national Film Festival, go to www.berlinale.de.
The Amazing Truth of Queen Raquela: a Talent collaboration in the 2008 Berlinale Panorama
suN 10 14:00 H
HAU 1 Panamericana –
Young Latin American Cinema on the Move
tue 12 17:00 H
HAU 2 From Street Cred to Screen Credibility – Hip-Hop and the Movies; followed by a Hip-Hop Lounge
15
foundations creating
the right conditions
Without international foundations and organisations lending a helping hand, the
Berlinale Talent Campus would not have come this far. We are thankful for their input,
which has enriched our programme, and their support, which has enabled many
Talents to be at the Campus.
Alfred Herrhausen Society
The Alfred Herrhausen Society is the international forum of
the Deutsche Bank. It seeks traces of the future in the present
and brings together people who are committed to the
­continuous existence of civil society. For this the Alfred
Herrhausen Society encourages international dialogue by
organising and arranging conferences and congresses with
international participation.
Within this context, the Alfred Herrhausen Society supports
the Berlinale Talent Campus in the conception and organi­
sation­ of the panel “Heroes versus Anti-Heroes: ­ Success
Stories in Cinema”, which will take place on 11 February, 11:00
at HAU 1. ­Further information on the Society can be found at
www.alfred-herrhausen-gesellschaft.de.
Oberst Redl and was one of the first Europeans to shoot a film
in Beijing in 1986. To commemorate his fifth death anni­
versary, there will be a special screening of István Szabó’s
­Mephisto. One of the aims of the Manfred Durniok ­Foundation,
recently established by his daughter, Ayano Teramoto, is the
promotion of South-East Asian art and the support of young
creatives.
This year, like 2006 and 2007, the travel expenses of the
­Talents from South East Asia will be covered by the Manfred
Durniok Foundation. More information on Manfred ­Dur­niok
at www.durniok.com.
The Heinrich Böll Foundation, named after the Nobel Prize
winning German writer, is affiliated with the German Green
Party and headquartered in the Hackesche Höfe in the
heart of Berlin. It is a legally independent political foundation
whose primary objective is to support political education
within both Germany and abroad, thus promoting ­democratic
involvement, socio-political activism, and cross-­cultural
­understanding. The Foundation also provides ­support to art
and culture, science and research, and ­ developmental
­cooperation. The Foundation and the ­Berlinale Talent ­Campus
have cooperated repeatedly over the years.
Brimming with excitable energy, the Berlinale Talent ­Campus,
hosted at the three HAUs, is where it’s all happening. With
350 creative filmmaking talents from all corners of the world,
abundant personal, professional and personal stories will be
enacted during these six action-packed days. The ­Deutsche
Welle TV (DW-TV) crew, with cameras and mics in tow, will be
scouting the Campus looking to catch those rare and ­fleeting
moments, unique stories and spirited bustle.
Portraying the mood and activities of the Campus are the
DW-TV producers, Melanie Matthäus and Bettina Kolb. Their
entire team consists of 18 camera and editing crew members who are serving an apprenticeship at Berlin’s Deutsche
Welle TV in digital media design/sound and vision. Divided
into smaller crews, the TV journalists will be on the prowl
to ­ capture interesting and amusing incidents, and portray
­Talents and their impressions.
The Campus team and the three HAUs, filmed in advance
by the DW-TV, will be presented at the “Taking Off” on Feb­­
ru­­ary 9, 2008 at 11:00 and 13:00. The “Making of The Berlinale ­ Talent Campus” will be screened on the final day of
the ­Campus during the Closing and Award Ceremony of the
Volkswagen Score Competition.
THU 14 20:00 H
HAU 1 The Making of The Berlinale Talent Campus 2008
at the Closing and Award Ceremony
win a co-pro­duc­tion
The prizes enable young and creative talents to carry out
­international projects together. The prize is awarded in the
categories of animated film, documentary, and short film, and
consists of a grant to be used for a specific film project. The
grant should primarily cover the production team’s expenses
for travel, meals, and accommodation. It may, to a lesser extent, also be allocated to cover production expenses. Filming
material and technical film equipment such as cameras, postproduction tools etc. will not be covered by the grant. Every
winning production can receive up to 70,000 Euros in funds.
Foundations help bringing in Talents from all over the world
MON 11 11:00 H
HAU 1 Heroes versus Antiheroes: Manfred Durniok Foundation
The late Berlin-based filmmaker and producer Manfred
­Durniok had a deep passion for South-Eastern Asian culture.
He produced István Szabó’s Oscar-awarded Mephisto and
wed 13 17:00 H
HAU 2 Lonely Hearts Club – 16
The Deutsche Welle TV Crew will be on-hand to capture the highlights and the spirit of the Berlinale Talent Campus for the “Making of“ film.
The Robert Bosch Stiftung, together with its partner, the Filmbüro Baden-Württemberg,
issues three promotional prizes for joint film productions by young German, Eastern and
South East European filmmakers.
Heinrich Böll Foundation
This year, the Heinrich Böll Foundation supports the Campus
by covering the travel expenses of Latin American Talents,
and preparing the workshop “Lonely Hearts Club – NGOs
Date Filmmakers”, which will take place on 13 February, 17:00
at HAU 2. For further information on the Foundation see:
www.heinrich-boell-stiftung.de.
portraying the campus
Success Stories in Cinema
NGOs Date Filmmakers
Qualifying applications will be submitted to an independent
jury. The jury will pre-select up to 15 teams. Two members of
each team will be invited to take part in the Co-Production
Forum in Stuttgart. In April, every nominated team will pitch
its project at the goEast-Festival in Wiesbaden in front of the
jury. The prizes will be awarded at a gala one day later in Wies­
baden. Up to two members of each winning team will have
the opportunity to participate in the Berlinale Talent Campus. A detailed description of application rules as well as the
­application form are available at www.filmfoerderpreis.com.
In 2007, the Robert Bosch Stiftung supported the ­ German-
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Bulgarian animated film Anna Blume (by Ebele Okoye and
Vessela Dantcheva), the German-Estonian documentary
­Normal (by Sandra van Slooten and Heilika Vosu) and the
German-Polish short film Freundschaft (by Nicole Volpert).
We invite you to our Campus events and encourage you to
use this ­opportunity to meet many directors and producers.
For more information please contact:
Filmbüro Baden-Württemberg e.V., Oliver Mahn
0049 – (0)711 – 22 10 67; [email protected]
Robert Bosch Stiftung GmbH, Frank W. Albers
E-mail: [email protected]
MON 11 14:00 H
HAU 2 Frogs in the Pocket: Dušan Makavejev
tue 12 14:00 H
HAU 1 Matters of Life and Death –
Reviews that Make or Break
wed 13 09:30 H
HAU 2 Early Bird Breakfast
17
»Robin« Regie Hanno Olderdissen Produktion Katrin Hohendahl Drehbuch Clemente Fernandez-Gil Foto Martin Valentin Menke
INTERNATIONALE
FILMSCHULEKÚLN
page
2
19–21
special focus
20 Screening Emotions –
Emotional Modus Operandi
Inspire reality
ifs internationale filmschule köln at the Berlinale Talent Campus:
Tuesday, February 12, HAU 2 stage, 9:30 am
»Taste it: Training & Development«
Presentation of ifs internationale filmschule köln,
NIPKOW PROGRAMM, SOURCES 2
with breakfast
ifs internationale filmschule köln gmbh
Werderstr. 1 | 50672 Köln | +49 (0)221 920188-0 | info@filmschule.de
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
19
special focus emotional
modus operandi
“Screening Emotions – Cinema‘s Finest Asset“ – the Berlinale Talent Campus #6
has set its sights on an asset that keeps the entire filmmaking community pulsating.
The great art of film is to transform the silver screen into a
golden receptacle of stories, spaces, perspectives, light,
­music and visuals that incite emotional responses, hit a sentimental chord and captivate and touch audiences. Emotions
are a valuable asset in filmmaking, as directors need to set
the tone of the film, producers need to know how to sell a
film, a cinematographer needs to develop sympathy for his
protagonist, a composer must ­succeed in moving us to tears,
and an editor needs to ­ create excrucia­ting tension in a
­thriller. To examine emotionality in cinema is to look into the
heart of the film industry and that is what the Berlinale Talent
Campus, in its sixth edition, is setting out to do.
Emotions and cinema are a classical topic, yet of late there
has been renewed interest by film theorists on the subject
partly related to discoveries in the field of scientific brain research. New developments and academic approaches to film
analyse comprehensively this phenomena in an insightful
way. Acquiring some of this knowledge can only assist the
filmmaking process, for as Dorothee Wenner, director of the
Berlinale Talent Campus, expounds, “Emotionality is for me
– despite the technologies and strategies you can use in
films to create certain feelings – still something abstract and
difficult to grasp. Isn’t the conveyance of emotions, to a
­degree, about a capability of translation that one can’t quite
put a finger on?”
The complex role of emotions in filmmaking is of relevance
to all stages of filmmaking and to all fields of work of film
professionals. Even the first cinematic idea is of extreme
­importance, especially on the level of emotionality. The
­appeal of the film idea and the subject material a filmmaker
wishes to work on needs considerable reflection before he/
she ­embarks on his/her project. Furthermore, the emotional
scope of the material has become a very important factor for
the ­realisation and success of a film, in both the feature and
­documentary segments. In terms of production technique,
the creation of emotional worlds is really a craft. Basically,
every layman knows that an emotional film experience is
­extremely influenced by the type and style of filming, the
light and the sound.
20
The fact that emotional worlds are also dependent on
­historical conditions and socio-cultural contexts, the “emo­
tional realities” portrayed in films will also be placed under
the spotlight. For example, the Campus event “Love International” isn’t just about love, but the cultural codi­fication­ and
perception of feelings. Despite globalisation,­ depictions of
love function very differently within different cultural groups.
You just have to compare the so-called ­“Berlin School” and
their depiction of new emotionality of young couples in
German films, to cult and love films from Mexico, India or
China – the differences­ become immediately apparent.
Similarly, internationally acclaimed filmmaker, Dušan Maka­­­
vejev will converse with Peter Cowie about explicitness in
film, using film as a tool for provocation. He will talk about
his own career, the challenges involved in low-budget filmmaking and in being politically committed, reflecting also
on the limits to which you can push an audience and ­generate
diff­ering emotional responses: repellence, curiosity, love or
hate. The panel, “The Dark Side of Cinema”, will bring to­­
gether such creatives as Hiam Abbass, Newton I. Aduaka and
Josef Fares to discuss themes such as alienation, racism,
oppression, a longing for home – issues that elicit the powerful darker emotions, leaving audiences contemplative or
even speechless.
trends, political resistance and the fight against oppression
are afforded credibility on the big screen.
Post-production and promotion are the areas where the
­repertoire of emotions is played with the most. In film advertising, in particular, the emotional qualities of a film are
promo­ted. Here, the difference in emphasis on diverse
­cultural groups become obvious. Moreover, emotionality
does not stop with the launch of the film. Film ­criticism has,
by and large, the potential to affect not just the marketing of
a film, but also the film itself, the makers, the actors, as well
as those who write those critiques. These issues will be taken
apart during the panel “Matters of Life and Death – Reviews
that Make or Break”. All these points ­belong to the recipro­cal
­effects of emotionality, film production and commerciali­
sation­ that we wish to address.
Emotions, the least calculable, yet the most inescapable
­aspect of the film business will be opened up to debate
throughout the numerous panels and internationally re­
nown­ed experts from all fields of filmmaking, including
­behind-the-scenes artistic genius, Alex McDowell, and cele­
brated ­ directors Stephen Daldry, Mike Leigh, and ­ Andrzej
Wajda, who will take a theoretical and practical look at the
many ­facets of this theme.
An event dealing with biopics, a genre that is experiencing a
renaissance, will look closely at why audiences are so eager
to see “real” stories depicted in cinema. Why are real life
­emotions fictionalised in successful films such as Down­­fall, produced by panelist Bernd Eichinger, The Queen by
Stephen Frears or in the Jeanne D‘Arc film Jeanne la Pucelle,
with ­ Sandrine Bonnaire? The panel on documentary films,
­“Senses & Sensibilities – Documentaries for the Big Screen”,
will ­analyse the limits and ethics of intruding into the private
sphere of the protagonist, using intense emotional material
– the “real life emotions” – for the big screen.
Cinema’s Finest asset
“From Street Cred to Screen Credibility. Hip-hop and the
Movies” seeks to broaden the debate on the credibility of
Hip-hop in the film and television industry. How aspects
such as the love affair with gangsters and pimps, new ­fashion
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
21
PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
& TRAINING
page
hands-on-training
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27
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29
30
31
32
33
34
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Three-month process coached by experienced script advisers
for European screenwriters and teams of writers, producers or directors!
SOURCES 2 Script Development Workshop
Seven-day session, coached development period, follow-up session.
Application dates
3
23–37
Volkswagen Score Competition
Portrait: Gustavo Santaolalla
Garage Studio
Portrait: Mike Figgis
The Talent Press
Portrait: Peter Cowie
Script & Doc Station
Portrait: Franz Rodenkirchen
Talent Project Market
Portrait: Sandrine Bonnaire
Berlin Today Award
Why Democracy? – Film Programme
Focus Africa
1st March 2008 for the workshop at the FilmCamp/Norway, 12th – 20th June 2008,
with the support of FilmCamp AS.
Requested: feature film projects + creative documentaries.
1st July 2008 for the workshop in Potsdam/Germany, November 2008,
with the support of Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg and MFG Baden-Württemberg.
Requested: feature film projects, biopics + creative documentaries.
SOURCES 2 at BERLINALE TALENT CAMPUS:
Consultation – Analysis – Advice for selected projects!
Heidrun Schleef at the Script Station and David Wingate at the Doc Station.
SOURCES 2 Lecture on 11th February 2008 / HAU 2 Second Floor
Dick Ross: The Heart of the Matter – Emotion vs Intelligence
Please contact the SOURCES 2 office close to Potsdamer Platz!
Köthener Strasse 44, D-10963 Berlin
Tel. + 49(0)30-88 60 211 • + 49(0)172-32 30 216 • Fax + 49(0) 30-88 60 213
[email protected] • www.sources2.de
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
23
Volkswagen score competition
tune into the film
portrait sonic
living
The hands-on-training for composers and sound designers – the Volkswagen Score
­Com­petition – gives three Talents the opportunity to work with the German Film
Orchest­ra Babelsberg and to be mentored by internationally renowned composer,
Gustavo ­San­taolalla.
Winner of two Academy Awards and the guru of the alternative Latin style, musician, film
composer and producer, Gustavo Santaolalla‘s music often combines elements of rock,
soul, African rhythms and Latin American folk.
The Volkswagen Score Competition, an initiative of the
­Berlinale Talent Campus and Volkswagen, was set up in
2003 to boost young international composers and sound
designers.­
In the autumn of 2007, sixteen composers and sound
designers­ downloaded excerpts of two soundtracks from
the ­Berlinale Talent Campus webpage: Platz im Schatten, by
­Sophie Narr (2007) and Around the World – In the 25th Million
Golf, the Volkswagen advertisement released in summer
2007. To apply to the Volkswagen Score Competition, they
created and submitted new scores for the two film excerpts.
On December 1, 2007, jury members – artistic director of the
Film Orchestra Babelsberg, Klaus-Peter Beyer, prominent
German sound mixer, Prof. Martin Steyer, and film composer
Martin Todsharow – selected the final contestants.
The three finalists – Conrad Oleak (Germany), Sonal Shah
­(India) and Vasco Hexel (Germany/UK) – will work aroundthe-clock during the Campus under the guidance of their
mentor, the winner of two Academy Awards, Argentinean
musician, composer and producer, Gustavo Santaolalla,
­giving the final touches to their scores. They will record their
soundtracks with the musicians of the German Film Orchestra­
Babelsberg, with the final mixing taking place at the film
school HFF “Konrad Wolf“. The digital post-production
will be directed by Wave-Line, a Berlin-based production
­company. During each stage of post-production, they will
receive feedback and expert direction from professionals –
on preparing the soundtrack, using studio resources and
­recording with a live orchestra, and the final editing. One-toone sessions will enable them to receive useful pointers
specific to their particular scores.
weeks and working with professionals. We recorded our
­music with the Babelsberg Film Orchestra which was my first
experience of working with a live orchestra. This was a very
important experience because I was recently working on a
feature film project, and I now had the confidence and knew
what I was facing.“
The three-member jury team will come together once more
at the presentation of the three final film scores. The winner
of the Volkswagen Score Competition 2008 will be ­announ­­ced on February 14, 2008. Sponsored by Dolby, a trip to
Los ­Angeles with an exclusive guided tour of the best sound
­studios in the city is the award awaiting the winning con­­t­
estant.
The three finalists and their mentor, Gustavo Santaolalla, will
converse with Peter Cowie about their experiences and the
outcome of the competition on February 14 at 11am.
Mixing the scores at the film school HFF “Konrad Wolf“
Titas Petrikis, finalist of the Volkswagen Score Competition
2007, in an interview with film journalist Martin Blaney stated,­
“When I came to Berlin, I was amazed at how big the event
is,“ he adds. “I didn‘t realise the scale of opportunities they
offered you. But it was a bit different for us compared to the
other Campus participants because the finalists of the Score
Competition [the other two finalists were Germany‘s Ilja
­Coric and the UK‘s Costas Fotopoulos] were there for two
24
wed 13 10:00 H
EXT
Excursion to the German Filmorchestra Babelsberg and the HFF “Konrad Wolf“
thu 14 20:00 H
HAU 1 Award Ceremony of the Volkswagen Score Competition at the Closing
For music aficionados, a soundtrack to a movie often makes
the movie what it is. Gustavo Santaolalla has swerved his
long musical career in the direction of composing mindblowing scores for a number of remarkable movies.
Old“ from Brokeback Mountain won him the Golden Globe
Award, which was followed by an Oscar for Best Original
Score. His score for Iñárritu’s third film, Babel (2006), got him
his second Academy Award for Best Original Score.
Santaolalla‘s music career started at the age of 16, when he
wrote, recorded and produced his first single in Argentina.
He founded and led two influential rock bands in the 1960s
and 1970s, Arco Iris and Soluna, making history as the pioneer in the fusion of rock and Latin American folk. In 1978 he
fled to the United States as Argentina descended into military dictatorship. Here, his success surged by the tail end of
the 1980s when he began producing breakthrough albums
for key bands amid the burgeoning rock en español scene.
The launch of his highly successful record label Surco led to
the production of records for Café Tacuba, Juanes, Molotov,
Bajofondo Tango Club and other premiere Latin acts. What
pleases Santaolalla most is the way the genre has achieved
popularity, pushing the definition of Latin music. It offers a
“cultural map of Latin America and shows that we are more
than just Mexican sombreros and congas,” he says. “Not that
I have anything against that, but I wanted to stretch past the
stereotypes.”
As the mentor for the Volkswagen Score Competition, we are
lucky to gain from him such insights on film scoring: “In my
experience, [with] the music you have to support emotionally­
the movie and the characters. And you have to create an
­environment but you should never put yourself in-between
the story and the audience with the music.”
In 1998, Santaolalla recorded an instrumental album “Ron­
roco“, which attracted the attention of producer/director
Michael Mann who used the song “Iguazu” in The Insider
(1999). The song featured prominently in the film, opening
the doors to Hollywood. First came Amores Perros (2000), released as a two-CD soundtrack for the Alejandro González
Iñárritu film of the same name. Both the film and the soundtrack were widely praised, and a few years later Santaolalla
composed the score for Iñárritu’s 21 Grams (2003). He was
then invited to compose the soundtrack for The Motorcycle
Diaries (2004), which won him the BAFTA Award in February 2005. For Brokeback Mountain (2005), he composed the
score on the basis of the script, a rare occurrence in Hollywood. “I came up with a theme and a kind of sonic texture
that the movie was gonna have before the film was shot”, he
explains. Director Ang Lee was able to study the soundtrack
­beforehand, keeping it in mind as he went about scouting
locations for the film. The track “A Love That Will Never Grow
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Mentor of the Volkswagen Score Competition: Gustavo Santaolalla
Photo: Alejandra Palacios
THU 14 11:00 H
HAU 1 Eyes on the Music – Presentation of the Volkswagen Score Competition. With Gustavo Santaolalla
25
garage studio breaking
free of the big screen
Portrait thriving
on risks
The Garage Studio has been set up to produce short digital flicks for online streaming.
All Talents are invited to visit the Garage Studio at Hau 3 to watch the film teams in
action.
As a filmmaker who has constantly crossed borders, experimented and on occasion
extended the very language of film, we are delighted to have Mike Figgis at the Campus
and as a Garage Studio mentor.
A do-it-yourself project from start to finish, The Garage
­Studio inspires Talents from all domains of filmmaking to undertake a new cinematic adventure. Working in the “garage”
are four international teams who will have a fast-track day of
­digital production. Each team has one day to shoot, edit and
package a digital short film which will be uploaded on the
internet the same night.
Mike Figgis is a visionary filmmaker who thrives on ex­pe­r­imentation. With roots in experimental theatre and music,
he wrote, directed and composed scores for a number of
films including the moody thrillers, Stormy ­ Monday (1988),
One Night Stand (1997) and the Oscar-nominated ­ Leaving
Las Vegas (1995). Born in England, he lived in Kenya until the
age of eight before ­moving back to Newcastle in the north
of England. As a teenager, he helped form an R&R band –
Gas Board, ­ featuring future Roxy Music singer Bryan Ferry.
­Moving to London, he ­ studied ­ music for three years and
began performing with The ­ People Show. In 1980, he left
The People Show to concentrate on writing and ­ directing
theatre. He formed his own theatre company, The Mike
­Figgis Group, and began creating ­multi-media productions,
which included­ the extensive use of film. Some of his earliest projects, including “Redhugh 1980“, “Slow Fade“ and
­“Animals in the City“, won awards for their innovative blend
of live action with music and film.
In its second year, and as such the youngest of the hands-on
training programmes offered by the Berlinale Talent Campus, it gives Talents the opportunity to discover and explore
new ways of making digital films, meant solely for internet
presentation. The Garage Studio provides the participants
with the possibility of a practical, aesthetic and theoretical
engagement with this still very new medium for professional
filmmakers/filmmaking. An experiment of sorts, the Online
Garage Studio was developed for the express purpose of
posting film ideas, enabling directors to select their team
members from the online Campus pool of actors, directors,
editors, cinematographers and visual artists, and providing
them with the opportunity to communicate online and work
constructively on pre-production from their home base.
To familiarise themselves with the facilities and to get to
know the cast and crew prior to shooting, the teams arrived
in Berlin a few days before the Campus began. These international teams will be hard at work on the day pencilled-out for
them, between February 10 to 13, when they will produce a
five-minute digital film to be uploaded instantly and presented exclusively on the internet. All this would not have
been possible without the support of the Campus partners:
Canon provides us with the indispensable digital camcorders this year, and production designers are on hand thanks
to the Film & Television Academy (HFF) “Konrad Wolf“. The
Berlin based casting agency, Type Face, supports us with the
casting of all the actors not found in the Talent pool, while
L‘Oréal Paris accounts for the make-up.
With each passing Campus day, these digital flicks can be
viewed on our website: www.berlinale-talentcampus.de.
­Garage Talents are guided by the filmmakers Jay ­ Anania,
Mike Figgis, Garin­ Rianto Nugroho and Grahame Weinbren.
26
Founder and ­producer of Earthly Delights Films and former
programme director of Digimart, Liz Rosenthal, will ­supervise
all four ­Talents and their films. The Garage Flicks will be shot,
edited and posted online:
On February 10: On Time
Written by David Halls (Canada) and directed by Ted Chung
(USA): A travelling salesman sells the future in his suitcase.
On February 11: It Could Happen to You
Written and directed by Juliane Block (Malaysia): The story of
an Urban Myth about a new rape tactic – little girls as bait to
bring young women to a certain house with a wired bell.
On February 12: Eddi
Written and directed by Victoria Hayford (UK): A computer
bytes back.
“I think this is the liberation of filmmaking. I think such
in­teresting things will come out of people’s laptops now
– I can’t wait. I think it is a brilliant time to be making films”,
he said in an interview following the release of Timecode,
referring to the breaking away from traditional filmmaking and the usage of tools that shake up the audio system.
Mike ­ Figgis has also written a book, “Digital Filmmaking“,
­published by Faber & Faber, on his experience with digital
equipment. He describes his artistic trajectory, his familiarisation with video camera, offers advice on the procedures
of pre- and post-production, location, lighting, camera
­movement, working with actors, music and distribution.
The Talents of the Garage Studio will go a long way with
Mike Figgis guiding them through their filmmaking process.
On February 13: The String Puppet
Written and directed by Alexander Frank (Switzerland): A western soldier starts to play a string puppet and ultimately plays
for his life under the merciless eyes of a boy turned ­soldier.
Shooting a “Garage Flick“ in 2007
THU 14 14:00 H
HAU 1 Garage Studio Proudly Presents:
Four Flicks for Clicks
Stormy Monday (1988) was his debut in feature length filmmaking. He wrote, directed and scored the movie that was
set in Newcastle’s steamy jazz club world. The film earned
him attention as a director who could get interesting performances from established Hollywood actors. His entrance
into American films came with Internal Affairs (1990), which
he directed and co-scored. He went on to make the films
Liebestraum (1991) and Leaving Las Vegas (1995), with the
latter he began his love affair with the “more impressionistic” Super 16 film normally used in documentaries, perfectly
­capturing the seamy trappings of the powerful love story.
Leaving Las Vegas became a critical darling, earning him
great reviews as well as two Oscar nominations, and ­Nicolas
Cage the Best Actor award for his portrayal of the alcoholic
screenwriter. He made One Night Stand and The Loss of ­Sexu­al
Innocence in the following years.
His forays into digital video technology led him to conceive
and direct Timecode (2000), a digital video feature film production portraying four stories running simultaneously in
real time, and with no editing. Since then, his work output
has almost exclusively been on the cutting edge of creative
digital filmmaking.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Director and composer Mike Figgis
A critical darling: Leaving Las Vegas by Mike Figgis
27
the talent press campus
chroniclers
Portrait
feasting on film
Eight young Talents zip around the Berlinale, featuring Campus events as well as ­
reviewing films of the Official Berlinale Programme.
Charming, prolific and versatile, veteran film critic and historian, Peter Cowie is one of the
Berlinale Talent Campus‘ most favoured moderators and a senior Talent Press mentor.
A programme of the Berlinale Talent Campus, Goethe-­Institut
and FIPRESCI, The Talent Press is an integral part of the
­Berlinale Talent Campus and offers young film critics and
journalists from around the world the opportunity to
­immerse themselves and capture the finest moments of this
year‘s festival.
Now in its fifth year, this hands-on-training permits young
critics to attend the festival and gain experience in reviewing
on a daily basis the events of the Campus and films of their
choice.
An once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get invaluable input
and expert mentoring by renowned film journalists and
­critics – this year‘s mentors are Peter Cowie (former International publisher), Dana Linssen (Editor-in-Chief of “De Filmkrant“), Derek Malcolm (Film critic for the “London Evening
Standard“) and Stephanie Zacharek (film critic for Salon.com).
Under their guidance, these journalists will write ­reviews of
films ­presented in the various sections of the ­festival, compose features and reports on the atmosphere of the Campus,
and interview both Talents and experts – ­gaining insight into
the business of covering a big international film festival by
being integrated into the pipelines of the Campus and various other sections of the Berlin ­International Film ­Festival.
least, ­ Talents and mentors will discuss and analyse a pre­selected film in its ­historical and socio-political context.
On Tuesday 12, a panel of equal interest to film critics, directors, producers and actors alike „Matters of Life and Death –
Reviews That Make or Break“ takes a fresh look at the unique
relationship between film professionals and film critics.
From over 200 applications, a six-member jury selected
the current participants of The Talent Press:
Natalia Ames (Peru), Dilek Aydin (Turkey)
Suchandrika Chakrabarti (United Kingdom)
Benjamin Cho (Australia), Shaibu Husseini (Nigeria)
Martyna Olszowska (Poland),
Ezequiel Schmoller (Argentina), Mayank Shekhar (India)
Articles of the participants will be published daily – from
February 9 to 14 – on the website of the Berlinale Talent
­Campus, and on the homepages of the Goethe-Institut and
FIPRESCI. What’s more, the daily articles, reviews and interviews will be published and distributed as wall newspapers
at the three HAUs. Finally, on Thursday 14 the printed issue
“Best of The Talent Press“ will be available all-around.
A new feature of this year’s Talent Press is the workshop on
February 8, 2008. Through the course of the day, press ­Talents
will be introduced and exposed to various issues ­ related
to film writing, including the situation of film ­ criticism
­worldwide, and the vital factors of reporting on festivals –
standards to be maintained, possibilities and expectations.
Together with invited experts, they will reflect on the ­borders
defining public relations and film criticism, and last but not
28
Being integrated into the pipelines of the Campus: The Talent Press
Tue 12 14:00 H
HAU 1 Matters of Life and Death –
Reviews that Make or Break
In 1958, at a cinema in London, Peter Cowie’s life changed
watching Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal. The film shaped
his career as a journalist and author, among whose books are
biographical studies of Ingmar Bergman, Orson Welles and
Francis Ford Coppola.
Born in England, he became passionate about writing on film
while at Cambridge University in 1960 and began ­publishing
books on film soon after he left university. Film historian and
author of over thirty books on cinema, the founder and ­editor
of The International Film Guide for 40 years before his retirement, and the editor of the Tantivy Press line of film books
that flourished through the 1960s and early 1970s, ­ Peter
­Cowie is one of the most important writers and editors on
cinema of the past half-century.
He is one of the leading authorities on Ingmar Bergman and
Scandinavian cinema and was decorated with the Royal
­Order of the Polar Star by the King of Sweden in 1989 for his
services to Swedish culture. Apart from “Ingmar Bergman: A
Critical Biography“ (New York: Scribners, 1982), he has also
authored reference books on the national cinema of Finland,
Norway, Sweden and the Netherlands. In November 2006, to
coincide with the centenary of the most spectacular icons of
early cinema, Louise Brooks, Cowie’s “Louise Brooks: Lulu
Forever“ (New York: Rizzoli; Schirmer-Mosel, Munich, 2006)
was published in Germany and the United States. This exquisitely produced album celebrates Lulu with rare film footage
stills, private photos, letters, interviews, and texts by Cowie,
exploring this influential cult figure and the abiding symbol
of the Jazz Age.
In his book “Coppola: A Biography“ (Da Capo Press, 1994),
Cowie traces the career of the flamboyant director. Describing­
his filmmaking techniques and analysing his plots, the ­author
shows how the director’s inventiveness, as well as such
­aspects of his personal life as his Italian heritage, have
­influenced his work. In “Revolution! The Explosion of World
Cinema in the Sixties“ (London / New York: Faber and Faber,
2004), an evocative and unique exploration of the most important era in international filmmaking, Peter Cowie gives us
a personal angle, lending an immediacy to events decades in
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
the past. In an interview Cowie said, “I was fortunate enough
to be 20 years of age when the 1960s began, and it was such
a stirring time – a time of transition from postwar gloom and
conservatism to a more confident exploration of life and art.”
The book focuses on those voices that still evoke the ­struggles
and achievements of the 1960s and set the creative and intellectual standard by which today’s finest films are still held.
Peter Cowie is one of the few writers of his kind to have had
a foot in both cinema’s academic world – teaching, writing
biographies and film studies – and business world, with the
International Film Guides and his former position as the international publishing director of Variety. He has served on
the juries of numerous festivals, lectured on film in four
­continents and is a special consultant to the Berlinale. The
Campus extends its heartfelt thanks to Peter Cowie for his
priceless input and steady support of the Campus and its
­ob­jec­tives.
Peter Cowie moderating a discussion with Gael García Bernal in 2007
mon 11 14:00 H
HAU 2 Frogs in the Pocket –
Dušan Makavejev in conversation with Peter Cowie
29
script & Doc station getting
down to the basics
Portrait transferring
scripting know-how
An integral part of the Berlinale Talent Campus is the Script & Doc Station which provides
concrete feedback sessions to documentary filmmakers and screen writers.
International script advisor and tutor, Franz Rodenkirchen has been involved in the
­development of the Script Station since its conception in 2004. We are delighted to
have his guidance at the sixth edition of the Berlinale Talent Campus.
Focusing on the complex craft of working with screenwriters
and documentary filmmakers – practically and creatively –
the Script & Doc Station offers select young film professionals­
the opportunity to have personal sessions for concrete feedback on their current film ideas, reassessing and revamping
them in such that they are ready to take those important
steps towards production. Twelve documentary filmmakers
and an equal number of screenwriters were selected for the
Script & Doc Station 2008 from over 187 applicants who sent
in treatments in English or German.
Supported by the German Federal Film Board FFA , this
hands-on-training, housed at HAU 3, not only offers Talents a
concentrated Concept Development Day, but also intensive
one-to-one meetings with 13 experts from different countries; and two coaching sessions scheduled with time in­between to develop answers to questions and new ideas.
The aim of the Script & Doc Station is also to establish a
­protected space for interaction and learning among Talents
to discuss their work, styles and ­experiences, as well as the
different methods of writing and ­concept development.
mentors include Anne-Kathrin Brinkmann, Dick Fontaine,
Ernst Ganzert, Esther van ­ Messel, Ulla ­ Simonen, and David
Wingate.
The Script Station has been developed in cooperation with
Script House, a well-established script agency in Germany;
and the Concept Development Day 2008 has been designed
in cooperation with EON Screenwriters‘ Workshop in ­London.
ZDF/arte, one of the most important German television
­departments for the production and co-production of international documentaries, has been cooperating with the
Doc Station since 2007, providing mentorship and designing
the Concept Development Day 2008. The European Script
­Writers‘ Training Programme SOURCES 2 has supported the
Script & Doc Station from the start with experts from their
teaching staff. Without the continued support of these
­institutions, the Script & Doc Station would not have been
able to continually evaluate and reshape its programme,
making it sustainable for Talents and their future projects.
“Between the Lines“, moderated by Alby James, Head of
­Development at EON Screenwriters’ Workshop and a Script
Station jury member, will have Talent actors reading two
scenes from fiction scripts. Script Reading is not only a core
part of the film process, but also the moment the script is
woken to life.
Mentors for the Script Station 2008 are Franz Rodenkirchen,
Alby James, Marten Rabarts, Julian Friedmann, Gyula ­Gazdag,
Heidrun Schleef and Selina Ukwuoma. This year’s Doc ­Station
30
Since Summer 1953 by Shirin Neshat, one of his more recent
projects, he is presently working on, among others, Red Cross
by Hugo Vieira da Silva, whose first feature, Body Rice,
­premiered in Locarno and went on to garner a host of international festival awards, and on The Obscure Spring, the new
project by Carlos Contreras, which was presented at ­CineMart
in Rotterdam last month.
International script advisor, teacher and tutor for workshops
and individual project development throughout Europe,
Franz Rodenkirchen is currently the head of dramaturgy at
the script development agency Script House in Berlin, where
he has been a partner since 2001. He is one of the tutors for
the international scriptwriting programme Script & Pitch and
is one of the script advisors of the BINGER Filmlab, ­Amsterdam
since 2006. Additionally, as script editor for the CineLink co­production market at the Sarajevo Film Festival, he coaches
selected writers on their projects, and also tutors students at
the script academy of the dffb (Deutsche Film- und Fernseh­
akademie Berlin).
As mentor of the Script Station, it is his open gaze and in­
valuable expertise in the intricate art of scripting from which
the Talents of the Script Station will benefit from.
During and after his studies in media consulting and German
literature, Franz Rodenkirchen co-wrote four feature films
with director Jörg Buttgereit (1987-1994) and also assisted in
bringing them to the big screen. In 1995, after freelancing as
a writer on film-related topics, he moved to Helsinki, where
he continued writing articles, as well as a Radio play, “The
House that Jack built”, for German broadcaster WDR and lectured at the Helsinki University. In 1996, he started working
as a script consultant for international art house projects.
Two public events during the Berlinale Talent Campus will
present an insight into the Script & Doc Station 2008 for
­strategic partners, international experts and fellow Talents:
“Between Reality“, moderated by Sirkka Möller, documentary­
curator and Doc Station jury member, will have Doc ­Talents
present their documentary treatments and discuss them on
stage with an international panel of documentary experts,
among them distributors, funders and TV execs.
Franz Rodenkirchen is a person who has meticulously ­infused
quality into the screenplays of some of the best young directors of today. Take for example Jasmila Žbanić‘s Grbavica,
winner of the Golden Bear at the Berlinale 2006, and Teona
Strugar Mitevska’s I Am from Titov Veles, which will be screen­ed in the Panorama section of the Berlinale 2008 and won the
Special Jury Award, Sarajevo 2007.
Personal sessions for writing Talents: Alby James with 2007 participant
wed 13 11:00 H
HAU 2 Between Realities –
2nd fl. Doc Station Presentation
wed 13 15:00 H
HAU 2 Between the Lines –
2nd fl. Script Station Presentation
The award-winning films Suzhou River (1999) by Chinese
­director Lou Ye, Noi Albinoi (2002) by Daguar Kari, Hotel (2004)
by Austrian director Jessica Hausner and Armin (2007) by
Ognjen Svilicic, part of the Berlinale Forum programme in
2007 – all comprise the vast portfolio of over 100 films he has
consulted. Sharing his thoughts with us on writing and
ad­­vising screenplays, he states, “When thinking of being a
fulfilled script advisor, I‘d like to imagine that eventually one
might be able to abandon all certainty for a completely open
gaze that is no longer impaired by any ­preconceived con­­
ventional solution.”
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Mentor of the Script Station: Franz Rodenkirchen
Tue 12 14:00 H
HAU 2 Adventures in the Euro-Jungle – The MEDIA Programme Seen Through the Eyes of Film Practioners
31
talent project market
present­ your project
Portrait the portrait
of an actress
The Talent Project Market, in cooperation with the Berlinale Co-Production Market, offers
young producers and directors the opportunity to present their projects to potential
­coproducers and financiers.
Known for her complex and often rebellious roles, we are priviledged to have
Sandrine Bonnaire, one of the most esteemed French actresses of her generation, at
the Berlinale Talent Campus.
This hands-on-training provides one-on-one coaching
­ses­sions by international professionals, as well as an insight
into the workings of co-production markets. Ten projects
from ten countries were chosen in early January and will be
presented at the fifth edition of the Berlinale Co-Production
Market from February 10-11, 2008, allowing Talents a rare
­opportunity to meet internationally experienced producers,
financiers, distributors, sales agents and broadcasters from
around the world.
Selected for Talent Project Market 2008 are:
The Scream of the Butterfly
by Kirsi Marie Liimatainen, ­Finland
Caribbean Chronicles by Jean des Forets, France
Field of Blackbirds by Ewa Borowski, Germany
The Conqueror by Alka Raghuram, India
The Talent Project Market is a two-day programme; the first
day allotted to pitching, presenting and preparing projects
for the international market. Talents will also receive training
on international co-production and financing. A reputed
pitching trainer, an international jury and other industry
­experts will give valuable advice on bringing projects to
­fruition. The second day will focus on individual meetings
with potential partners. This will take place at the Berlinale
Co-Production Market where pre-scheduled meetings will
­allow Talents the time and space to present themselves
and their projects to potential producers, financiers, and
­distri­butors who, in advance, would have familiarised
­themselves with the ­ Talent projects through the Project
­Catalogue of the Berlinale Co-Production Market.
Tony Ten by Marleen Slot, The Netherlands
Black South-Easter by Carey McKenzie, South Africa
Squire Musa by Othman Karim, Sweden
English Rose by Hope Dickson Leach
and Jennifer Westin, UK/USA
Arches by Maria Laura Ruggiero, Argentina (alumnus)
Susa by Rusudan Pirveli, Georgia (alumnus)
Moreover, the VFF – Verwertungsgesellschaft der Film- und
Fernsehproduzenten – for the fifth year in a row, is ­sponsoring
the “Highlight Pitch”, where three pre-selected Talent projects
will be pitched and each awarded the 3,000 € prize.
In addition, the Talent Project Market offers a variety of informal networking opportunities and a chance to exchange
ideas and share projects with other participants of the Talent
Project Market.
The film that unambiguously defined her as French cinema’s
pre-eminent troubled teenager was Agnès Varda’s Sans toit
ni loi (Vagabond, 1986). The disturbing, uncompromsing
­portrayal of a young drifter led not only to her second César
Award, but more importantly, it became her entry into the
company of France’s top auteurs – and she has since stuck to
the path of film-as-art rather than indulging in more
­com­merical European fare.
footage shot especially for this project at the special re­­­­­si­dence, where Sabine now lives after a disastrous five-year
detour of a mental institution.
Sandrine Bonnaire is a member of the International Jury of
the Berlin International Film Festival 2008, her film Elle
s’appelle Sabine will be screened as Campus special during
the festival. Having served on both sides of the camera – as
director of Elle s‘appelle Sabine and playing the role of Jeanne
D‘Arc in the two-part biopic Jeanne la Pucelle – she will ­reflect
on audience desires for watching “real life“ stories portrayed
in all their emotional intensity on the big screen as a panelist
for “Real Life Emotion – Biopics and Doc Stars“.
Her extraordinary early run was not yet finished. She spent
the rest of the decade working steadily for some of France’s
most accomplised directors. She has appeared in films by
Claude Chabrol, Claude Sautet, Patrice Leconte, André
Téchiné, Jacques Rivette, Jean-Pierre Améris, Pierre Jolivet,
among others. An actress known to have her fingers firmly on
the nape of her character’s neck, she was the object of Michel
Blanc’s gaze in Monsieur Hire (1989), Patrice Leconte’s superb
adaptation of a Georges Simenon story. Her career has gone
from strength to strength, and she received ­ international
accolade and an award at the 1995 Venice film festival for her
performance in Claude Chabrol’s La cérémonie­ (Judgement
in Stone, 1995).
Sandrine Bonnaire in Claude Chabrol‘s The Colour of Lies
The Talent Project Market is one of the two hands-on-train­­
ings open to Campus alumni. This year‘s list of selected
projects includes two alumni projects.
Valuable advice for the Talent projects given by international experts
32
Sandrine Bonnaire became an overnight sensation in France
in 1983 when she was chosen from among thousands of
teenage girls for the leading role in Maurice Pialat’s À nos
amours. She was just fifteen years old, yet her presence in the
film shows an immediate understanding of acting for the
camera. In 1984, she was awarded the César Award for Most
Promising Actress for her role in À nos amours. “Everything
was there,” observed critic David Thomson, “without ­coyness
or boasting. From shot to shot, nearly, she seemed to be shifting in mood and age. Here was a phenomenon of ­acting.”
With Elle s’appelle Sabine, she makes a touching directorial
debut, a thoughtful look at her younger sister whose ­autismrelated behavioural difficulties went undiagnosed for the
better part of three decades. Bonnaire had a dual reason for
making Elle s’appelle Sabine: “One is to paint a portrait of my
sister. The other is to help establish autism centres for adults.”
This deeply moving documentary consists of snippets from
Sandrine’s 20 years worth of home videos, augmented by
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
MON 11 17:45 H
Ext.
Elle s‘appelle Sabine (Her Name Is Sabine) –
Campus Special-Screening at Cubix 8
wed 13 17:00 H
HAU 1 Real Life Emotion –
Biopics and Doc Stars
33
berlin today award
big opportunity for young
filmmakers
berlin today award
finalists 2008
The Berlin Today Award – the short film competition sup­por­
ted since 2003 by the Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg
within the framework of the Berlinale Talent Campus – ­unveils
its new face. The upcoming round of this annual ­occasion for
Talents to produce five short films will take place under the
auspices of Federal Foreign Minister Frank-Walter ­Steinmeier
and with the support of the Federal ­Foreign Office.
The three short films by Campus Talents, in competition for
the Berlin Today Award 2008, were produced by the Berlin
­production company zero fiction film:
The Berlin Today Award is a short film competition within the frame­
work of the Berlinale Talent Campus. After five successful years and
the production of 15 exciting short films, the competition now gives
itself a new look.
In 2009, to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin
Wall, the Berlin Today Award will focus on the theme “My
Wall”. Five short films, each a maximum of ten minutes in
length, are to be realised in keeping with professional
­standards by five German-based production companies with
funding from Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg and in-kind
contributions from the film industry.
As part of a “Producers‘ Meeting“ to be held during the
­Ber­linale Talent Campus 2008, 15 selected Talents have the
chance to pitch their film ideas to the participating pro­ducers.
The five projects that make the leap toward ­ realisation will
be produced by the end of 2008. As a new component of the
competition, the young directors are invited to Berlin – or
­another German city – for a one-month project and development phase (residency) before shooting begins.
The world premiere of the three short films competing for the Berlin Today Award 2008
takes place at the Campus. They will be presented to all Talents during the Opening
Ceremony on February 9.
The world premiere of the short films will take place at the
opening of the Berlinale Talent Campus in 2009 as part of
the 59th Berlin International Film Festival. Subsequently,
the short films are planned for worldwide distribution in
­cooperat­ion with the Goethe-Institut. Mentor for this year’s
competition ­ is German director Wim Wenders.
The Berlin Today Award is open to all current and former
­participants of the Berlinale Talent Campus (this year‘s
­deadline was January 17th). The next application round for
the Berlin Today Award 09/10 is planned for December 2008.
For detailed conditions of the competition see the website
www.berlintoday.de.
Berlin Hair Today by Ole Bendtzen
Photo: Peter Himsel
Berlin Hair Today by Ole Bendtzen (Denmark)
An exploration of the bizarre hair of the Berliners. The
­documentary follows flamboyant Danish hair-dresser Rikki
on a precarious mission through Berlin. The owner of “Streetcut“, a trendy hair-dresser’s shop in Berlin’s colourful Kreuzberg district, has set himself up for a challenging task: to
bring back good taste to the city.
Match Factor by Maheen Zia (Pakistan)
A haunting story about the power of prejudice and the
strength of trust: Ahmed (Navid Akhavan), a young Iraqi
­soccer player, comes to Berlin for a FIFA charity match. When
one evening he doesn’t return to his hotel, fear of a possible
terrorist conspiracy triggers a city-wide manhunt. Brigitte
(Anneke Kim Sarnau), a young policewoman, is on patrol
duty when she spots the suspect.
The Last Wash by Ville Jankeri (Finland)
A black comedy about an unconventional suicide attempt:
After 30 years of working in a Berlin launderette, Olga (Peggy
Lukac) from Poland receives notice that her favourite washing
machine will be replaced by a new model. With the help of her
­devoted friend, she decides to end her misery and loads her
last wash.
Match Factor by Maheen Zia
Photo: Peter Himsel
The Berlin Today Award is organised by boxfish events in
­cooperation with the Berlinale Talent Campus. It is suppor­­t­ed­ by the Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, the Federal
­Foreign Office and the regional film industry.
sat 9
HAU 1
17:00 H
Opening Ceremony and World Premiere of the Berlin Today Award Short Films 2008
suN 10 19:30 H
ext.
Dine & Shine – Talents Rendezvous with Berlinale Guests Winner of last year‘s Berlin Today Award: Kasia Klimkiewicz (Poland)
and Andrew Friedman (USA) for Wasserschlacht – The Great Border Battle
The Last Wash by Ville Jankeri
Photo: Peter Himsel
Photo: David Ausserhofer
34
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
& Berlin Today Award Ceremony (on invitation only)
moN 11 18:00 H
ext.
Public Screening of finalist films 2008
at Hackesche Höfe Filmtheater
35
why democracy vote for
democracy?
focus africa spot on
a new generation
“What does democracy mean to me?“ – eight short films by Berlinale Talent Campus alumni
explore the personal, political and the question of rights on the theme “Why Democracy?“
In 2008, the Subsaharan region and Germany will enjoy a stimulating exchange. With
the aim of strengthening ties and exploring new ground for future collaborative efforts
between the two regions, a series of events, “Focus Africa”, will commence with the
­Berlinale Talent Campus 2008.
Democracy is arguably the greatest political buzzword of our
time and is invoked by everyone – but what does it mean?
Can it be defined, measured, safeguarded? What does it
mean to people who don‘t believe in it? What does it mean to
you? In October 2007, ten one-hour films by independent
award-winning filmmakers from around the world focused
on contemporary democracy were broadcast in the world‘s
largest ever factual media event. More than 40 broadcasters
on all continents are participating, with an estimated audience of 300 million viewers. With so much violence happening in the name of democracy, it has undoubtedly become a
contested idea. Consequently, there is an even greater need
than before to understand it better and, despite its ironies,
an unparalled interest in the promise it holds. This also led to
the setting up of the Why Democracy House, the project’s
online forum. In addition, a selection of short films have been
made in cooperation with the Berlinale Talent Campus, ten of
which are by Campus alumni. Here’s your chance to watch a
small selection of some of the creative and thought provo­
king shorts by former Talents. We are proud to have their
World Premiere at the Berlinale 2008. More information on
the entire project can be found at www.whydemocracy.net.
Berlinale Talent Campus presents eight
“Why Democracy?“ short films by Campus alumni:
Iran means that the first female bus driver can only drive a
bus when women are on board.
Interferenze
Italy (11'46). Director: Zoe D‘Amaro. The right to freedom of
speech is an essential element of democracy. In 2002, pirate
local TV stations started to spread throughout the Italian territory as a statement against the oligarchic control over the
most influential medium.
A new generation of African filmmakers is entering the scene
with film and project ideas that are too diverse to be subsumed under one label. Looking at the scene from the
­outside, one cannot help but admire the artistic energy and
strik­­ing determination in the various new production hubs
on the continent. The Berlin International Film Festival and
the Campus are platforms created to promote a new, young
generation of filmmakers and to build international networks
for filmmaking. This can be seen through the Official Programme, which includes eight films with major involvement
On The Square
Croatia (4'14). Director: Vanja Juranic. The changing political
structure of SE Europe ignores an individual’s opposition to
this reality.
You Cannot Hide from Allah
Pakistan (12'13). Director: Petr Lom. A Washington DC taxi dri­v­er who wins the lottery returns to his native town to try and
win the mayoral election.
Kinshasa 2.0
Democratic Republic of Congo (11'06). Director: Teboho ­Edkins.
An internet campaign helps in the release of a presidential
candidate jailed for talking openly about the lack of democracy. Moving between a militarised Kinshasa and “Second
Life“, the power of the Internet for democracy is explored.
kate henshaw-nuttall
the efik princess
on the movie run away
By Shaibu Husseini
She is one talented actress every good director would want
to work with. Pretty and unpretentiously friendly, Kate
­Henshaw-Nuttall is one Nollywood (as the Nigerian Home
Movie Industry is liberally called) personality who has worked
herself to a level where she gets the sort of adulation that
stars in Hollywood get.
Famous Last Words
United Kingdom (6'48). Director: Avril Evans. A young woman
boards a train on the London Underground. Is she nervous
or not? And if so, why?
Three Blind Men
India (6'57). Director: Kanu Behl. Three blind men run into an
elephant on Parliament Street.
Old Peter
Russia (8'05). Director: Ivan Golovnev. The last Shaman of the
Kazym river votes in each election but this hasn‘t helped to stop
the destruction of his culture through massive oil extraction.
Feminin – Masculin
Iran (8'41). Director: Sadaf Foroughi. Equal rights for women in
36
of film professionals from the African continent. The Campus
takes great pleasure in inviting 35 Talents and 10 Experts
from Subsaharan Africa. It is a unique opportunity for all
­attending the Campus to in­ter­act with like-minded professionals and ­init­i­ate­ partnerships with the African region and
vice versa. On the opening day of the Campus, a special get
together, “Hot Spot Africa” for Talents and experts from
­African ­ countries will take place at 14:00 to guide Talents
through the Campus and Berlinale labyrinth and give them
pointers on events that may be of special interest to them.
Famous Last Words by Avril Evans
suN 17 14:00 H
EXT
Why Democracy? – Short Films
at CinemaxX 6, moderated by Don Edkins
A trained microbiologist who is married to a Briton, acting
for the African screen diva began in Lagos in 1993 after a
chance opportunity to audition for a role in the movie When
the Sun Set. It took that film for Kate to develop an unquenchable passion for acting. Soon producers found her a ready
hand for their offerings. Today Kate has by dint of hard work
risen to become one of the busiest and highest paid actresses­
in Nollywood, the world‘s third-biggest film-producing
­industry with a conservative movie credit estimate of about
150.
Despite the usual inclination to use Hollywood as a standard­
for rating Nollywood, Kate Henshaw-Nuttall says that she
does not follow that school of thought but instead believes
in the potentials of Nollywood. With a penchant for playing
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
non-glamorous and down trodden roles, she has become a
role model to new entrants. Kate’s views on the need for
them to be focused have been very strong. She has not
stopped admonishing them to look beyond the financial
gains and the fame that comes with acting. “I think they
should focus on getting it right. Fame and money will come
once you get it right” she says.
Kate Henshaw-Nuttall
sun 10 11:00 H
HAU 1 Love International – With Kate Henshaw-Nuttall,
Shah Rukh Khan and Maria Schrader
37
Timetable of the
Berlinale Talent Campus
February 9 –14, 2008
HOGAN & HARTSON RAUE LLP
FAIR USE
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW
Are you a producer, director or scriptwriter?
Then don’t miss our workshop
at the BERLINALE TALENT CAMPUS 2008:
www.berlinale-talentcampus.de
Financing, casting, editing, shooting, writing, acting – every step in the filmmaking
process is covered by six exciting and eventful days. The Berlinale Talent Campus offers
near­ly 70 ­lectures, discussions, excursions, screenings and workshops for Talents and in­
terested visitors, all held in english by internationally renowned experts.
Monday, February 11, 2008, 5 – 7 p.m., HAU 2, Second Floor
GOLDEN KEY TO THE ARCHIVES
The Legal Path to Found Footage
Michael Donaldson (Donaldson & Hart) in conversation with
Mareile Büscher (Hogan & Hartson Raue LLP)
Events reserved for Talents are marked in black, events also open to the public are mark­
ed in magenta. The page numbers of the event descriptions in the magazine are set in
brackets.
If you would like more information about how our
film & entertainment law team can assist you, please contact:
Prof. Dr. Peter Raue [email protected]
Dr. Christoph Wagner [email protected]
Christiane Stützle [email protected]
Dr. Mareile Büscher, LL.M. [email protected]
B A LT I M O R E
CARACAS
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LONDON
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Berlin Office
Munich Office
Potsdamer Platz 1
10785 Berlin
Germany
Schackstrasse 1
80539 München
Germany
phone: (+49-30) 726 115 - 0
fax:
(+49-30) 726 115 - 100
phone: (+49-89) 205 08 88 - 0
fax:
(+49-89) 205 08 88 - 10
9
saturday
Time
HAU 1
HAU 2 Second Floor
HAU 3 Black Stage
OTHER VENUES
09:30
10:00
Talent Registration
Talent Accreditation, Travel
­E xpense Reimbursement
and Ticketing (until 16:00h)
(p.46).
11:00
Taking Off
Essential briefing on services,
­programme and
Hands-on-­Trainings (p.46).
13:00
Taking Off
Essential briefing on services,
­programme and
Hands-on-­Trainings (p.46).
14:30
Global Speed Matching
Big Global with Janine Marmot.
In cooperation with Skillset (p.46).
WASHINGTON DC
WWW.HHLAW.COM
HAU 2
17:00
Volkswagen Score
­Competition Editing at
Wave-Line and feedback
session with mentor
Gustavo San­taolalla (p.24).
Opening Ceremony and
the World Premiere of
the Berlin Today Award Films
Dieter Kosslick, Kirsten Niehuus
and guests. ­Moderated by Peter
Twiehaus. ­Supported by Medienboard ­Berlin-Brandenburg (p.46).
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
39
10
HAU 1
12
HAU 2
HAU 2 Second Floor
HAU 3 Black Stage
OTHER VENUES
Time
HAU 1
HAU 2
09:00
Ticketing
09:00
Ticketing
09:30
Early Bird Breakfast
Presented by Euromed Audiovisual II
Programme (p.47).
09:30
Taste It: Training & Development
With Breakfast. Presented by ifs ­internationale film­schule köln, NIPKOW
PROGRAMM, SOURCES 2 (p.56).
11:00
Love International
Kate Henshaw-Nuttall,
Shah Rukh Khan, Maria Schrader.
Moderated by Dorothee ­Wenner.
In cooperation with ­Federal Foreign
Office and ­Berlinale Special (p.47).
The Indie Filmmaker‘s Guide
to the Internet
Tales from the Online Frontier.
Liz Rosenthal.
In cooperation with Skillset (p.47).
Avid Media Composer
Basic Training
Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid
(p.48).
12:30
Lunch Break
Speed Matching (directors &
­producers meet everyone)
Meet the Expert (p.44).
14:00
Panamericana – Young Latin
American Cinema on the Move
Fernando Eimbcke, Pablo Fendrik,
Juan Pablo Gugliotta,
Christian ­Valdelièvre.
Moderated by Peter ­Cowie.
In cooperation with ­Berlinale
Com­petition (p.48).
Two Producers Sharing
Their ­Secrets
Iain Smith in conversation with
­Sandy Lieberson.
In cooperation with Skillset (p.48).
Hot Spot Africa
Peace Anyiam-Fiberesima,
Don Edkins, Alby James,
Nashen Moodley, Pedro Pimenta,
Sophie Salbot, Selina Ukwuoma.
Moderated by Michael Auret and
Rumbi Katedza. In cooperation
with ­Federal Foreign Office (p.49).
Avid Media Composer
Effects
Editing Workshop.
In co­operation with Avid
(p.49).
In the Limelight:
Stephen Daldry
Stephen Daldry in conversation
with Mark LeFanu (p.49).
Cairo Underground
Shadi El-Noshokaty, Hala Galal,
“Kaiser“ Mohamed Fatthi Moussa,
Emad Mabrouk.
Moderated by Viola Shafik.
In cooperation with Euromed ­
Audio­visual II Programme (p.51).
16:00 H
Avid/Digidesign
Workshop.
In co­operation with Avid
(p.51).
17:00
11
Meet the Expert (p.44).
17:00 H
Don‘t Call Us, We'll Call You
Nancy Bishop, Ilene Kahn,
Derek ­Power. In cooperation with
­European Film Promotion (p.51).
Volkswagen Score
Competition
Editing at Wave-Line (p.24).
12:45 H
Reception of Manfred
­Durniok Foundation
For East Asian Talents.
­Supported by Manfred
­Durniok Foundation (p.16).
11:00
HAU 1
HAU 2
09:00
Ticketing
09:30
Early Bird Breakfast
Presented by Avid (p.52).
11:00
Heroes vs. Anti-Heroes: ­
Success Stories in Cinema
Julie Delpy, Benjamin Gilmour, Julia
Jentsch, Ralph Ziman. ­Moderated
by ­Grahame ­Weinbren. In cooperation with ­Alfred Herrhausen Society, ­
Berlinale Panorama, Berlinale
­Generation, Berlinale Forum (p.52).
HAU 2 Second Floor
The Heart of the Matter –
Emotion vs. Intelligence
Dick Ross.
In cooperation with ­SOURCES 2 ­
(p.52).
Lunch Break
Speed Matching (directors meet
producers & editors)
Meet the Expert (p.44).
14:00
Senses & Sensibilities – Documentaries For the Big Screen
John Akomfrah, Dominique
­Cabrera, Sandi DuBowski, ­Miroslav
Janek. ­Moderated by Mark LeFanu.
In ­cooperation with Federal ­Foreign
Office, Berlinale Panorama and
­Berlinale Forum (p.53).
Frogs in the Pocket
Dušan Makavejev in conversation
with Peter Cowie.
In cooperation with Robert Bosch ­
Stiftung and Berlinale ­Forum (p.53).
Stargazing – Three Casting
Directors Debate
Nancy Bishop, Juliette Menager,
­Emma Style. In cooperation with
­European Film Promotion (p.53).
In the Limelight: Mike Leigh
Mike Leigh in conversation
with Ben Gibson. ­
In cooperation with Berlinale ­
Competition (p.53).
Short Films Expand Cinema
Jeanne Faust, Shai Heredia,
Matt­hias­ Müller, Abderrahmane
A. Salem. Moderated by Maike Mia
Höhne, Stefanie Schulte-­Strathaus.
In cooperation with ­Federal Foreign
Office, Berlinale Shorts, Berlinale ­
Forum Expanded (p.55).
20:00
Avid Media Composer
Effects
Editing Workshop.
In co­operation with Avid
(p.49).
Meet the Expert (p.44).
In cooperation with Berlinale Shorts
and Berlinale Forum ­Expanded
(p.55).
40
Avid Media Composer
Basic Training
Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid
(p.48).
16:00 H
19:00 H Short Film Reception
OTHER VENUES
Southern Passages
Hazim Bitar, Vincenzo Bugno,
David Fisher, Irit Neidthardt,
Abdelaziz Taleb, Jane Williams.
Moderated by Cathérine Buresi,
Bärbel Mauch.
In cooperation with Euromed
­Audio­visual II Programme (p.56).
10:00 H Berlin Today
Volkswagen Score
Competition
Final mixing at the HFF
“Konrad Wolf“ (p.24).
Speed Matching
(directors meet writers)
Meet the Expert (p.44).
14:00
Matters of Life and Death –
Reviews that Make or Break
David D‘Arcy, Martina Gedeck,
­Shaibu Husseini, István Szabó.
­Moderated by Peter Cowie.
In ­cooperation with Federal Foreign
Office, Robert Bosch Stiftung (p.57).
Adventures in the Euro-Jungle
Sébastien Delloye, Arnaud
Pasquali, Riina Sildos.
Moderated by Franz ­Rodenkirchen.
In cooperation with MEDIA (p.57).
The Indie Filmmaker‘s Guide
to the Internet
Adventures in Self-Distribution:
­Filmmaker Case Studies. Arin
­Crumley, M Dot Strange, Lance
­Weiler. Moderated by Liz Rosen­thal.
In cooperation with Skillset (p.57).
17:00
The Dark Side of Cinema
Hiam Abbass, Newton I.
Aduaka, Josef Fares, Damian
­Harris.
Moderated by ­Vinzenz Hediger.
In cooperation with Federal Foreign
­Office, Euromed Audiovisual II
­Programme, Berlinale Competition,
Berlinale Forum, Berlinale Pano­
rama (p.59).
From Street Cred to Screen
Credibility – Hip-Hop & the
Movies Karim Chrobog,
Volker Meyer-Dabisch, Atif Ghani,
Fatoumata Kandé Senghor,
Donald Mugisha, Tyron Ricketts.
Moderated by Kevin Fitzgerald
and Satti R. ­Kuijpers. In cooperation
with ­Federal Foreign ­Office, Berlinale
­Generation, Berlinale Perspektive ­
and Berlinale Forum (p.59). ­
Followed by the Hip-Hop Lounge
16:00 H
HAU 2
HAU 2 Second Floor
OTHER VENUES
13
Award: Producers‘
Meeting
In cooperation with boxfish
events. Supported by
Medien­board Berlin-­
Brandenburg, Federal ­
Foreign Office (p.56).
12:00 H
Excursion to ­European
Film Market (p.52).
16:00 H
Meet the Expert (p.44).
Excursion
to European Film Market
(p.52).
17:00 H
Together Forever?
What You Need for a Successful
International Co-Production. ­
Esther Bannenberg, Roshanak
Behesht Nedjad, Frank Hübner.
Moderated by Ido Abram
(p.59).
wednesday
12:30
17:00
HAU 3 Black Stage
HAU 3 Black Stage
Lunch Break
19:30 H Dine & Shine –
Talents ­Rendezvous with
Berlinale Guests at ewerk.
Supported by Medienboard
Berlin-Brandenburg, ­
Robert Bosch Stiftung (p.51).
In the Limelight:
Andrzej Wajda
Andrzej Wajda in conversation
with Mark LeFanu and
Ulrich ­Gregor.
In cooperation with ­Berlinale
(p.56).
HAU 2 Second Floor
12:30
monday
Time
www.berlinale-talentcampus.de
tuesday
sunday
Time
Events reserved for Talents are marked in black,
events also open to the public are marked in magenta.
Golden Key to the Archives –
The Legal Path to Found ­
Footage
Michael C. Donaldson in
con­versation with Mareile Büscher.
In cooperation with ­Hogan & ­
Hartson Raue LLP (p.55).
Avid/Digidesign
Workshop.
In co­operation with Avid
(p.51).
Volkswagen Score
Competition
Editing at Wave-Line (p.24).
12:00 H
Excursion to
European Film Market (p.52).
Time
HAU 1
09:00
Ticketing
09:30
Early Bird Breakfast
Presented by Robert Bosch ­Stiftung
and International Film ­
Festival Sarajevo (p.60).
Volkswagen Score
Competition: Excursion
to Filmorchestra and
HFF “Konrad Wolf“ (p.60).
Cinema Inside the Crystal Ball –
Future Thoughts on Film­
making
Adytia Assarat, Wolfgang Müller­Pietralla. Moderated by Mark
­LeFanu. In cooperation with Volkswagen and Berlinale Forum (p.60).
Excursion to
European Film Market (p.52).
12:30
Lunch Break
Speed Matching
(directors meet everyone else)
Meet the Expert (p.44).
17:45 H
14:00
Crafting Visual Intensity
Master Class Camera with Ellen
­Kuras. Moderated by Rajendra Roy
(p.61).
The Language of Spaces
and Things
Alex McDowell in conversation
with Peter Cowie (p.61).
17:00
Real Life Emotion – Biopics
and Doc Stars
Sandrine Bonnaire,
Bernd ­Eichinger, Stephen Frears.
Moderated by Ben Gibson (p.62).
“Lonely Hearts Club“ –
NGOs Date Filmmakers
Moderated by Christian Stahl. ­
In cooperation with Heinrich Böll
Foundation, Federal Foreign Office,
Euromed Audiovisual II Programme
(p.62).
Excursion to the Costume
House Theaterkunst
(p.52).
16:00 H
Elle s'appelle Sabine
(Her Name is Sabine)
Campus Special-Screening
at Cubix 8 (p.33).
22:00 H Talent Night
Short Films at CinemaxX 6.
In co­operation with Berlinale
Shorts, Berlinale Generation (p.55).
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
OTHER VENUES
10:00 H
11:00
13:15 H
HAU 3 Black Stage
Avid Media Composer
Basic Training
Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid
(p.48).
10:00 H
15:00 H
Avid Media Composer
Effects
Editing Workshop.
In co­operation with Avid
(p.49).
Excursion to
European Film Market
For directors (p.52).
16:00 H
Avid/Digidesign
Workshop.
In co­operation with Avid
(p.51).
Between Realities
Doc Station Presentation.
Heino ­Deckert, Dick Fontaine,
Asako ­Fujioka, Ulla Simonen.
Moderated by Sirkka Möller
(p.60).
Between the Lines
Script Station Presentation.
Moderated by Alby James
(p.61).
Meet the Expert (p.44).
17:30 H
Hands-On HD
HD-Workshop with Grischa
Schaufuß (p.62).
Excursion to
European Film Market
For producers (p.52).
41
14
www.berlinale-talentcampus.de
tr.
tungss
Entlas
Events reserved for Talents are marked in black,
events also open to the public are marked in magenta.
thursday
HAU 1
HAU 2
09:00
Eyes on the Music
Presentation of the Volkswagen
Score Competition. Gustavo
­Santaolalla.
Moderated by Peter ­Cowie.
str.
In cooperation with ­Volkswagen
Lenné
(p.63).
Ben-Gu
The Indie Filmmaker‘s
Guide to the Internet
How to become an Independent Filmmaker. Arin Crumlin,
Kelly ­Devine, Robert Greenwald, Allan Niblo, M Dot
Strange. Moderated by Liz
In cooperation with
BRosenthal.
elle
vue(p.63).
Skillset
str.
Speed Matching (general)
Garage Studio Proudly PreKill Your Darlings
sents: Four Flicks For Clicks
Editing Master Class with
Jay Anania, M Dot Strange,
Susan Korda
(p.64).
er Str.
ts
o
­Garin ­Rianto Nugroho,
P dam
.
­Grahame Weinbren. Moderated
Str
by Liz Rosenthal (p.64).
er
m
a
tsd
ThingstetoPoTake Home
l
KathiABildhauer, Vincenzo Bugno, Khavn de la Cruz, Marcus
Forchner, Sonja Heinen, Rumbi
Marlene- Katedza, ­Stephan Kitanov, Mira
StaatsDietrichbibliothek
Platz Staleva, Dorothee Wenner (p.65).
ame
r Str
.
14:00
.
rion-Str
Lunch Break
World Cinema Fund –
How to Apply
Sonja Heinen, Vincenzo Bugno.
In cooperation with ­
World ­Cinema Fund (p.64).
Avid Media Composer
Basic Training
Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid
(p.48).
10:30 H
Meet the Expert (p.44).
Str.
Berlinale Co-Production
13:00 H
LeipzigerMarket – What and Who Is It For?
Avid Media Composer
Leipziger
Sonja Heinen,
Kathi ­Bild­hauer,
Effects Editing Workshop. ­
In co­operation with Avid
MartinaPlatz
Bleis.
In cooperation with Berlinale ­
(p.49).
Co-­Production Market (p.65).Abgeordnetenhaus
Meet the Expert (p.44).
Zimmerstr.
r Str
.
Pots
d
Dess
r Str
.
d
Ha
alter
Anh
Str.
latz
tr.
Lennés
Leipziger Str.
Abgeordnetenhaus
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Mö
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str
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De
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fer
Hallesc
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HAU 2
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Tem
pel
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HAU 3
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Tem
pel
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HAU 3
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HAU 2
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HAU 1
HAU 1
Mehring
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Großb
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Meet the Experts
Day 1 – Saturday, Feb 9
Day 2 – Sunday, Feb 10
Day 3 – Monday, Feb 11
Day 4 – Tuesday, Feb 12
Day 5 – Wednesday, Feb 13
Day 6 – Thursday, Feb 14
Anhalter
Bahnhof
fen
p
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Askanischer
Platz
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Closing Party
at Adagio
(basement ­Berlinale Palast).
Supported by ­Volkswagen
(p.65).
Str.
ene
Köth
str.
Link
Location
Hebbel am Ufer 1–3
Am
21:00 H
Friedrichstr.
pi e
ts
MartinGropius-Bau
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44
46
47
52
56
60
63
4
43–65
Programme
von Berlin
erst
Niederkirchn
Haus 2
Closing and Award Cere­
mony of the Volkswagen
Score Competition
Berlinale
Moderated by ­Thomas
Heinze
Palast
and Dorothee Wenner.
Supported by ­Volkswagen (p.65).
Master class at Costume
House Theaterkunst
For set designers (p.63).
page
tr.
ns
an
em
es
Str
20:00
OTHER VENUES
Voßstr.
12:30
16:00
HAU 3 Black Stage
Ticketing
Ebertstr.
11:00
HAU 2 Second Floor
auer
Time
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
43
meet the expert experts
at your bidding
“Meet the Expert“ offers you the chance to have an individual focused conversation with filmmaking
experts at HAU 2, Second Floor. The Meeting Point is at HAU 1, ten minutes prior to the appointment.
“Meet the Expert“ is presented in collaboration with Skillset.
sunday 10
Agnieszka Moody, Media Desk / Film Funding
12:30 h –13:10 H
Find out how the MEDIA funding schemes for development,
access to finance, and TV broadcasting work, and how to
submit a successful application. Agnieszka Moody will also
provide information on a range of MEDIA-supported professional training courses, festivals and markets in Europe.
Sally Caplan , Head of Premiere Fund at the UK Film Council
13.15 h –14.00 h
Sally Caplan will be free to talk about the UK Film Council‘s
Premiere Fund which invests in commercial films, across the
full range of budgets and genres, which offer quality and
­entertainment to wide audiences in the UK and worldwide.
Chris Collins , Development Producer,
UK Film Council’s ­Development Fund
16.00 h –17.00 H
Chris Collins will be talking about his work as a producer,
­executive producer, production executive and line producer
on a variety of feature films. He will also discuss his role for
the UK Film Council‘s development fund.
Iain Smith, Producer
16:10 h –16:50 H
One of UK’s most experienced producers, you can discuss
what it takes to make or break your film. Your fears and hopes
in particular if you are an independent filmmaker.
monday 11
Sandy Lieberson, President of production, 20th Century Fox,
MGM International, Ladd Co. (W.B.), London
12:30 h –13:10 H
Discuss your aspirations and prospects as filmmakers. What
your plans are and how to go about them. Sandy Lieberson
has ­produced over 20 feature films and feature docs and is
also an experienced hand as a studio executive, developing
and supervising the production of U.S. and European films.
44
Lenny Crooks , Head of the New Cinema Fund, UK Film Council
13.15 h –14.00 h
Lenny Crooks will be talking about the New Cinema Fund,
one of the most commercially and culturally successful ­public
funds operating in Europe which aims to support ­filmmakers
working outside of the mainstream.
Charlie Bloye , Chief Executive, Film Export UK
13:20 h –14:00 H
Discuss how films reach their global audiences and what happens to the money on its way back. How much should filmmakers care about “the market“? Film Export UK‘s members
are the many film sales companies with offices in the UK .
The discussion will also include information about how film­
makers can cooperate with the Goethe-Institut in South
America and worldwide.
as well as offer insight into festival strategies within the
­Korean ­festival network and beyond.
Emma Clarke , Senior Executive,
New Cinema Fund at the UK Film Council
16.00 h –17.00 h
Emma Clarke will be talking about the New Cinema Fund,
one of the most commercially and culturally successful
­public funds operating in Europe which aims to support
emerging filmmakers and established filmmakers working
outside of the mainstream.
thursday 14
Mia Bays , Production Executive
and Marketing Consultant for Film London
16.10 h –16.50 h
Mia Bays will be available to discuss Film London and the
BBC‘s innovative micro budget feature fund MICROWAVE,
making 10 micro budget feature films over 3 years 2007-2010,
with the best and most cutting edge UK film talent on their
first feature films.
Kelly Devine , Consultant with Renew Media
13:20 –14:00 H
Kelly Devine is waiting to discuss her work with web-based
initiative Reframe to digitize, preserve and make available
for purchase content from independent distributors, public
media organizations, archives and self-distributing film­
makers. She has a wide range of experience working with
­distributors, cable nets and filmmakers.
wednesday 13
Shan Dongbing , Producer, Beijing
16.00 h –16.40 h
Shan Dongbing is a producer interested in meeting Talents –
directors, screenwriters, editors, DOPs and composers – who
are eager to get involved with China-based film productions.
Janine Marmot , Director of Film, Skillset, London
16:10 h –16:50 H
Your chance to talk to a working producer on any film related
subject, right from development to delivery. Janine Marmot
will also be able to help you understand what Skillset has to
offer filmmakers in the UK .
Arin Crumley , Writer, director, producer and actor
12:30 –13:10 H
The Wall Street Journal lists Arin among the top 20 new
­media moguls, and applauds the co-creation of the popular
independent film and online video series, Four Eyed Monsters.
Arin is waiting to share his experiences with other filmmakers­
and his suggestions on how to stay ahead of the curve.
Mike Belmont/M Dot Strange , Writer, director and producer
13:20 –14:00 H
Mike is keen to spread the word and help his fellow viral
­filmmakers by offering practical advice and talking about his
own experiences as an independent filmmaker.
tuesday 12
Kanako Hayashi , Festival director,
TOKYO FILMeX International­ Film Festival, Japan
12.30 h –13.10 h
Discover the core of independent cinema in Asia from one of
the best experts with an in-depth knowledge of films in this
region. Find out more about Asian film networks and festivals,
putting into context Japanese filmmakers and the film scene.
Liz Rosenthal, Programme director, Global Digital
Distribution Summit, Montreal
16:00 –16:40 H
Liz Rosenthal is an early advocate and pioneer of digital filmmaking and distribution. She advises international media
companies, film financing organisations, filmmakers and film
festivals about using cutting edge distribution techniques
and new business models for independent film.
Nicolai Petersen , Director of Goethe-Institut Caracas
13.00 h –14.00 h
Learn about the inner workings of the Goethe-Institut and
how their film programmes are organised and conducted.
Hee-Jeon Kim , International Sales, CJ Entertainment, Korea
16.20 h –17.00 h
Hee-jeon Kim will provide general information on international business for Korean co-productions and distribution,
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Allan Niblo , Vertigo Films
12:30 –13:10 H
Allan Niblo has lots of experiences to share in filmmaking.
He also started the successful Vertigo Films in 2002 with
fellow producer James Richardson, Director Nick Love and
­distributor Rupert Preston.
David Thompson , Head of BBC Films, London
16.10 h –16.50 h
David Thompson will talk about his role as Head of BBC Films,
overseeing a slate of films for cinema and tv, and will also be
able to discuss his role in setting up a new independent production company with a focus on film and television drama.
contact the skillset stand
for detailed schedule of the following experts:
Phyllis Mollet , International film festival consultant
Your opportunity to speak with this expert festival strategist
on locating funding, navigating international film festivals
and developing co-productions with other countries.
Peter Buckingham , Head of Distribution & Exhibition
at the UK Film Council
Peter Buckingham will be discussing the range of schemes
available to support the strategy of increasing the breadth
and diversity of cinema-going across the UK, as well as assis­t­ing­ audience appreciation of UK films.
Jan-Jacob Lousberg , European and International Production
Executive for the UK Film Council
Jan-Jacob Lousberg will be available to discuss his responsibility for sourcing projects, talent, and co-financing oppor­
tunities in Europe.
See CVS of experts from p. 67
45
Campus Programme
Sat Feb 9
Campus Programme
Sun feb 10
talent registration
early bird breakfast
10:00 H, HAU 2
At 10:00 the doors to HAU 2 will open for Talent registration
and reimbursement of travel expenses if applicable. This is
when Talents will find out more about the events and activities offered throughout the Campus. You will receive an
overview of Campus projects, logistics, ticketing and above
all, this is where you first meet fellow Talents.
taking off – essential briefing
11:00 H, HAU 2 – repetition at 13:00 H, HAU 2
The first and most important Talent briefing will give details
about the week to follow. An introduction to the team members, access to Internet, the ins and outs of using the Campus
database as well as information on the Berlinale screenings
will be clarified. More significantly, you will be introduced to
the general programme and the wide selection it offers, also
in terms of this year’s Hands-On-Trainings: the Volkswagen
Score Competition, the Garage Studio, The Talent Press, the
Script & Doc Station and the Talent Project Market.
11: directors meet producers and editors; Tuesday 12: ­direc­tors
meet writers; Wednesday 13: directors meet everyone else;
Thursday 14: general.
opening ceremony and the world premiere
of the berlin today award short films 2008
17:00H, HAU 1 / Dieter Kosslick, Kirsten Niehuus and guests.
Moderated by Peter ­Twiehaus. Supported by the
Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg.
A welcome address by the director of the Berlin International
Film Festival, Dieter Kosslick, will officially open the Berlinale
Talent Campus. Director of the Berlinale Talent Campus,
­Dorothee Wenner, will also welcome Talents and guests,
briefly introducing the theme of the 6th edition “Screening
Emotions“. The World Premiere of this year‘s nominated
shorts competing for the Berlin Today Award 2008 will be
screened subsequently. For details on the Berlin Today Award
see p.34. Of course there‘s more, and we‘re sure you‘ll enjoy
the surprises awaiting you!
Global Speed matching
14:30 H, HAU 2 / Big Global with Janine Marmot.
In cooperation with Skillset.
Networking, socialising and meeting peers from around
the world are key aspects of the Berlinale Talent Campus. To
set this essential experience in motion, join in the Global
Speed Matching – our specialized version of speed dating.
­Con­ducted by Janine Marmot, all Talents are invited to HAU
2 to meet each other in a rapid-fire session of three-minute
encounters. Bursting with excited chatter, this icebreaker is
your first chance to meet, greet and exchange information
with co-Talents. More focused and less frenetic Speed
­Matchings will ­continue every day at 12:30 at HAU 2 where
you will have the opportunity to meet potential work
­partners. This year’s Speed Matching schedule is as follows:
Sunday 10: directors and producers meet everyone; Monday
46
Three minute meetings at the Global Speed Matching
Sat 9
HAU 1
Talent Registration
Sat 9
HAU 1
Taking Off – Essential Briefing
Sat 9
HAU 2
Global Speed Matching
Sat 9
HAU 1
10:00 H
9:30 h, HAU 2 /
Presented by Euromed Audiovisual II Programme.
The early bird catches the worm: Today‘s Early Bird Breakfast
is hosted by the Euromed Audiovisual II Programme and
­offers you a relaxed and tasty start to a promising new
­Campus day. Meet representatives of today‘s host or­gan­i­
sation­ as well as fellow Talents for a comfortable chat while
you enjoy hot coffee and breakfast.
the indie filmmaker‘s Guide to the internet –
tales from the online frontier
11:00 H, HAU 2, Second floor / Liz Rosenthal.
In cooperation with Skillset.
Hear how independent filmmakers of feature, documentary
and short films are using the Internet to market, distribute
and finance their work. Presenting a variety of case studies,
clips and websites, this session will give a thorough and
­cutting-edge overview of how the Internet is an invaluable
tool for the independent filmmaker.
love international
11:00 H, HAU 1 / Kate Henshaw-Nuttall, Shah Rukh Khan,
Maria Schrader.
Moderated by Dorothee Wenner. In cooperation with
­Federal Foreign Office and Berlinale Special.
There are few things more pleasurable than seeing a
­wonderful love story on the big screen. Although love may
be regarded as an eternal affair and a natural human­
con­­dition, looking at films from the different parts of the
world, one can see clear distinctions arising from very
­different cultural contexts that shape relationships from the
“first sight” till “death tears them apart”. Morale, ethics, ­family
constellations, gender relations, economics, traditions and
religion – all these issues result in what the Western world
likes to describe as the most private sphere of an individual.
Three super stars from the genre of “love depiction” –
­Bollywood’s Shah Rukh Khan, Kate Henshaw-Nuttall of the
Nollywood fame and German leading lady and Silver Bear
winner Maria Schrader – look at today’s cinema and its ­purpos
as a role model for “real” love stories, as well as a ­fulfilment of
audiences’ desire for ­escapism and as a ­reflection of the world
we live in – be it in India, Nigeria, Germany or ­elsewhere.
11:00 & 13:00 H
Shah Rukh Khan in Om Shanti Om, part of this year‘s Berlinale Special
Sun 10 9:30 H
HAU 2 Early Bird Breakfast
14:30 H
Sun 9
HAU 1
17:00 H
Sun 9
HAU 2
Opening Ceremony and the World Premiere of the
Berlin Today Award Short Films 2008
2nd fl. The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
11:00 H
Love International
11:00 H
The Indie Filmmaker‘s Guide to the Internet –
Tales From the Online Frontier
47
Campus Programme
Sun feb 10
Campus Programme
Sun feb 10
Avid Media Composer Basic Training
two producers sharing their secrets
hot spot africa
11:00 H, HAU 3 Black stage / Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid.
14:00 H, HAU 2 / Iain Smith in conversation with
Sandy Lieberson. In cooperation with Skillset.
This basic editing workshop provides an exhaustive in­tro­
duction to the various techniques of non-linear editing with
the Avid Media Composer system, the affordable, ­ flexible,
hardware-independent film and video editing ­ solution for
Mac and PC. Media Composer is the application used to
­create more of the world’s films, television shows, and commercials than any other editing system.
Sunday 10 to Thursday 14 (excepting Tuesday 12), daily at 11:00.
In conversation with Sandy Lieberson (former president of
production at Twentieth Century Fox), producer Iain Smith,
one of Europe’s busiest producers, explores the themes of
taking risks and the balance between art and money. Using
clips from selected films, Iain will discuss how these issues
apply to the films he has worked on and produced. He will
examine the studio system versus the independent producer­
and what lessons filmmakers could learn from it. Smith’s
credits include Academy Award winning Charriots of Fire and
Killing Fields, Ridley Scott‘s 1492, Jean Jacque Annaud‘s Seven
Years in Tibet, Luc Besson‘s Fifth Element, Anthony Minghella‘s­
Cold Mountain, Alfonso Cuaron‘s Children of Men and ­Darren
Aronofsky‘s The Fountain.
14:00 h, HAU 2, second floor / Peace Anyiam-Fiberesima,
Don Edkins, Alby James, Nashen Moodley, Pedro Pimenta,
Sophie Salbot, Selina Ukwuoma.
Moderated by Michael Auret and Rumbi Katedza.
In ­cooperation with the Federal Foreign Office.
panamericana –
Young latin american cinema on the move
14:00 H, HAU 1 / Fernando Eimbcke, Pablo Fendrik, Juan Pablo
Gugliotta, Christian Valdelièvre. Moderated by Peter Cowie.
In cooperation with Berlinale Competition.
This case study focuses on two former Talents and their films.
Fernando Eimbcke from Mexico, participant of the Campus
in 2003, presented his first feature film Duck Season in 2004,
which was shown in Cannes and numerous other festivals.
His second feature Lake Tahoe is part of this year‘s Berlinale
Competition. For the first time a former Talent (together with
Lance Hammer‘s Ballast) is part of the Berlinale Competition.
Pablo Fendrik from Argentina, Campus and Talent Project
Market participant in 2006, made his first feature film The
Mugger in 2007, winning awards at the Buenos Aires International Film Festival and at the Film Festival in Cuba. It was
also shown in Cannes. His second feature Blood Appears, shot
in October 2007, is now in postproduction. Using excerpts of
their films, Pablo and Fernando, together with executive producer of The Mugger, Juan Pablo Gugliotta, and Lake Tahoe
producer Christian Valdelievre, will talk about their experiences producing their first and second features in Argentina
and Mexico. The two films will serve as examples of Young
Latin American Cinema on the move. They will discuss the
specific requirements of filming in the region, working con­
structively with a team under trying circumstances and with
small budgets and limited production facilities.
48
The session addresses film professionals from or interested
in working in Subsaharan Africa. Talents will be introduced
to some of the key players present in Berlin, who will talk
about their range of activities. Additionally, an overview of
events highlighting African cinema at the Berlinale will be
provided along with strategic advice on navigating the
­festival in general. ­
Billy Elliot in 2000. The film won the BAFTA award for the Best
British Production and was nominated for an Oscar. For
­Paramount Pictures, Daldry went to Hollywood to direct The
Hours ­ staring Nicole Kidman, Julianne Moore and Meryl
Streep. With his latest film being an American-German
­coproduction, Daldry came to Berlin for the shooting in 2007.
Based on the successful novel “The Reader” by Bernhard
Schlink and set in postwar Germany, it tells the story of a
man whose life has been shaped by an illicit affair during his
youth.
Stephen Daldry will converse with Mark LeFanu about the art
of filmic adaptation of novels while retaining the emotional
depth of the original material, and about the various ways of
working with actors and actresses to capture the essence of
the character portrals in his films.
Avid Media Composer Effects training
14:00 H, HAU 3, Black stage / Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid.
This basic editing workshop provides an exhaustive introduction to the various techniques of non-linear editing with
the Avid Media Composer system, the affordable, flexible,
hardware-independent film and video editing solution for
Mac and PC . Media Composer is the application used to
­create more of the world’s films, television shows, and com­
mercials than any other editing system.
Sunday 10 to Wednesday 13 (excepting Tuesday 12),
daily at 14:00 and 17:00. Thursday 14 at 13:00.
In the 2008 Berlinale Competition: Fernando Eimbcke‘s Lake Tahoe
Billy Elliot: Stephen Daldry‘s first international success
I n the limelight: Stephen Daldry
17:00 H, HAU 1 / Stephen Daldry. Moderated by Mark LeFanu.
Sun 10 11:00 H
HAU 3 Avid Media Composer Basic Training
black stage
Sun 10 14:00 H
HAU 1 Panamericana – Young Latin American Cinema
on the Move
Sun 10 14:00 H
HAU 2 Two Producers Sharing Their Secrets
Considered today as one of the most interesting characterdriven filmmakers from England, Stephen Daldry started his
career in theatre. For his 1992 adaption of “An Inspector
Calls” he was highly awarded on both sides of the Atlantic. In
1997 Daldry signed in as a film director with Working Title
Films. Starting off with Eight, a short film on an eight-year old
football fan, Daldry hit the international cinema screens with
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Sun 10 14:00 H
HAU 2 Hot Spot Africa
2nd fl.
Sun 10 14:00 H
HAU 3 Avid Media Composer Effects Training
black stage
Sun 10 17:00 H
HAU 1 In the Limelight: Stephen Daldry
49
Campus Programme
Sun feb 10
3UMMER3CHOOL
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cairo underground
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17:00 H, HAU 2 / Shadi El-Noshokaty, Hala Galal,
“Kaiser“ Mohamed Fatthi Moussa, Emad Mabrouk.
Moderated by Viola Shafik. In cooperation with Euromed
Audiovisual II Programme.
Cairo, the hotspot of the Middle East, has regained its importance over the last decade in both the amount and quality of
productions to assert its position at the centre of film and art
production in the Middle East. What was once the “most
beautiful city in the world” in the early 1900s is now a busy
crowded metropolis. Artists and filmmakers have made the
hardness and chaos of the city a source of inspiration. At the
same time, an increasingly globalized private sector in a
world of mass media, movies and art, has paved the way for
new forums. These factors have assisted artists and film­
makers­ to redefine their relationship to the political sector.­
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Some of the key players in the Cairo film scene discuss the
emergence of a new cultural scene, the opening up of alter­
native spaces for film and art in this city teeming with millions, which has also succeeded in attracting new audiences.
They will reflect on the various aspects that have led to the
development of an emerging independent film and video
scene despite a film industry and a ­conservative state-controlled cultural environment, and the extent to which film or
culture in general succeeds in achieving an autonomous
space for reflection and for transmitting alternatives.
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don‘t call us – we‘ll call you!
17:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Workshop for actors
and actresses. Nancy Bishop, Ilene Kahn, Derek Power.
In cooperation with European Film ­Promotion.
Actors and actresses have the most difficult goods to market:
themselves. Hollywood based Ilene Kahn Power and Derek
Power, heads of a multi-faceted personal management company which specialises in the representation of its clientele
will share insights and offer advice to actors and actresses at
the start of their career. They will discuss ways of creating an
image within the highly competitive business of exploring
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
shores beyond one’s national boundaries – and what else it
takes to pursue a successful strategy in getting visible.
Avid digidesign workshop
17:00 H, HAU 3, Black stage / Editing Workshop.
In cooperation with Avid.
This basic workshop provides an exhaustive introduction to
the various techniques and possibilities of Digidesign software for digital audio post-production.
Sunday 10 to Wednesday 13 (excepting Tuesday 12),
daily at 17:00.
Dine & Shine – Talents rendezvous with berlinale
guests and the berlin today award ceremony
19:30 H, ewerk / Moderated by Adrian Kennedy.
In cooper­ation with the ­Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg
and the Robert Bosch Stiftung.
Talents enjoy a formal sit-down dinner. Don‘t fear, it definitely­
won‘t get boring as the evening holds a lot in store. Not only
will the winner of the Berlin Today Award be announced and
awarded by jury member and mentor of the this year‘s competition round, Wim Wenders, but each table will also have a
special guest of the Berlinale keeping you hooked. With each
new course, a new person of fame will grace your table with
his or her presence. So this could be your chance to have an
in-depth conversation and exchange views with a film personality whose work has inspired and directed your own.
Guten Appetit – as we say in Germany!
Sun 10 17:00 H
HAU 2 Cairo Underground
Sun 10 17:00 H
HAU 2 Don‘t Call Us – We‘ll Call You!
2nd fl. Workshop For Actors and Actresses
Sun 10 19:30 H
ext.
Dine and Shine –
Talents Rendezvous With Berlinale Guests at ewerk
51
Campus Programme
mon feb 11
Campus Programme
mon feb 11
early bird breakfast
d‘être“ of the project, is not ready for production? Dick Ross
discusses the ways in which young filmmakers can shape this
relationship from concept to production, changing the attitude towards the audience from passive onlookers to active
participants in the creative process.
senses & Sensibilities –
Documentaries for the big screen
excursion to the European film market
The trading floor of the Berlinale Film Festival is abuzz with
activity during the European Film Market (EFM) – one of the
most important annual events for the film industry. This year
430 exhibitors from 51 countries will be represented and approximately 714 films will be presented to professional visitors. Guided by Sydney Levine, founder and president of Film
Finders database, Talents will have the opportunity to get an
introduction to the format and the functioning of the EFM.
Monday 11 / Tuesday 12 at 12:00 & 16:00.
Wednesday 13 at 10:00 (for producers)
and 14:00 (for directorS).
Of late, documentaries are increasingly screened in movie
theatres and festival slots which were traditionally, by unwritten law, reserved for “features only”. Despite this fairly recent
development, there is only a very fine line that distinguishes
documentaries made for TV from those made for theatrical
release. Opinions on the matter are highly ­controversial. Four
masters of documentary filmmaking – Ghanaian-born John
Akomfrah, jury member for the 2008 “Best First Feature
Award“ (endowed by GWFF) Dominique Cabrera, director
Sandi DuBowski (producer of A Jihad For Love, featuring the
Panorama), and Czech filmmaker Miroslav Janek – debate the
issue using examples from their own production experience,
and also reflect on the limits and ethics in documentary filmmaking, addressing questions on the “intrusion of privacy”,
and making documentaries on burning issues ­without stepping into the “current affairs” trap.
excursion to the costume house theaterkunst
frogs in the pocket
12:45, meeting point: 12:30 at the entrance to hau 1
In cooperation with Theaterkunst.
14:00, HAU 2 / Dušan Makavejev in conversation with
Peter Cowie. In ­cooperation with Robert Bosch Stiftung
and Berlinale ­Forum.
9:30 H, HAU 2 / Presented by Avid.
Today‘s Early Bird Breakfast is hosted by Avid Technology
and offers you a relaxed and tasty start to a promising new
Campus day. Meet representatives of today‘s host organisation as well as fellow Talents while you enjoy breakfast.
heroes vs. Anti-Heroes – Success stories in Cinema
11:00 H, HAU 1 / Julie Delpy, Benjamin Gilmour, Julia Jentsch,
Ralph ­Ziman. Moderated by Grahame Weinbren.
In cooperation with Alfred Herrhausen Society, Berlinale
Panorama, Berlinale Generation, Berlinale Forum.
The panel ponders the identity of the contemporary cinematic­
hero, how we relate to him or her, both as filmmakers and as
viewers. How the dark anti-hero plays on our consciousness
and what we take away from a film that portrays such a
­character? The fiction filmmakers, Benjamin Gilmour, whose
directorial debut Son of A Lion features in the Berlinale Forum,
and Ralph Ziman, whose Jerusalema is part of the Berlinale
Panorama, and the actresses Julia Jentsch, winner of the 2005
Silver Bear for Best Actress in Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
and Julie Delpy, who has worked in over 30 films, will discuss
how one finds a way to live with a character for the one of two
years it takes to make a film, when the character is someone
who would be impossible to relate to in real life.
the heart of the matter – Emotion vs. intelligence
11:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Dick Ross.
In cooperation with SOURCES 2.
In his lecture, storyteller and script adviser Dick Ross deals
with the crucial relationship of the writer/filmmaker with his/
her audience. The evidence of many scripts by emerging European writers prompts him to ask if telling the story is really
the paramount motivation? Or are we too preoccupied with
form and structure? Having managed to get the “shape“ of
the script to an acceptable level, why do we tend to rush into
production, ignoring the fact that the story, the “raison
52
12:00, meeting point: at the entrance to hau 1,
always 15 ­minutes prior to the start
Sydney Levine. In cooperation with European Film Market.
Theaterkunst is Germany’s largest costume house for film,
television, advertising and theatre. In the 100 years of its
­existence, it has brought together a collection of more than
10 million items stored in three branches and the head­
quarters in Berlin. Today‘s general tour is open to 10 Talents.
mon 11 9:30 H
HAU 2 Early Bird Breakfast
mon 11 11:00 H
HAU 1 Heroes vs. Anti-Heroes – Success Stories in Cinema
mon 11 11:00 H
HAU 2 The Heart of the Matter –
2nd fl. Emotion vs. Intelligence
14:00 H, HAU 1 / John Akomfrah, Dominique Cabrera,
Sandi DuBowski, Miroslav Janek.
Moderated by Mark LeFanu. In cooperation with the Federal
Foreign ­Office, Berlinale Panorama and Berlinale Forum.
Dušan Makavejev, the most inventive, boisterous, and widely
travelled of all 1960s filmmakers, discusses his career and its
lessons for young filmmakers today. His conversation with
Peter Cowie will cover the challenges involved in low-budget
filmmaking, as well as political commitment, zany humour
and, of course, sex on screen. The Berlinale Forum presents
special screenings of Dušan Makavejev’s WR: Misterije Or­ga­
niz­ma (1971). This surreal documentary-fiction collision was
banned on release in Makavejev’s home country and is both
whimsical and bold in its blending of politics and ­sexuality.
The film runs on Feb 9, 16:30 at ­ Delphi Filmpalast and on
February 12, 15:15 at Arsenal.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
stargazing – three casting directors debate
14:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Nancy Bishop, Juliette Menager,
Emma Style. In cooperation with European Film Promotion.
Three experienced casting directors will provide an overview
of all casting related issues. They will counsel young actors
and actresses on casting and the prerequisites of the film
­industry. Concrete advise on locating the right agent/­man­
ager, the best way to prepare for a casting presentation, and
dealing with challenges when working in smaller ­countries
without an agency networking system will be ­ tackled. The
audience will be invited to join in the ­ensuing discussion.
in the limelight: mike Leigh
17:00 H, HAU 1 / Mike Leigh in conversation with Ben Gibson.
In cooperation with Berlinale Competition.
His new film Happy-Go-Lucky runs in this year’s competition.
Mike Leigh’s influence on British theatre and cinema has
been present for more than 30 years. Starting with a focus on
theatre, one of his plays became the script for his debut film,
Bleak Moments in 1971. In 1989 he co-founded Thin Man
Films to produce films as Life is Sweet in 1990, Naked in 1993,
Secrets and Lies in 1996 – films that took his name far beyond
the UK. In conversation with Ben Gibson, the director of the
London Film School, Mike Leigh will talk about his method of
improvisation. Together with the actors, Leigh embarks on
the creation of characters, their personal history, and their
emotional relations to each other.
mon 11 14:00 H
HAU 1 Senses & Sensibilities – Documentaries for the Big Screen
mon 11 14:00 H
HAU 2 Frogs In the Pocket
mon 11 14:00 H
HAU 2 Star Gacing –
2nd fl. Three Casting Directors Debate
mon 11 17:00 H
HAU 1 In the Limelight: Mike Leigh
53
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Scholarships for European
Audiovisual Media
Professionals in Berlin
Campus Programme
mon feb 11
short films expand cinema
17:00 H, HAU 2 / Jeanne Faust, Shai Heredia, Matthias Müller,
Ahmed Salem Abderrahmane. Moderated by Maike Mia
Höhne and Stefanie Schulte-Strathaus.
In cooperation with Federal Foreign Office, ­Berlinale Shorts
and Berlinale Forum Expanded.
Short films have secretly become the centre of cinematographic innovation with a potential that benefits not only
the film industry but other artistic domains as well. Short
films, increasingly (re-)establish themselves as a kind of experimental playing field for advanced cinema. The format is
abandoning the traditional movie screens more and more to
become the crossroads for art and cinema – simultaneously
avant-garde pioneer and aesthetic trendsetter. Tapping into
this evolution, the panel discusses the alternative ways and
spaces for presenting short films, as well as the new hot spots
of exhibition space for the short film scene.
Followed by the panel is the Short Film Reception.
short film reception
19:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / In cooperation with Berlinale
Shorts and Berlinale Forum ­Expanded.
Further studies for qualified applicants in the fields of
� Film, television and video financing, production, marketing
and distribution
� New technologies (multimedia, interactivity)
� TV computer design and computer graphics
Deadline for applications 21st of April
and 20th of October 2008
WITH THE SUPPORT OF
Contact
Kurfürstendamm 225
D - 10719 Berlin
phone: +49 30 614 28 38
fax:
+49 30 614 28 26
e-mail: [email protected]
visit: www.nipkow.de
A casual meet-and-greet reception after the short film panel
will provide an opportunity for filmmaking Talents to liaise
with festival delegates, distributors, and buyers of short films.
Through this network, filmmakers can make the necessary
connections for the exhibition and distribution of their films,
as well as familiarise themselves with the market of ­alternative
venues. In turn, short film representatives have the chance to
promote their festivals or distribution ­com­panies to a pool of
emerging short filmmakers.
every director and producer wanting to use even the shortest clips, excerpts or scenes of whatever origin. They face the
difficult question of how to legalise these, if the owner isn’t
one of their closest friends.
California-based Lawyer Michael C. Donaldson heads a film
prone movement that aims at shedding light on even the
darkest archival cellars to bring clarification and practical advice to this dangerous territory which has ruined many who
were unprepared. “Fair Use” is like a road map and a bridge
building initiative between filmmakers and producers – and
those in possession of precious rights.
talent night
22:00 H, cinemaxx 6 / Moderated by David Thompson.
In cooperation with ­Berlinale Shorts and Berlinale
Generation.
The event offers a selection of Berlinale Shorts, including
some directed by fomer Talents. Head of BBC Films, David
Thompson, will moderate the programme and open the floor
to discussion. Enjoy the long night of shorts: Meditations on a
Name (Bonnie Elliott, Australia, 9'), Szmolinsky ­ (Julius Onah,
USA, 5'), Haze (Anthony Chen, Singapore, 14'18), Journey To
The Forest (Jörn Staeger, Germany, 7'), Nana ­(Warwick Thornton, Australia, 6'), Traces (Rachel Zisser, USA, 19'), A Good Day
for a Swim (Bogdan Mustaţă, Romania, 10'), Take 3 (Roseanne
Liang, New Zealand, 12').
mon 11 17:00 H
HAU 2 Short Films Expand Cinema
mon 11 17:00 H
HAU 2 Golden Key to the Archives –
Golden key to the archives, the legal path to found footage
2nd fl. 17:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Michael C. Donaldson
in conversation­ with Mareile Büscher.
mon 11 19:00 H
HAU 2 Short Film Reception
“Fair Use” has become a hot term – not only for lawyers
spec­i­al­­­ising in film and media but more so for practically
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
The Legal Path to Found Footage
mon 11 22:00 H
ext.
Talent Night –
Short Films at CinemaxX 6
55
Campus Programme
tue feb 12
Campus Programme
tue Feb 12
taste It: Training and development
matters of life and death –
Reviews that Make or break
the indie filmmaker‘s guide to the internet –
adventures in self distribution: Filmmaker case studies
14:00 H, HAU 1 / David D‘Arcy, Martina Gedeck,
Shaibu Husseini, István Szabó. Moderated by Peter Cowie.
In cooperation with the Federal ­Foreign Office and
the Robert Bosch Stiftung.
14:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Arin Crumley, M Dot Strange
and Lance Weiler. Moderated by Liz Rosenthal.
In cooperation with Skillset.
9:30 H, HAU 2 / Presented by ifs internationale filmschule köln,
NIPKOW PROGRAMM and SOURCES 2.
This two-in-one deal combines the Early Bird Breakfast with
presentations of three training initiatives – IFS International
Film School Cologne, the NIPKOW PROGRAMM and ­SOURCES
2. Following the brief formal presentations, Talents are ­invited
to breakfast with invited experts and the representatives of
today’s host organisations at their respective counters.
School of Film in 1953, to make his debut movie, Pokolenie,
two years later. Since then he has made around 40 films, his
latest, Katyń, is screening at Berlinale Palast out of competition­
and is nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 2008
Academy Awards. Wajda has made his reputation as a sen­
sitive and uncompromising chronicler of his country‘s political and social evolution. He is known for crafting an œuvre of
work that devastates even as it informs. In conversation with
Ulrich Gregor and Mark ­LeFanu, he will expound on the art of
giving films the right mood and atmosphere of the period
the film is set in, with particular reference to his latest film.
berlin today award: Producers‘ Meeting
10:00 H, HAU 3, Black Stage / In cooperation with boxfish
events. Supported by Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg,
Federal Foreign Office. On invitation only.
For the Berlin Today Award 2008/09 five short films are to be
produced under the theme of “My Wall“, to be premiered at
the Campus Opening in 2009. The Producers‘ Meeting is a
marriage market of sorts, where 15 preselected Talents will
meet 10 producers keen on producing one of the BTA shorts.
Opening with a round of brief introductions and project descriptions, Talents are offered the opportunity to present
their projects in one-to-one meetings. After a day of ­scouting,
pitching, debating and profiling, both Talents and producers
will vote with whom they wish to produce their shortfilm.
From that wish list, a BTA jury will select the five final Talent/
producer teams at the end of February.
southern passages
11:00 H, HAU2, second floor / Hazim Bitar, Vincenzo Bugno,
David Fisher, Irit Neidhardt, Abdelaziz Taleb, Jane Williams.
Moderated by Cathérine Buresi and Bärbel Mauch.
In cooperation with Euromed Audiovisual II ­Programme.
The discussion will focus on filmmaking conditions specific
to MEDA- countries, co-production opportunities between
filmmakers in MEDA-countries and Europe, and cooperation
perspectives between filmmakers within the MEDA-region. It
will also examine the requirements for regional possibilities
to finance, produce, market and distribute films. Guest speakers will talk about their own body of work, the ­programmes
and initiatives they represent. The panel will also go into the
local and global distribution of films with particular focus on
the outlook for cooperations on an intra-MEDA regional
level.
I n the Limelight: andrzej wajda
11:00 H, HAU 1 / Andrzej Wajda in conversation with
Ulrich Gregor and Mark LeFanu.
In cooperation with Berlinale Competition.
Film and theatre director, script writer and set designer,
­Andrzej Wajda is a major figure of world and Central European cinema, and recipient of the Oscar Award for lifetime
achievement and an honorary Golden Bear for lifetime
achievement at the Berlinale 2006. A student of the Cracow‘s
Academy of Fine Arts, he graduated from the National ­Higher
56
tue 12 9:30 H
HAU 2 Taste It: Training & Development
tue 12 10:00 H
HAU 3 Producers‘ Meeting
tue 12 11:00 H
HAU 1 In the Limelight: Andrzej Wajda
tue 12 11:00 H
HAU 2 Southern Passages
2nd fl. A fresh look at the special – and at times complicated –
­relationship between film professionals and their critics: the
reviewers. Directors, producers and actors/actresses often
fear this very sensitive area since reviews have a major influence on the life of a film – or the career of a star. Actress
­Martina Gedeck and director István Szabó will talk with film
critics David D’Arcy and Shaibu Husseini, a current year Talent,­
about their own experience with the press and how good or
bad reviews have affected their approach to their craft. Together they will reflect on the possible limits of film reviewing, and how it is possible to bond with those who ­ review
and make or break a film career, looking ahead to a future no
longer dominated exclusively by the print media.
Trail-blazing filmmakers present detailed case studies of their
online distribution strategies, demonstrating how they use
the Internet to connect directly with audiences to ­promote,
sell and finance their work. Learn how to create a dynamic
web presence, how to build and retain a loyal ­fanbase, deal
with digital rights issues, and use the Internet to promote the
theatrical, DVD and download release of your films.
adventures in the euro-jungle – The Media Programme
seen through the eyes of film practioners
14:00 H, HAU 2 / Sébastien Delloye, Arnaud Pasquali,
Riina Sildos. Moderated by Franz Rodenkirchen.
In cooperation with MEDIA.
MEDIA , one of the most important and influential training
initiatives in Europe, is one of the Berlinale Talent Campus’
main partners. Film professionals from various fields of work
discuss their experiences working with MEDIA: the challen­
ges­ of coproducing in Europe, the benefits of training, the
­advantages of international networks. With examples from
recent productions like I Am From Titov Veles (Berlinale
­Panorama 2008) or Irina Palm (Berlinale Competition 2007)
questions of English versus other production languages, and
narrating and marketing local stories for international
­audiences will be addressed. The panel is of special interest
to film professionals from Europe interested in learning from
experts what MEDIA offers to independent producers.
­Participants are invited to ask questions on how to apply.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Irina Palm, produced by Sébastien Delloye:
a successful adventure in the Euro-Jungle
tue 12 14:00 H
HAU 1 Matters of Life and Death –
Reviews that Make and Break
tue 12 14:00 H
HAU 2 Adventures in the Euro-Jungle
tue 12 14:00 H
HAU 2 The Indie Filmmaker‘s Guide to the Internet –
2nd fl. Adventures in Self-Distribution
57
Your Vision
drives the project!
When you know exactly what you want
to achieve, trust us to help you deliver.
Campus Programme
tue Feb 12
the dark side of cinema
17:00 H, HAU 1 / Hiam Abbass, Newton I. Aduaka, Josef Fares,
Damian Harris. Moderated by Vinzenz Hediger. In cooperation with Federal Foreign Office, Euromed Audiovisual II
Programme, Berlinale Competition, Berlinale Forum,
Berlinale Panorama.
creativity
Since the very first film ever made, film professionals as well as
audiences have experienced the strength of depicting emotional extremes of the dark side – be it horror, personal trauma, alienation, oppression, death or war – these issues evoke
the powerful darker emotions. On this panel, directors and
actors will discuss their fascination and motivation ­dealing as
film professionals with human behaviour and ­reactions of the
extreme kind. Using excerpts of recent films from various regions of the world, the experts will convey their views on the
necessity and desire to make cinema that reflects violent
­realities. Aduaka‘s film, Ezra, deals with the legacy of a child
soldier in Sierra Leone, who killed his own parents, Hiam
­Abbass starred in Paradise Now and The Lemon Tree, two
­movies which portray women living “at gunpoint“ in today‘s
Palestine, Josef Farres’ main hero in Leo faces a crime that has
equally harsh consequences on his own life, and Harris' Gar­
dens of the Night, which features in the 2008 Berlinale Competition, delves into the world of child abduction. So what
­distinguishes the depiction of “realistic“ thrillers that deal
with angst, death and crime from fantasy and horror – and
also the emotions and reactions they evoke in the audience?
from street cred to screen credibility –
Hip-Hop and the movies
Approach every new idea with complete confidence.
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software for independent film and video production.
17:00 H, HAU 2 / Karim Chrobog, Atif Ghani, Volker MeyerDabisch, Donald Mugisha, Fatoumata Kandé Senghor
and Tyron Ricketts.
Moderated by Kevin Fitzgerald and Satti R. Kuijpers.
In cooperation with Federal Foreign Office, Berlinale
­Gen­e­­ration, Perspektive Deutsches Kino, Berlinale Forum.
Through its musical popularity, hip-hop as a culture has had
an active impact on image-making. This panel broadens the
debate between filmmakers and music or festival producers
©2008 Avid Technology, Inc. All rights reserved. Avid is a registered trademark of Avid Technology, Inc. All other trademarks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
to develop a deeper understanding of its influence and
­credibility in the film and television industry, as well as to
showcase work across the global hip-hop diaspora. The
event will provide a unique mix of entertainment and
­education, ­ combining issues of social change, community,
political ­critique and aesthetic commercialisation through a
debate on music, culture, and filmic exploration. Together,
these panelists represent the real value of hip-hop:
­knowledge, wisdom, freedom, justice, respect, unity, love
and peace.
Subsequently, Talents and Campus guests are ­invited to join
experts at the Hip-Hop Lounge.
together forever? – What You Need for
a successful international co-production
17:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Esther Bannenberg,
Roshanak Behesht Nedjad, Frank ­Hübner.
Moderated by Ido Abram.
What do you need for a successful international co-pro­­
duction?­ What gives projects international appeal and
marke­t­ability? What strategies are suitable for which
projects? What are the possibilities of co-producing with
­different countries? What hindrances are likely to arise and
how can these be overcome? Three specialists in independent production, distribution and sales will discuss the ten
projects selected for the Talent Project Market and offer advice related to your individual­ projects.
tue 12 17:00 H
HAU 1 The Dark Side of Cinema
tue 12 17:00 H
HAU 2 From Street Cred to Screen Credibility –
Hip-Hop and the Movies.
Followed by the Hip-Hop Lounge
tue 12 17:00 H
HAU 2 Together Forever? – What You Need for a Successful
2nd fl. International Co-Production
tue 12 19:00 H
HAU 2 Hip-Hop Lounge
59
Campus Programme
wed feb 13
Campus Programme
wed Feb 13
early bird breakfast
crafting Visual Intensity
between the Lines – Script station presentation
Master Class Camera with Ellen Kuras.
15:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Moderated by Alby James.
In cooperation with EON Screenwriters‘ Workshop.
9:30 H, HAU 2 / Presented by Robert Bosch Stiftung
and International Film Festival Sarajevo.
Today‘s Early Bird Breakfast is hosted by the Robert Bosch
Stiftung and the International Film Festival Sarajevo. It offers
you a relaxed and tasty start to a promising new Campus
day. Meet representatives of today‘s host organisations as
well as fellow Talents and as special guest Stefan Arsenijevic,
director of the Panorama film Love & Other Crimes, for a com­
fortable chat while you enjoy hot coffee and breakfast.
inspiration in identifying crucial global developments and
key issues in the coming times. Wonderful Town narrates the
love story of a hotel owner in a Southern province town and
an architect from Bangkok. It uses the strange beauty of
landscapes that are slowly recovering from the tsunami as a
never-seen-before backdrop. The film can be regarded as a
perfect example for exploring the potential of cinematographic narratives and aesthetics that are very different from
mainstream cinema. The debate strives to address various
­issues that are of emotional, political, and social relevance to
the filmmaking of today and tomorrow. Wonderful Town is
selected as an official entry to this year’s Berlinale Forum.
excursion to film orchestra & HFF “konrad wolf“
10:00 H, meeting point: 09:45 h at the entrance to hau1 /
In cooperation with German Film Orchestra Babelsberg,
HFF “Konrad Wolf“ and Volkswagen.
Exclusively for composers and sound designers, this mini
tour of Berlin’s film music world will take its first halt at the
German Film Orchestra Babelsberg, where Talents will be
shown around the premises of the film orchestra. The tour
will take its next stop at the HFF where Talents will be guided
through the various studios. Renowned sound mixer Prof.
Martin Steyer and Johannes Malfatti, composer and Campus
alumnus, will complement the tour with input on the ­working
of the artists and the studios. A Q & A session with ­Volkswagen
Score Competition’s mentor Gustavo Santaolalla­ closes the
tour.
cinema Inside the Crystal ball –
Future Thoughts on Filmmaking
11:00, HAU 1 / Adytia Assarat, Wolfgang Müller-Pietralla.
Moderated by Mark LeFanu. In cooperation with
Volkswagen, Berlinale Forum.
Aditya Assarat’s first feature Wonderful Town will serve as a
case study to discuss multiple aspects relevant to the filmmaking of today and tomorrow. The young Thai director
converses with futurist scientist, Wolfgang Müller-Pietralla
from Volkswagen, for whom films are an important source of
60
between realities – doc station presentation
11:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Heino Deckert,
Dick Fontaine, Asako Fujioka, Ulla Simonen.
Moderated by ­Sirkka Möller.
A popular misconception is that documentary films happen
just like that, once the director starts shooting. This may be
true for a few exceptional cases, but most great documentaries started with careful planning, structuring and a lot of
writing. The Doc Station Talents will present their documentary treatments and discuss them on stage with an international panel of documentary experts, among them distributors, funders and TV execs, chaired by documentary curator,
Sirkka Möller. A unique insight into the development of
­documentary films and an encounter with some of the most
exciting projects from around the world.
wed 13 9:30 H
HAU 2 Early Bird Breakfast
wed 13 10:00 H
EXT.
Excursion to Film Orchestra & HFF “Konrad Wolf“
wed 13 11:00 H
HAU 1 Cinema Inside the Crystal Ball –
Future Thoughts on Filmmaking
wed 13 11:00 H
HAU 2 Between Realities –
2nd fl. Doc Station Presentation
Ellen Kuras has a way of seeing that takes an image to its
outer limits. In her years as documentary cameraperson and
director of photography, she has developed a visual sen­
sitivity­ and expertise that resulted in her winning the
Sundance Film Festival Jury Award and Eastman Kodak
­Documentary Cinematography Focus Award in 1999 for
Samsara by Ellen Bruno, Best Cinematography Award at the
Sundance Film Festival in 1992 for Tom Kalin‘s Swoon and in
1995 for Rebecca­ Miller‘s Angela. Her other films include Lou
Reed’s Berlin, Neil Young: Heart of Gold, No Direction Home:
Bob Dylan and I Shot Andy Warhol. Two of her latest projects,
Be Kind Rewind and Shine a Light will enjoy their world premieres at the Berlinale 2008. “I truly believe that every movie
has a unique look and my mission as a cinematographer is to
create the look the director and producer are trying to portray through the written word,“ she says. “It is magical to be
at the point in the creative process where the printed page
comes to life through light in the physical world.“ In her master class, this gifted director of photography, Ellen Kuras, will
give insight into her methods of creating a story’s visual
world using lighting and other tools of her craft which
­substantiate her uncommon vision.
The success of a film depends on the moment the script is
woken to life. It is the first time the writer faces the people
with whom he or she spent the most intimate moments: the
written characters. For the actor or the actress it is the first
time to slip into the skin and the personality of a stranger.
Alby James, Head of EON Screenwriters’ Workshop, will pre­
sent a unique glimpse into the hands-on sector of the Berlinale Talent Campus: Acting Talents reading selected scenes
from Script Station screenplays in development.
the Language of spaces and things
14:00 H , HAU 2 / Master Class with Alex McDowell.
Moderated by Peter Cowie. ­
Can furniture really depict a hero’s biography? Do locations
narrate stories and create spaces that hold the mood of a
film? These are just a few challenges faced by set-designers
whose contribution to filmmaking is crucial. How does all
this add up to full-fledged narrative structures in this trade?
Alex McDowell, the behind-the-scenes genius of our times
who worked on films such as Charlie and the Chocolate
­Factory, Minority Report, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and
The Crow, shares his insights on his working style using
­examples from many of his films.
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: Set Design by Alex McDowell
wed 13 14:00 H
HAU 1 Crafting Visual Intensity –
Master Class Camera with Ellen Kuras
wed 13 14:00 H
HAU 2 The Language of Spaces and Things
wed 13 15:00 H
HAU 2 Between the Lines –
2nd fl. Script Station Presentation
61
Campus Programme
wed feb 13
Campus Programme
thu Feb 14
real life emotion –Biopics and Doc Stars
masterclass for set designers
17:00 H, HAU 1 / Sandrine Bonnaire, Bernd Eichinger
and Stephen Frears. Moderated­ by Ben Gibson.
Traditionally, biographical movies used to seek out the
­tur­n­ing point that defined a life, usually a public life, with
the formal atmosphere of a destiny revealed and fulfilled.
­Aud­iences seem to be increasingly tired of the simplicity of
fictional characters in the key genres. One reason for docu­
mentary to be the emerging new form in independent cinema might be the richness of these real characters. And in
fiction or ­documentary, biographies offer some kind of guar­
antee – of complexity and authenticity. The best biopics of
the 21st century deal, not in destiny revealed, but more often
in the mood of an unknowable subjectivity, seeking out a
defining enigma. For us, identifying with the humanity of
these real players creates a special emotional closeness in
cinema. This panel brings together an impressive range of
filmmakers dealing with real life stories in recent films like
Jeanne la ­Pucelle (with Sandrine Bonnaire as Jeanne D‘Arc),
The Queen (directed by Stephen Frears) and Downfall (pro­
duced by Bernd Eichinger).
two NGO spokespersons, they will discuss and develop models for a constructive collaboration between filmmakers and
NGOs, focusing on the domains of human rights, capitalism,­
­globalization, and ecology. The panel seeks an open dis­cus­
sion on a coactive future between NGOs and ­ film­makers
worldwide.
hands-on hd
17:30 H, HAU 2, second floor / Workshop with Grischa Schaufuß.
This workshop gives a hands-on introduction to High Defi­
nition (HD) technologies. Adopting a practical and critical
­approach, the session will give participants the opportunity
to learn both technique and artistic possibilities of HD
­filmmaking. With High Definition camera on hand, film­
makers can familiarise themselves with HD format selection,
choice of lens, lighting, audio capture, and many more re­le­
vant functions.
Filmmakers and NGOs have long since struggled to remain
afloat in the turbulent waters of global policy. This event
will discuss how NGOs and filmmakers could expand their
in­fluence within societies and meet common goals. In an
­interactive approach, 40 Talents will engage with 6 film experts and 10 spokespersons from the NGO scene. Talents will
participate in a moderated discussion with NGOs on ex­pe­r­
iences, challenges and difficulties in their attempt at closer
cooperation in the fields of research, pre-production and
post-production. Divided into six groups, each with one or
62
Theaterkunst is Germany’s largest costume house for film,
television, advertising and theatre. Theaterkunst’s assortment of more than 10 million items includes all periods, styles
and trends, with a specialty collection of 200,000 ­uniforms.
The impressive list of films to which Theaterkunst contributed, ranges from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis to Caroline Link’s
Nowhere in Africa and Roman Polanski’s The Pianist. ­ Today‘s
Masterclass is specific only to production designer Talents
and includes a guided tour through the costume house. Furthermore, Talents will visit the Uniform Department and participate in a case study involving a recent, ­critically acclaimed
German film which costumed its ­ characters from the vast
collection at Theaterkunst.
eyes on the music
11:00 H, HAU 1 / Gustavo Santa­olalla and the three finalists
Vasco Hexel, Conrad Oleak and Sonal Shah.
Presentation of the Volkswagen Score Competition.
Moderated by Peter Cowie. In cooperation with
Volkswagen.­
“lonely hearts club“ – ngos date filmmakers
17:00 H, HAU 2 / Representatives of amnesty international,
Attac, BUND, CARE, Germanwatch, Greenpeace, ­IPPNW,
medico international, Misereor, Oxfam, Terres des Femmes.
Moderated by Christian Stahl. In cooperation with
Heinrich Böll Foundation, Federal Foreign Office and
Euromed Audiovisual II Programme. On invitation only.
10:00 H, meeting point at 9:45 at the entrance to hau 1
In cooperation with Theaterkunst.
Director Stephen Frears (The Queen) on Biopics and Doc Stars
wed 13 17:00 H
HAU 1 Real Life Emotion –
Biopics and Doc Stars
wed 13 17:00 H
HAU 2 “Lonely Hearts Club“ –
NGOs Date Filmmakers
wed 13 17:30 H
HAU 2 Hands-On HD
2nd fl. Workshop
A film’s soundtrack is the blending of dialogue, music, sound
effects and atmosphere. These combined elements have the
power to take an audience on an emotional journey – one
that allows them to become fully engaged, and totally lost in
this fictive world on screen. The soundtrack has the power to
hold the audience psychologically and emotionally within its
grasp. Being a film composer involves so much more than being able to write music, perform, orchestrate or conduct. For
film composers, the challenge is to read film narratives and
create suitable compositions, creating another dimension to
the visual world presented, that reach the emotional depths
of the characters portrayed. All this within the ­ para­meters
placed upon them by the relentless external ­ demands of
scoring a movie.
The panel seeks to highlight the relevance of film scores
within the contemporary discourse on cinema. Taking the
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
example of the scores created for the Volkswagen Score
Competition, the three finalists and their esteemed mentor
– musician, composer and winner of two Academy awards
Gustavo Santaolalla – will relate their experiences of composing scores for the Volkswagen Score Competition, and reflect
on the challenge involved in film scoring. The scores of the
three finalists will be presented during the event.
the indie filmmaker‘s guide to the internet –
how to become an independent filmmaker
11:00 H, HAU 2 / Arin Crumley, Kelly Devine,
Robert Greenwald, Allan Niblo, M Dot Strange.
Moderated by Liz Rosenthal. In cooperation with Skillset.
Traditionally, independent filmmakers have been ­dependent
on a long line of gatekeepers that stand between themselves
and an audience for their films, financiers, festivals, sales
agents, distributors, exhibitors and the press. Today, the
­Inter­net enables filmmakers to reach their audiences ­directly
and therefore offers potential for a new business model
­independent of gatekeepers. In this session, leading online
pioneers will discuss and demonstrate a range of new ­services
and tools available to filmmakers to help them build audiences, distribute their work and even finance their films.
What should you consider before you take the DIY plunge?
What are the important factors that indies should consider
before choosing a service? How will the role of the distributor­
transform as filmmakers build direct connections to ­audiences
and how will this change the kind of distribution deals you
make in the future?
thu 14 10:30 H
EXT.
Masterclass for Set Designers
at Costume House Theaterkunst
thu 14 11:00 H
HAU 1 Eyes On the Music –
Presentation of the Volkswagen Score Competition
thu 14 11:00 H
HAU 2 The Indie Filmmaker‘s Guide to the Internet –
How to Become an Independent Filmmaker
63
Campus Programme
thu feb 14
Campus Programme
thu Feb 14
world cinema fund – how to apply
various possi­bilities­ the medium offers and how one can
capitalise on them.
berlinale co-production Market –
what and who is it for?
closing and Award ceremony of the volkswagen
score competition & Closing party
Kill your darlings
14:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Sonja Heinen,
Kathi Bildhauer, Martina Bleis.
In cooperation with Berlinale Co-Production Market.
20:00 H, HAU 1 & 21:00 H, adagio
Moderated by Thomas Heinze and Dorothee Wenner.
In ­cooperation with Volkswagen.
The Berlinale Co-Production Market is a platform for pro­
ducers,­ distributors and sales agents as well as broad­casting
and funding representatives active in the field of international co-production. Every year over 30 projects are ­presented
at the Berlinale Co-Production Market which serves as an
irreplaceable tool for finding co-production partners and in
realising film projects. Since the Berlinale Co-Production
Market was formed five years ago, numerous projects of the
Co-Production Market have been shot and screened at international festival and in cinemas. Alongside the intensive 30minute one-on-one meetings with the ­ selected projects,
participants can get informed about co-producing/financ­ing opportunities and current trends in the international
market, and also foster contacts and exchange experiences.
Case Studies and other formats round out the programme.
Head of the Berlinale Co-Production Market, Sonja Heinen,
will introduce you to the function and the ­ intention of the
Co-Production Market and explain the ­application and selection process.
A farewell from the Campus team and the last and final event
– the announcement of the Volkswagen Score Competition
winner – will bring the six-day Berlinale Talent Campus to a
resounding close. The jury will disclose the winning finalist
and present him or her the prize: a trip to the best sound
studios in Los Angeles – sponsored by Dolby Laboratories.
In celebration of a stimulating week, the party will turn
­informal at Berlin’s after-hours watering hole – Adagio. So
don’t sap all your energy until this night is done.
11:00 H, HAU 2, second floor / Sonja Heinen, Vincenzo Bugno.
In cooperation with World Cinema Fund.
The Berlin International Film Festival launched the World
Cinema Fund in 2004, initiated by the German Federal
­Cultural Foundation and in cooperation with the Goethe­Institut to support filmmakers from transition countries. ­Until
2007, the geographical focus was on Latin America, Africa,
the Middle East and Central Asia. As of summer 2007, the
World Cinema Fund expanded its focus regions: to South
East Asia and the Caucasus. The aim of the Fund is to help
the realisation of films which otherwise could not be produced due to the lack of a constructive film industry, i.e.
feature films and creative feature-length documentaries with
a strong cultural identity.
Project Managers Sonja Heinen and Vincenzo Bugno will
offer vital information on the fields for which support is pro­
vided, who is eligible for funding, the funding amount that
can be availed and so on.
14:00 H, HAU 2 / Editing Master Class with Susan Korda.
Imagine this: You succeed perfectly in shooting a single
scene – actors, camera movements, lighting; everything
works even better than you dreamt. Later while editing you
suddenly realise that this beautiful scene doesn’t really fit
into the dramaturgy anymore. What now? Kill your darlings,
editor and filmmaker Susan Korda advises forcefully in her
lecture, taking you on an inspiring tour through the editing
room to explore the magic of the editor’s process.
the garage studio proudly presents:
four flicks for clicks
14:00 H, HAU 1 / Jay Anania, Juliane Block, Ted Chung,
­Alexander Frank, Victoria Hayford, M Dot Strange, Garin
Rianto Nugroho and ­Grahame Weinbren.
Moderated by Liz Rosenthal.
things to take home
16:00 H, HAU 2
Four short digital films – On Time, Eddi, It Could Happen to You
and The String Puppet – have been produced in the Garage
Studio on four days of the Campus solely for online ­stream­ing. We celebrate the fast-track production of these flicks
with an official screening on the big screen. To follow is a discussion with Talent directors of the Garage Studio on their,
create their films – from shooting to editing and uploading
– all in one day, and their exploration of the free world of film
production for the internet proficient. Talent mentors Jay
Anania, Garin Rianto Nugroho, M Dot Strange and Grahame
Weinbren will discuss what it means to serve the digital production chain from casting to shooting and distribution on
a ­ completely independent level. They will ­ expand on the
64
Celebrating a stimulating week at the Closing Party
Four Flicks on the Garage Studio‘s online portal
thu 14 11:00 H
HAU 2 World Cinema Fund –
2nd fl. How to Apply
thu 14 14:00 H
HAU 1 Garage Studio Proudly Presents:
Four Flicks for Clicks
thu 14 14:00 H
HAU 2 Kill Your Darlings –
Editing Masterclass
Before getting into gear for the Closing Party, all Talents who
wish to take home some prized souvenirs are invited to join
this session, which will give an overview of activities and
­opportunities that the Campus offers once you are back in
your countries and get busy with your forthcoming pro­jects.
One part of the session, of special interest to Talents and
alumni from Eastern Europe and those interested in working
in the region, is the presentation of the Sofia Meetings and
the special cooperation between the Sofia Meetings and the
­Campus. Information on the Campus Abroad editions and
the recently founded film co-ops will also be given. Don’t
miss it and bring along your notebook!
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
thu 14 14:00 H
HAU 2 Berlinale Co-Production Market –
2nd fl. What and Who Is It For?
thu 14 16:00 H
HAU 2 Things to Take Home
thu 14 20:00 H
HAU 1 Closing and Award Ceremony of the Volkswagen Score Competition
thu 14 21:00 H
EXT.
Closing Party at Adagio
65
5
index of Events
A list of all Berlinale Talent Campus events including the page numbers
where you find further information.
page
66–79
index
67
68
74
76
78
79
Index of Events
Index of Experts
Index of Talents
Epilogue / Note of Thanks
Team and Imprint
Partners
A
g
r
Adventures in the Euro-Jungle – The MEDIA
Programme Seen Through the Eyes of Film
Practioners (p.57)
Avid Media Composer Training (p.48, 49)
Avid DigiDesign Training (p.51)
Garage Studio Proudly Presents:
Four Flicks For Clicks (p.26, 27, 64)
Golden Key to the Archives –
The Legal Path to Found Footage (p.55)
Global Speed Matching (p.46)
Real Life Emotion – Biopics and Doc
Stars (p.33, 62)
b
h
Berlin Today Award: Producers‘ Meeting (p.56)
Berlinale Co-Production Market – What and
Who Is It For? (p.65)
Between Realities – Doc Station Presentation
(p.30, 60)
Between the Lines – Script Station
Presentation (p.30, 61)
Hands-On HD (p.62)
The Heart of the Matter – Emotion vs.
Intelligence (p.52)
Heroes vs. Anti-Heroes – Success Stories
in Cinema (p.52)
Hot Spot Africa (p.49)
c
Cairo Underground (p.51)
Cinema Inside the Crystal Ball –
Future Thoughts on Filmmaking (p.60)
Closing and Award Ceremony of the
Volkswagen Score Competition (p.24, 65)
Closing Party (p.65)
Crafting Visual Intensity (p.61)
D
The Dark Side of Cinema (p.59)
Dine & Shine – Talents Rendezvous With
Berlinale Guests (p.51)
Don‘t Call Us, We‘ll Call You (p.51)
e
Early Bird Breakfast (p.47, 52, 60)
Excursion to European Film Market (p.52)
Excursion to Filmorchestra Babelsberg
and HFF “Konrad Wolf“ (p.24, 60)
Excursion to the Costume House
Theaterkunst (p.52)
Eyes on the Music (p.25, 63)
f
Frogs in the Pocket (p.53)
From Street Cred to Screen Credibility –
Hip-Hop and the Movies (p.59)
i
s
Senses and Sensibilities – Documentaries
For the Big Screen (p.53)
Short Film Reception (p.55)
Short Films Expand Cinema (p.55)
Southern Passages (p.56)
Speed Matching (p.46)
Stargazing – Three Casting Directors
Debate (p.53)
t
In the Limelight: Andrzej Wajda (p.56)
In the Limelight: Mike Leigh (p.53)
In the Limelight: Stephen Daldry (p.49)
The Indie Filmmaker‘s Guide to the
Internet (p.47, 57, 63)
Taking Off (p.46)
Talent Night (p.55)
Taste It: Training & Development (p.56)
Things to Take Home (p.65)
Together Forever? (p.59)
Two Producers Sharing Their Secrets (p.48)
k
w
Kill Your Darlings (p.64)
World Cinema Fund – How to Apply (p.64)
l
The Language of Spaces and Things (p.61)
“Lonely Hearts Club“ –
NGOs Date Filmmakers (p.62)
Love International (p.37, 47)
m
Master Class for Set Designers (p.63)
Matters of Life and Death –
Reviews That Make or Break (p.28, 57)
Meet the Expert (p.44)
0
Opening Ceremony and World Premiere of
the Berlin Today Awards Short Films 2008
(p.34/35, 46)
p
Panamericana – Young Latin American
Cinema on the Move (p.48)
66
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
67
index of Experts
Nearly 150 experienced film professionals from all backgrounds the
world over visit the Berlinale Talent Campus to share their experiences
with young filmmakers.
A
ABBASs, HIAM Israeli/Arab actress, she is best known for her roles in Satin
Rouge, Paradise Now, The Syrian Bride and Free Zone. She has acted in
Lemon Tree which features in the 2008 Berlinale Panorama. (p.59)
ABRAM, IDO Head of Binger Filmlab, he is the former director of
­ ine­­Mart, the co-production market of the International Film Festival
C
Rotterdam. (p.59)
ADUAKA, NEWTON I. Nigerian Director, his shorts include Voices Behind
the Wall, Carnival Of Silence and On the Edge. His latest feature Ezra
won the best film award at Fespaco African Film Festival and at the
Durban International Film Festival. (p.59)
AKOMFRAH, JOHN Ghanaian-born filmmaker, he came to prominence
with Handsworth Songs. He helped found the Black Audio Film Collective. His digital movies include: Digitopia and Night Work. (p.53)
ANANIA, JAY Director of award-winning documentaries, his recent
features include Her Name Is Carla, The Visitors and Day On Fire. He
teaches directing at the NYU Graduate Film Programme. (p.26, 64)
international co-productions. Flying Moon films include 32 A, Comrades In Dreams and Full Metal Village. (p.59)
BELMONT, MIKE/ M DOT STRANGE Writer, director and producer of the
feature We Are the Strange; the film premiered at the Sundance Film
Festival and won two HDFEST Deffie Awards. His lastest feature is a 3D
Samurai film Heart String Marionette. (p.45, 57, 63)
BEYER, KLAUS-PETER Artistic director of the German Film Orchestra
­ abelsberg, he was the music producer of the 2001 version of Lotte
B
Reiniger’s The Adventures Of Prince Achmed and music composer of
Conversation With A Beast. (p.60)
Bildhauer, Kathi Member of the Berlinale Co-Production Market
team since its first year, and manager of the Talent Project Market.
­Author of “Drehbuch reloaded”, her PhD thesis is on unconventional
contemporary screenplays. Lecturer at German universities. (p.65)
BISHOP, NANCY Casting director and founder of Nancy Bishop Casting,
she has worked on Casino Royale, French Bean, Fugitive Pieces and Psych
9, and is currently involved in Solomon Kane. (p.51, 53)
BITAR, HAZIM Founder and coordinator of the Amman Filmmakers
ANIYAM-FIBERESIMA, PEACE Founder and CEO of Africa Movie ­Academy
Awards, which she created to encourage the growth of the film
industry­ in Africa, she is also executive director, Global Music ­Movies
and More. (p.49)
ASSARAT, ADITYA Thai director, he wrote and directed several short
films and documentaries before his debut feature Wonderful Town,
which features in the 2008 Berlinale Forum. His latest project is High
Society. (p.60)
AURET, MICHAEL Director of Spier Sales and Distribution, he will release
Son Of A Man, the film features in the 2008 Berlinale Forum, in the UK
and Ireland. Founder and Festival Director of the Cape Town World
Cinema Festival until 2007, he was CEO of the Sithengi Film and T V
Market and initiator of the Sithengi Talent Campus. (p.49)
b
BANNENBERG, ESTHER Independent consultant for the international
positionning and scouting of independent films, she has a solid background in worldwide sales, distribution, acquisition, marketing and
promotion, festivals and markets. (p.59)
­ ooperative and director of the Jordan Short Film Festival, he is the
C
producer and director of Jordan‘s leading independent films inclu­ding Sharar and Growing Up In Amman‘s Suburbia. (p.56)
Bleis, martina Member of the Berlinale Co-Production Market team
since its first year. Head of the Zurich Co-Production Forum since last
year. (p.65)
BlOYE, CHARLIE Chief Executive of Film Export UK , he has held senior
sales positions at Renaissance Films and Signpost Films. Founder and
managing director of Peace Arch Films, he has served as Executive
­Producer on five films including Our Fathers. (p.44)
BONNAIRE, SANDRINE See portrait on p.33. (p.62)
BRINKMANN, ANNE-KATHRIN Commissioning editor for ZDF’s ARTE THEMA , she was commissioning editor of ARTE/ZDF’s “Das kleine Fernsehspiel”. She is trained as a dramaturg and worked as assistant director
for theatre projects. (p.30)
BUCKINGHAM, PETER Former deputy chief executive of FilmFour, he is the
head of distribution and exhibition at the UK Film Council, tasked with
increasing the breadth and diversity of cinema across the UK . (p.44)
BAYS, MIA Oscar winning film producer and marketing consultant, she
has vast experience in distribution, marketing and sales, financing and
production. As marketing consultant she was involved in the Oscar
2007 shortlisted documentary Blindsight. (p.45)
vals, curator of retrospectives, and the initiator and Project Manager of
the Berlinale’s World Cinema Fund. (p.56, 64)
BEHESHT NEDJAD, ROSHANAK Producer and founder of Flying Moon,
which focuses on features and documentaries with emphasis on
BURESI, CATHÉRINE Team leader of the Euromed Audiovisual Technical
assistance since 2006, she is the former chief executive of EAVE
68
BUGNO, VINCENZO Film critic and journalist, he is advisor to film festi-
European Audiovisual Entrepreneurs. Previously, she was in charge of a
service structure for professionals such as the Strasbourg Film Commission, Strasbourg Film Fund and the MEDIA Antenna Strasbourg. (p.56)
BÜSCHER, MAREILE Berlin-based lawyer at Hogan & Hartson Raue LLP,
she focuses on intellectual property matters, media and entertainment law, as well as copyright litigation and negotiation. She has
­lectured on the subject of art and copyright law for various institutions
including the Federal Foundation of German Cinemas. Her publications include a handbook on copyright law with particular focus on
the rights of performing artists. (p.55)
DECKERT, HEINO Managing director of MA.JA.DE Film Production, he
founded d.net in 1995, an informal union of seven Euro­­pean ­colleagues
joining forces to exchange ideas and initiatives. He also lectures on
production and distribution of documentaries for organisations such
as EDN, Discovery Campus and Sundance Institute. (p.60)
DELLOYE, SÉBASTIEN Producer and associate of the production company Entre Chien et Loup, his film credits include Irina Palm, Control X
and Miss Montigny, among others. The company’s latest production
Restless, directed by Amok Kollek, features in this year’s Berlinale
­Competition. (p.57)
CABRERA, DOMINIQUE Director, screenwriter and actress, she has been
making films since 1981, among others, Demain et encore demain
­(Forum 1998), Le lait de la tendresse humaine (2001) and Folle embellie
(Forum 2004). She‘s also in this year‘s Berlinale First Feature Jury. (p.53)
Delpy, Julie French/American actress and director, she has directed,
written and acted in more than 30 films. Europa Europa, The Three
­Musketeers and Before Sunrise are just 3 names from her extensive
­filmography. She made her feature-length directorial debut with
Looking for Jimmy, and wrote, acted, directed, edited, scored and coproduced 2 Days in Paris. (p.52)
CAPLAN, SALLY Head of Premier Fund of the UK Film Council, she is the
president of Icon Film Distribution. She was senior vice president of
acquisitions and business affairs, Momentum Pictures, to mention one
among other positions she has held. (p.45)
DEVINE, KELLY Consultant with Renew Media on its new web-based
initiative Reframe, she works with clients ranging from distributors to
cable nets to filmmakers. She is also Artistic Director of the Global
Peace Film Festival. (p.45, 63)
CHROBOG, KARIM Filmmaker and the founder of 18th Street Films and
Tangier Pictures, he started his career in the media industry at Time
Warner‘s public policy office. His latest film War Child features in the
2008 Berlinale Generation programme. (p.57)
DONALDSON, MICHAEL C. Entertainment lawyer for over 30 years, he is
general counsel to the Independent Feature Project/West and the International Documentary Association. He is a speaker on copyright,
film and negotiating at numerous festivals. (p.55)
CLARKE, EMMA Senior Executive of New Cinema Fund at the UK Film
Council, she is responsible for films Red Road, This Is England, Touching
The Void, Bloody Sunday, amongst others. (p.45)
DUBOWSKI, SANDI American director and producer best known for his
2001 documentary Trembling Before G-D, he is the recipient of 12
awards including the 2001 Teddy Award of the Berlinale and producer
of A Jihad For Love, featuring in the 2008 Berlinale Panorama. (p.53)
c
COLLINS, CHRIS Development Producer of UK Film Council Development Fund, he has worked as a producer, executive producer and
pro­duction executive on various films including My Summer Of Love,
Brick Lane and Better Things, which awaits release. (p.45)
COWIE, PETER See portrait on p.29. (p.28, 48, 53, 57, 61, 63)
CROOKS, LENNY Head of the UK Film Council‘s New Cinema Fund, he
has been involved in the films The Magdalene Sisters, Sweet Sixteen,
­Festival and Young Adam. (p.45)
CRUMLEY, ARIN Co-writer, co-director, co-producer, actor of the independent film and online video series Four Eyed Monsters, the project
has become a cult phenomenon and to date, the video podcast has
received over two million views. (p.45, 57, 63)
d
DALDRY, STEPHEN With successful films like Billy Elliot and The Hours, he
is considered as one of the most interesting character-driven filmmakers of the younger generation in England. His latest film is The Reader
that he currently shoots in Germany. (p.49)
e
EDKINS, DON South African documentary filmmaker and producer of a
number of documentaries including Goldwidows, The Colour Of Gold
and The Broken String, he is an executive producer of the STEPS International global documentary project “Why Democracy?“. (p.36, 49)
EICHINGER, BERND German film producer and director, he is chairman
of the supervisory board of Neue Constantin Film, also having pro­
duced movies independently, for example Downfall, Resident Evil:
Extinction and Perfume: The Story Of A Murderer. (p.62)
EIMBCKE, FERNANDO Mexican film director and screenwriter, his ­feature
debut Duck Season won several film festival awards. This former Campus participant’s latest film Lake Tahoe is in this year’s Berlinale Competition. (p.15, 48)
EL-NOSHOKATY, SHADY Artist and lecturer in the painting and drawing
department in the faculty of Art Education – Hellwan University, Cairo,
he has had numerous group and solo art exhibitions including at the
Tate Modern, London, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo and Centre Pompidou,
Paris. (p.51)
D’ARCY, DAVID Art reporter and film journalist, he is a ­correspondent for
the Art Newspaper, a contributing editor at Art & ­Auction and a regular
critic on the “Front Row“ programme on BBC Radio. (p.57)
f
DE LA CRUZ, KHAVN Director of features, he is the festival director of the
FARES, JOSEF Lebanese /Swedish director and writer, he has a host of
films to his credit including Zoro, Kopps, Kom Då!, Jalla Jalla and most
recently Leo, featuring in the 2008 Berlinale Forum. (p.57)
MOV International Digital Film Festival and the founding member of
the Philippine Independent Filmmakers Multi-Purpose Cooperative.
His latest film The Muzzled Horse of An Engineer In Search of Mechanical
Saddles features in the 2008 Berlinale Forum Expanded. (p.65)
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
69
FATTHI MOUSSA, “KAISER” MOHAMED Director, cinematographer and
editor, his shorts include Elevator, Virgin Mary, Culture Wheel and
­Silence. He is a participant of this year’s Berlinale Talent Campus. (p.51)
GEDECK, MARTINA Award-winning German actress, her filmography
comprises over 50 productions including The Good Shepherd, The Lives
Of Others, Mostly Martha, Life Is All You Get and Rossini. (p.57)
Faust, Jeanne German artist, she has had numerous solo and group
exhibitions in Germany and abroad at festivals and galleries such as
Centre Pompidou, Filmfestival Rotterdam, Videonale Bonn, camden
arts center, London, among others. (p.55)
GHANI, ATIF Producer and writer with a strong background in
i­ n­dependent film production and marketing, his film portfolio includes The Family Portrait, The White Darkness and Yasmin’s Song as line
production manager. (p.59)
FENDRIK, PABLO First-time director of El Asaltante, he was invited with
the film project to the 2007 Cannes Critics’ Week and selected for Films
in Progress 11. He participated in the Berlinale Talent Project Market
with El Asaltante in 2004. (p.48)
GIBSON, BEN Director of the London Film School, he has commissioned
and produced films by Terence Davies, Derek Jarman, John Maybury,
Gurinder Chadha and many others as an independent ­producer and
head of production at the British Film Institute. (p.53, 62)
FIGGIS, MIKE See portrait on p.27. (p.26)
GILMOUR, BENJAMIN Co-writer and first-time director, he made Son Of A
Lion which had its world premiere at the 12th Pusan International Film
Festival. Son Of A Lion features in this year’s Berlinale Forum and Berlinale Generation. (p.52)
FISHER, DAVID Director of Greenhouse, which operates in the ­framework
of the EU‘s Euromed Audiovisual II Programme, it is a ­ development
project for feature-length documentaries made by ­ Mediterranean
(MEDA) filmmakers. (p.56)
FITZGERALD, KEVIN DJ and co-founder of the popular radio show “all @
one point“ on KPFK 90.7FM in Los Angeles, he spent much of his life
involved in hip-hop music and culture. He has directed numerous
documentaries and is the founder of the Hip-Hop Film Festival,
a ­travelling festival on the US West Coast. (p.59)
FONTAINE, DICK Head of documentary at NFTS in London, he has made
over 40 films during a career in independent film and video. He coruns Grapevine Pictures, a company specialising in documentary,
­music and original drama. (p.30, 60)
FREARS, STEPHEN Academy award nominated film director, his film
portfolio includes My Beautiful Laundrette, Dangerous Liaisons, The
Grifters, Dirty Pretty Things, Mrs. Henderson Presents and his latest, The
Queen. (p.62)
GREENWALD, ROBERT Filmmaker and political activist, he is the director
and producer of Iraq For Sale: The War Profiteers and Outfoxed: Rupert
Murdoch’s War On Journalism. His company Brave New Films uses
­moving images to educate, influence and empower viewers to take
action around that matter. (p.63)
Gregor, Ulrich Film critic and promoter of independent, international
cinema, he is the chairperson of Friends of German Cinema and the
former director of the Berlinale Forum. (p.56)
GUGLIOTTA, JUAN PABLO Producer of El Asaltante by Pablo Fendrik and
of Las Vides Posibles by Gugliotta Sandra; the latter was supported by
the World Cinema Fund. His latest project is La Sangre Brota (Blood
­Appears) by Pablo Fendrik, a co-production with France and Germany,
currently in postproduction. (p.48)
h
HÖHNE, MAIKE MIA Programme curator of Berlinale Shorts, she is also a
freelance writer, director, curator and photographer. Among others,
she wrote, directed and produced Eine einfache Liebe, was director
and production designer of Fin de siglo and, most recently she has
been script supervisor for Innere Werte. (p.55)
HÜBNER, FRANK Producer and executive producer, he has produced
Imaginary Heroes, Whale Rider, and was executive producer of Stander,
Spartan and Riding The Bullet. He was associate director of Closing The
Ring, released in late 2007. (p.59)
HUSSEINI, SHAIBU Performing artist, cultural worker and film journalist,
he writes on the arts and movies for Nigeria’s “The Guardian“. He also
runs two weekly columns (Celebrity and Moviedom) in “The Guardian“.
He is a participant of this year’s Talent Press. (p.28, 57)
j
JAMES, ALBY Head of Development at EON Screenwriters‘ Workshop,
he is a leading scriptwriting tutor, and Head of Screenwriting at the
Northern Film School in Leeds and established a script development
and training programme in South Africa for the film and television industry. Alby is on the selection panel for the Berlinale Talent Campus’
Script Station and the World Cinema Fund at the Berlin International
Film Festival. (p.30, 49, 61)
JANEK, MIROSLAV Czech film director, writer, editor and producer, he
made nearly forty short films before immigrating to the USA in 1979.
Returning to the Czech Republic, he shot and directed documentaries
for television. His film Vierka was awarded as best Czech ­documentary
at the International Documentary Film Festival Jihlava. (p.53)
Jentsch, Julia German actress, her first prominent screen role was in
the 2004 cult film The Edukators. She garnered further attention playing the title role in the 2005 film, Sophie Scholl – The Final Days, for
which she won the best actress award at the European Film Awards
and at the German Film Awards, as well as the Silver Bear for best actress at the Berlinale. Her other films include Schneeland, Downfall and
I Served the King of England. (p.52)
KIM, HEE-JEON Responsible for international sales at CJ Entertainment,
Korea‘s leading entertainment company, their film portfolio includes
Musa: The Warrior, Memories Of Murder and I’m A Cyborg, But That’s Ok,
winner of the 2007 Alfred Bauer Prize at the Berlinale. (p.44)
KITANOV, STEFAN Director of Sofia International Film Festival, he is also
a producer whose most recent productions are Gucha (presented at
Berlinale Panorama in 2007) and Which Way Today. He is a member of
the European Film Academy. (p.65)
KORDA, SUSAN Teacher at NYU Tisch School of the Arts, she has worked
as a writer, director and editor on documentary and narrative films including Swimmers, For All Mankind, Trembling Before G-D and her own
One Of Us. (p.64)
KUIJPERS, RAHMAN SATTI Screenwriter and multi-media producer, he
wrote his first feature script with the financial support of the UK Film
Council and the European development funding from SOURCES 2. He
co-founded cyberNomads, a community grassroots website that archives and documents Afro-German history. He was a participant of
the first Berlinale Talent Campus in 2003. (p.59)
Kuras, Ellen Cinematographer, she has a vast portfolio of films
i­ ncluding Shine a Light and Be Kind Rewind, which ­celebrate their international premieres at the 2008 Berlinale. She also wrote, directed, shot
and produced the documentary The Betrayal. (p.61)
l
LEFANU, MARK Film critic, curator and teacher based in Denmark, he is
the author of “The Cinema of Andrei Tarkovsky“ and the study of the
films of Kenji Mizoguchi, “Mizoguchi and Japan“. He has contributed
articles on film to the periodicals “Positif“ (Paris), “Sight & Sound“ (London), and is a member of the European Film Academy. (p.53, 56, 60)
LEIGH, MIKE English film and theatre director, he has made the films
Naked, Secrets and Lies and Vera Drake, among others. His latest film
Happy-Go-Lucky, is part of this year‘s Berlinale Competition. (p.53)
FRIEDMANN, JULIAN Publisher and editor of the “Scriptwriter” magazine and a leading consultant for film and TV scriptwriting, he has
­lectured over the world on scriptwriting and published the book
“How To Make Money Scriptwriting“. (p.30)
HARRIS, DAMIAN Director, writer, actor, he wrote and directed his
feature directorial debut The Rachel Papers, followed by Deceived,
Bad Company and Mercy. His latest Gardens of the Night will ­feature
in the Berlinale Competition. (p.59)
FUJIOKA, ASAKO Working with Yamagata International Documentary
Film Festival, Japan, she established and ran New Asian Currents, a
programme of films by emerging Asian documentary filmmakers until
2003, and continues to work with Asia. (p.60)
HAYASHI, KANAKO Festival director, Tokyo FilMeX International Film
Festival, which showcases the best contemporary independent
­cinema Asia, she was a member of the 2002 Berlinale International
Jury and in last year’s jury for the Manfred Salzgeber Prize of the
­Panorama Section. (p.44)
KAhN, ILENE Producer and founder of her company Kahn Power ­Pictures,
which produced the award-winning Stalin for HBO, she was the Executive Producer on Gia, which won 3 Golden Globes and 6 Emmy nominations. In her ten-years as Vice President of HBO Pictures, she supervised
the development and production of over 60 films. (p.51)
HEDIGER, VINZENZ Film critic for a major Swiss newspaper during the
90s, he is presently a professor of film and media studies at the Ruhr
University Bochum, Germany. Until end 2004, he was on the board of
trustees of the Swiss cultural foundation Pro Helvetia, responsible for
visual arts and the cinema. (p.57)
KANDÉ SENGHOR, FAToUMATA Senegalese artist, activist and former
Campus participant, she uses film, photography, performance, radio
and writing to address issues revolving around modernism. Her
­filmography includes the documentaries True School, Diola Tigi and
Dona Maria Cabral. (p.59)
LINSSEN, DANA Worked in a cinema during her philosophy studies, she
worked as a film critic for the Dutch daily newspaper “NRC ­Handelsblad“
in 1997 and is editor-in-chief of the Dutch independent film monthly
“De Filmkrant“ since 1998. (p.28)
HEINEN, SONJA Head of the Berlinale Co-Production Market and Project
Manager of the World Cinema Fund, both are initiatives of the ­Berlinale
and dedicated to international co-productions. (p.64, 65)
KATEDZA, RUMBI Zimbabwean filmmaker, writer, arts director and past
festival director of the Zimbabwe International Film Festival, she has
a portfolio of 5 films. Former Talent of the Campus, she is the initiator
of the Film Co-op in Harare, ­Zimbabwe. (p.49)
LOUSBERG, JAN-JACOB European Executive at the Film Council, he
­ andles the task of sourcing projects, talent and funding in Europe.
h
Previously, he was a London-based story editor and acquisitions and
development executive for Fine Line Features. (p.45)
KHAN, SHAH RUKH India’s most favoured Bollywood actor, he started
his career in the TV serial Fauji which won him instant success. His most
popular films include Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, Kuch Kuch Hota
Hai, Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham, Veer Zaara and Asoka. His latest work,
Om Shanti Om features in the 2008 Berlinale Special. (p.47)
m
g
GALAL, HALA Egyptian documentary filmmaker, she is one of the founders of the independent production company Semat. Her film Women’s
Chit Chat has been critically acclaimed and deals with ­generations of
feminists in Egypt. (p.51)
GANZERT, ERNST-LUDWIG Producer and CEO of EIKON Media in Berlin, he
has produced more than 30 documentaries including Jailbirds and
Maison De France and the features Zores and Under The Ice, among
­others. (p.30)
GAZDAG, GYULA Writer and director of award-winning feature films in­
cluding A Hungarian Fairy Tale, Lost Illusions, Banquet and The ­Reso­lu­­tion, his latest film Cobblestone will release this year. He is a ­professor
at the Faculty of Film, Television and Digital Media at UCLA and serves
as the Artistic Director of the Sundance Filmmakers Lab. (p.30)
70
HENSHAW-NUTTALL, KATE See portrait on p.37. (p.47)
HEREDIA, SHAI Founder and director of Experimenta, the only international festival for experimental cinema in India, she has showcased
­Indian experimental films at the Tate Modern, London, Images Festival, Toronto, Cinema Nova, Brussels and Lightcone Paris, to mention a
few. (p.55)
k
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
LEVINE, SYDNEY Prior to founding Film Finders, she served as Vice
­ resident of Acquisitions for Republic Pictures and before that for
P
Lorimar. Her contacts have resulted in the acquisitions My Beautiful
Laundrette, Letter To Brezhnev and Tampopo. (p.52)
LIEBERSON, SANDY Chairperson, Film London, he has been a major
­ gure in the film industry in Europe and America since the 1960s. He
fi
was first vice president of International Pictures and Marketing and
later president of production at Twentieth Century Fox. (p.44, 48)
MABROUK, EMAD Egyptian editor and assistant director on a number of
films, he has worked on The Violence And Sarcasm, The City Report, and
Night and Day. This year‘s Talent, he directed the short film Since the 9th
before completing his most recent The Dead Won’t Mind. (p.51)
71
MAKAVEJEV, DUŠAN Serbian film director famous for his groundbreaking films of Yugoslav cinema, he won numerous awards including the
Silver Bear for his documentary Innocence Unprotected. His ­ filmo­graphy includes Man Is Not A Bird, Love Affair and WR: Mysteries Of The ­
Organism, which will enjoy a re-release at 2008 Berlinale Forum. (p.53)
MALCOLM, DEREK Film historian and critic with “The Guardian“ for
­several decades, he is also the author of “A Century of Films“. President
of the British Federation of Film Societies and the International Film
Critics’ Circle, he is at present Honorary President of FIPRESCI. He
­currently writes for the London “Evening Standard“. (p.28)
MARMOT, JANINE Director of Film at Skillset, she has produced films
such as Institute Benjamenta, I Could Read The Sky and Made In Heaven.
She is currently developing a slate of feature films through her
com­­pany Hot Property Films. (p.44, 46)
MAUCH, BÄRBEL Producer and founder of Bärbel Mauch Film, she has
considerable experience in production and distribution as well as with
film festivals in Germany, France and Africa. She has produced Faro la
reine des eaux (Premiere: Berlinale 2007), and currently in preparation
is L’aventutier among others. (p.56)
MCDOWELL, ALEX Award-winning production designer for Minority
MOODY, AGNIESZKA Director of the UK Media Desk, hosted by the UK
Film Council, it is the information office for the MEDIA Programme and
offers support and advice to UK applicants applying to the MEDIA
­Programme. (p.44)
MUGISHA, DONALD Director, producer and writer, he co-authored and
co-produced the digital feature Divizionz, his first foray into making a
full-length film. The film of this former Talent will celebrate its world
premiere in the 2008 Berlinale Forum. (p.15, 59)
MÜLLER, MATTHIAS Artist working in film, video and photography, he is
also a curator and organiser of numerous avant-garde film events such
as the “Found Footage Film Festival“, “Ich etc.“ and various touring
programmes. His films and videos have been screened in major film
festivals worldwide. (p.55)
MÜLLER-PIETRALLA, WOLFGANG Head of Future Affairs, Volkswagen, he
joined the environmental protection department at Volkswagen in
1992, where he introduced a sustainable environmental ­management
system. Since 2003, he holds a key position in setting-up Volkswagen’s
future studies group. (p.60)
n
MENAGER, JULIETTE Casting director and costume designer, she has
NEIDHARDT, IRIT Co-founder and programme director (until 1999) of
Israelische und Palästinensische Filmtage Münster, she taught at the
School for Oriental and African Studies and at the Morley College. She
is head of the German distribution company mec film which focuses
on cinema from the Middle East. (p.56)
worked on such films as The Nativity Story, The Trail, Alexander, The
Dreamers and Sotto Falso Nome, among others. (p.53)
NIBLO, ALLAN Cameraman, director and producer, his first film as pro-
­Re­port and The Terminal, his film credits also include Fear And Loathing
In Las Vegas and Charlie And the Chocolate Factory. His latest project is
Wes Anderson‘s The Fantastic Mr. Fox. (p.61)
MESSEL, ESTHER van Chief Executive of First Hand Films, Zurich and
Berlin, for world sales of documentaries and fiction films, she was the
head of distribution at Warner Bros. Israel. She is a lecturer and consultant to various organisations such as EAVE Brussels, IDFA Forum
Amsterdam, Cinemart Rotterdam, Eurodoc Paris, among others. (p.30)
MEYER-DABISCH, VOLKER German actor and director for film and
t­ he­atre, his latest documentary love, peace & beatbox features in the
2008 Berlinale Generation and Perspektive Deustches Kino. He has
also directed the short film Zwirbels Traum and the documentary
­Kohleladen Özdemir. (p.59)
MÖLLER, SIRKKA She has been working for film festivals since 1988. She
programmed the Sheffield International Documentary Festival 20012006 and worked in documentary distribution. She is a freelance film
curator, documentary consultant and a regular jury member and moderator at international film events. (p.30, 60)
MOLLET, PHYLLIS Film festival consultant involved in the European Film
industry, she is a member of the European Film Academy, secretary
general and founding director of the European Producers’ Club and
FIAPF‘s director of communication and festivals. She is the founder
and executive director of Chalachitra Europe, a company that ­promotes
and develops cinematographic relations between India and Europe.
(p.44)
MOODLEY, NASHEN South African film critic, journalist and programmer,
he is currently the manager/programmer of the Durban International
Film Festival. Since 2005 he has been a programming consultant for
the Dubai International Film Festival, responsible for the Cinema Of
Africa programme. (p.49)
72
ducer was the critical and box office hit Human Traffic. He co-founded
Vertigo Films in 2002; the company’s productions include The Football
Factory, The Business and Outlaw. (p.45, 63)
NUGROHO, GARIN RIANTO Indonesian filmmaker, he directed two short
films and 15 documentaries before his feature, Love Is A Slice Of Bread.
His film credits include Letter To An Angel (Forum 1994) and The Moon
Dances... (Forum 1996), among others. He is a member of this year‘s
NETPAC Jury. (p.64)
p
PASQUALI, ARNAUD Head of the sector for MEDIA Promotion (Markets
& Festivals) – MEDIA Training MEDIA programme of the European
­Union and for the Education, Audiovisual & Culture Executive Agency
(EACEA). (p.57)
PETERSEN, NIKOLAI Director of the Goethe-Institut in Caracas,
­ ene­zuela, he was previously head of cultural programmes at the
V
Goethe-Institut Johannesburg where he played a crucial role in the
cooperation between the Berlinale and the Sithengi Film and ­Television
Market. (p.44)
PIMENTA, PEDRO One of the major players in film co-productions in
South Africa, he is the director of DOCKANEMA – a Documentary Film
Festival in Maputo. His film portfolio includes Marracuene, Fools, Zulu
and Love Letter, among others. (p.49)
POWER, DEREK As a talent manager based in West Hollywood, he is a
specialist in the representation of Eurocentric talent. Among the many
he has helped guide through his company, The Derek Power Company, are Ben Kingsley, Greta Scacchi, Robert Dornhelm and Jennifer Rae
Welsh. (p.51)
r
­ erlinale Forum, she is a co-founder and member of the Board of
B
­Kinothek Asta Nielsen in Frankfurt. (p.55)
RABARTS, MARTEN Artistic director, Binger Filmlab, he is a producer,
screenwriter and script editor. As head of studies at Amsterdam’s
­Maurits Binger Film Institute, he was instrumental in the realisation of
the film series Project 10 – Real Stories from a Free South Africa, which
premiered at the Forum in 2004. (p.30)
SHAFIK, VIOLA German film scholar and filmmaker, she has directed documentaries including Iraqi Artists In Germany and The Lemon Tree. She is
also the author of the books “Arab Cinema: History and Cultural Identity“ and “Popular Egyptian Cinema: Gender, Class, and Nation“. (p.51)
RICKETTS, TYRON Afro-German actor and musician, he has acted is
­ umerous critically acclaimed German films such as Kopf oder Zahl,
n
Barfuß, Kanak Attack and Afro Deutsch. He was singer and frontman for
“Mellowbag“ with two successful hip-hop ­albums. (p.59)
shan, dongbing Active in Chinese Independent filmmaking, he has
produced the films Crosscurrent, The Square, The Sons, Crazy English and
City Paradise. President of Big One Films which focuses on film production and distribution in China. (p.45)
RODENKIRCHEN, FRANZ See portrait on p.31. (p.30, 57)
SILDOS, RIINA One of the founders of the Tallinn International Film
F­ estival – the Black Nights Film Festival, she started her own production company Amrion in 2003. A production from her cache, Lotte
From Gadgetville premiered at the Berlinale 2003. She is one of the
founders and organisers of Baltic Event Co-Production Market. (p.57)
ROSENTHAL, LIZ Founder and director of Power the Pixel which or­ga­n­ised their first Digital Distribution Forum for Independents at last
year’s London Film Festival, she is the founder of Earthly Delights
Films, one of the producers of The Trouble With Men And Women, and
the co-creator and producer of the online animation project, ­Marsipan.
(p.26, 44, 47, 57, 63)
ROSS, DICK Scriptwriter, consultant, he won the European Script Prize
for The Red Apple Tree. He is also the director and producer of The Late
Liz, the producer of The Cross And the Switchblade, and is a board
­member of SOURCES 2. (p.52)
ROY, RAJENDRA Chief Curator, department of film, The Museum of
­ odern Art (MOMA), he will oversee the museum‘s 22,000 film archive.
M
Previously, artistic director at the Hamptons International Film ­Festival,
he has previously worked at the Guggenheim Museum. (p.61)
SIMONEN, ULLA Finnish producer and consultant for Avek – Promotion
Centre for Audiovisual Culture, Finland, her filmography includes
­Between Two Countries, Don’t Worry It’s Just A Phase, The Future Is Not
What It Used To Be and Kiltit Tytot. (p.30, 60)
SMITH, IAIN Producer of more than a dozen feature films, his film ­credit
include Academy Award winning Chariots Of Fire, Killing Fields, Fifth
­Element, Children of Men, and many more. He is ­currently completing
adaptation of the graphic novel, Wanted. (p.44, 48)
s
STAHL, CHRISTIAN Managing director of “Medienagentur für Sen­­d­ungsbewusste” in Berlin, he conducts trainings for people work­ing in
the media world, plans and moderates podium discussions, events
and conferences, and assists in conceptualising conferences. (p.62)
SALBOT, SOPHIE Producer of the films Samba Traoré, Le cri du cœur, and
Kini & Adams for the production company Les Films de la Plaine, she
then founded her own production company, Athénaïse. Rêves de
­poussière is the first full-length feature film from Athénaïse. (p.49)
STEYER, MARTIN German sound mixer, he has worked on numerous
critically acclaimed films including Das Herz ist ein dunkler Wald, Meine
schöne Bescherung, Yella, The Last King of Scotland and Requiem, among
others. (p.60)
SALEM, ABDERRAHMANE AHMED Director of “La Maison des cinéastes“ in
Mauritania and the director of “La Semaine Nationale du Film“, his film
credits include Taxi-Démocratie; Un Homme, Une Tente, Un ­ Drapeau
and Mon Nouakchott. (p.55)
STYLE, EMMA Casting director, she has worked for the films Oh Happy
Day, Mansfield Park, Hogfather and Scenes of A Sexual Nature. She is
­currently involved in production The Colour of Magic. (p.53)
SANTAOLALLA, GUSTAVO See portrait on p.25. (p.60, 63)
SCHAUFUSS, GRISCHA Director of photography and producer, he offers
production services for corporate, documentary and commercial films.
He conceptualised Two Revolutions 1848/1989, and worked on Die
Häuser des Mr. Wong, among others. (p.62)
SCHLEEF, HEIDRUN Freelance scriptwriter since 1996, she has written
and co-written numerous scripts for renowned directors in Italy. Her
past projects include Un soleil trop tard, Mare Nero, Il Caimano, Ciao,
Riparo and L‘uomo di Vetro. She has been working at SOURCES 2 since
2003. (p.30)
SCHRADER, MARIA Well-known German actress, screenwriter and ­director,
she has acted in the films Stille Nacht, Aimee & Jaguar, for which she won
the Silver Bear at the 1999 Berlinale, Rosenstraße and Schneeland to
mention just a few. Liebesleben, her directorial debut, will be screened
at the German Films section of the Berlinale 2008. (p.47)
SCHULTE-STRATHAUS, STEFANIE Curator at the Freunde der Deutschen
Kinemathek e.V./Kino Arsenal in Berlin, and a programmer at the
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
SZABÓ, ISTVÁN Critically acclaimed Hungarian filmmaker, he directed
the award-winning films Father, Lovefilm and 25 Fireman‘s Street. His
signature film trilogy consists of Mephisto, Colonel Redl, and Hanussen.
He made a switch to English-language films with Meeting Venus,
Sunshine,­ Taking Sides, and most recently Being Julia. (p.57)
t
TALEB, ABDELAZIZ Director, producer and one of the leading visual
­ igital artisits in Morocco, he is also the co-director of the collective
d
Taleb cherche midi and founder of the Videokaravaan project. He is a
former participant of the Berlinale Talent Campus. (p.56)
THOMPSON, DAVID Head of BBC Films, the Corporation’s cinematic arm
involved with high profile British films of recent years including the
hugely successful Billy Elliot, Mansfield Park, Notes On A Scandal, Scoop,
Maybe Baby and Dirty Pretty Things. (p.44, 55)
TODSHAROW, MARTIN Film composer, he has composed music for Max
Frisch – Geschichte einer Stimme, Nothing But Ghosts, Minotaur and
­Under the Ice. He is a lecturer at the film academy Ludwigsburg, the
DFFB Berlin and the HFF “Konrad Wolf“ in Potsdam-Babelsberg. (p.60)
73
u
a
UKWUOMA, SELINA Development Executive EON Screenwriters‘ Work­
shop, she has helped, among others, to develop Boy A, featuring in the
2008 Berlinale Panorama, Cuba Pictures’ first film to go into ­production.
She also tutors on the MA in Screenwriting and Producing at the
­University of Westminster. (p.30, 49)
Abeil Lluna
Achim Gabriel Adam Mohammad Rahmat
Adams Emma
Adeleye Mike-Steve
Aduwo Bolanle
Akay Emre Alihodzic Senad Ameresekere Asitha
Ames Natalia Amini Babak Anastasopoulos Angela
Aoun Rachel Archer Nuno Assmann Simon Attal Bernard Au Man Kit Jevons
Aydin Dilek
V
VALDELIèVRE CHRISTIAN Producer, founding partner of Futura Producciones (which changed its name to Lulú Producciones in 2004) and
Titán Producciones, he co-produced Sex, Shame and Tears, and is the
producer of Duck Season and Lake Tahoe, Fernando Eimbcke’s first two
features, the latter features in the 2008 Berlinale ­Competition. (p.48)
w
WAJDA, ANDRZEJ Legendary Polish film director, he is one of the most
prominent members of the Polish Film School. He has made around 42
films including Kanal, The Promised Land and The Maids Of Wilko,
among others. His latest Katyń, is screened at Berlinale ­ Palast out of
­Competition this year. (p.56)
WEINBREN, GRAHAME Experimental filmmaker, his documentaries and
experimental films and interactive cinema installations have been
screened at festivals, on television and in museums and cinemas. He is
the editor of the “Millennium Film Journal“, a journal of avant-garde
film, video and works in other image technologies, New York.
(p.26, 52, 64)
WEILER, LANCE Award-winning writer and director, he is recognised as
a pioneer for the way he makes and distributes his work. His first feature The Last Broadcast is currently distributed in over 20 countries. His
recent feature Head Trauma had its world premiere at the LA Film
­Festival in 2006. (p.57)
WILLIAMS, JANE Head of Industry office, Dubai International Film
F­ estival, Dubai Technology and Media Free Zone, she set up DIFF’s
­Industry Office in 2006. In 1998, she became the head of training at the
Maurits Binger Film Institute in Holland. She has also worked for the
Cinemart and Hubert Bals Fund at the International Film Festival
­Rotterdam, the Balkan Fund and the Thessaloniki International Film
Festival. (p.56)
WINGATE, DAVID Board member and a SOURCES 2 script advisor for feature and documentary projects, he is a consultant and dramatic
­advisor, script advisor and teacher in several European countries. As
dramatic advisor his credits include Fucking Åmål, Lucky People Centre
International and recently, Day Break and The Souvenirs Of Mr. X. (p.30)
z
ZACHAREK, STEPHANIE American film and music critic, she is a senior
writer and film critic for Salon.com. Her writing on books and pop
­culture has also appeared in “The New York Times“, the “Los Angeles
Times Book Review“, “Entertainment Weekly“ and “Sight and Sound“,
among others. She is a member of the National Society of Film ­Critics.
(p.28)
ZIMAN, RALPH Writer and director, he began his career as a news and
documentary cameraman in South Africa. He is one of the most sought
after directors of music videos and was awarded for his work with Faith
No More. His debut feature film Heart And Minds received worldwide
critical acclaim. His latest work Jerusalema features in the 2008 ­Berlinale
Panorama. (p.52)
74
b
Baigazin Emir Baldoza Ivy Rose Balulu Rafael Bass Jenna Bawardi Ossama Beak Natalie Behbahani Negar Bello Jide Benfaidoul Abdellatif
Benito Marie Benkhaldoun Houda
Berger Philip
Bernard Alessandro
Bichis Adelina Bihito Musafiri Biniadaki Nancy Blanchard Ira Block Juliane Bloom David Blum Sarah Bodmer Bianca Bonneville David Borowski Ewa Botkay Courcier Louise
Bougleux Alberto Boulifa Fyzal Boyle Amanda Brameshuber Sebastian
Brice Eteki Assoua Achille
Brog Tal Brugger Melanie Burduli Vano Butterbach Till Buzabo Consodyne
c
Çagdas Özgür Carroll James Ceacero Ruiz Carlos Cevasco López Paula
Mercedes
Ceylan Omer Chainani Soman Chakrabarti Suchandrika
Chan Ruth Cho Benjamin Chung Ted Clelland-Stokes Sacha
Coen Vincent Cole Graeme Collette Jean-Julien
Copikova Michaela
Costa Rui Counet Jean Crowe Ben Cruz Sergio Cziraki Gergely d
Daiyrbekov Aibek Daly Rebecca Darvas Csanad Davis Keith d‘Ayala Valva Sebastiano
de los Reyes Clarissa
Debeljuh Matija Dejaegher Koen Demouilpied Hutch des Forets Jean Diabang Brener Angele
Dickson Leach Hope
Dietrich Markus Dike Nonso Dinulescu Maria Djapo Adis Dolinsky Julieta Dymek Mateusz index of talents
350 young filmmakers and film creatives from all over the world come together
at the sixth Berlinale Talent Campus. Here they are, the Talents of 2008.
González Zaffaroni Luis
Green Kirsten Grolitsch Flora Grudziecki Bartosz Guerrero Rodrigo Gustafsson Elisabet
Gutiérrez Julia Sabina
h
Hajredini Driton Halls David Bradley
Hammou Sharon Hamzeh Koussay Harris Jonathan
Hasan Najaf Hayes Zara Hayford Victoria Hellsgård Carolina
Hentschel Anke Herrera Torres Gabriel
Hespanha Tiago Hexel Vasco Hirano Midori Ho Kok Tai Rich Hoai Nam Tran Hotz Julie i-J
Eder Kathrin Eglitis Didzis El Pasha Maged Esteban Alenda Cesar
Ewing Suzi Fallucchi Stephan Fay-Berquist Ria Ferdek Pawel
Flotron Alice Fortner Bryce Frank Michael Frank Alexander
g
Gandotra Rahul Gant Roberto Gelashvili Omar Gergely Zoltán Gerstein David Giappiconi Laure Ginel Rafael Gjokovik Marko Göltenboth Peter Gomez de Vargas Jose
Gonzales Erika González Ana Valeria
l
Laka Patience Lale David Lalovic Ivana Langis Anastassios
Lass Jakob Lassoued Anis Lavaquial André Leescu Catalin Lehmann Leonard Leite Ricardo Lesclaux Emilie Leskinen Miikka Lewicka Karolina
Liimatainen Kirsi Marie
Lin Chun-Ni Lindeen Marcus Lobo Frederico Lorenos Maria Kathrina
Lovas Balazs Luz Gonçalo Müller Franziska
Muñoz Alvaro Murata Katsura n
Ichim Ada-Maria
Iglesias Vigil Jose Enrique
Ikic Ivan Iregbu Chinedum
Ismailova Saodat Jaber Hicham Jacimovic Milos Jacques Bugingo James Paulette James-Larsson Lisa Javitch Arielle Jbawi Somar Joens Boris Jones Morris Ewan Jordan Yashira
K
Kambandu Malingose
Kang Juli Karim Othman Khazai Kash Khoury Firas Kim Kihyun Kim Kyoungmook
Klingler-Ioannides Kriton
Klüh Svenja Koblik Kedar Eran Korsgaard Lea The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
Rogers Chris Roth Chris Ruggiero Maria Laura
Ruiz Irina Ruszev Szilvia Trinidad Arvin Trocker Ronny Tur Moltó Jorge u
Najafi Sara Neal Kelly Neykova Svetla Ni Fhaolain Aine Niebe Rick Nikolaeva Asya Nilthamrong Jakrawal
Nkazi Muya Novak Yasmine Nuudi Kristjan-Jaak
o
Oberrainer Robert Olderdissen Hanno
Oleak Conrad Olszowska Martyna
Onel Melisa Orderson Kurt Orion Kai Osikoya Bolawole
Otero Javier Owusu Akosua Adoma
e-F
Kotecka Monika Kotian Nayantara
Kovacevic Nenad Krabs Melanie Kraljevic Eva Krynke Julia m
P
Mabrouk Emad Madhavan Manesh Madsen Sven Daniel Vinge
Magkanari Maria Malikov Isa Manjate Rogério Marcuson Emily Mardari Viorel Marron Kevin Martel Caroline Mason Bryan Mcgarrigle Darach Mckenzie Carey Minnix Tommy Moder Johanna Möller Beatrice Monestiez Julien Moore Lucy Mor Assaf Moreno Sabrina Moro Miriana Mósesdóttir Dögg Moussa Kaiser Mohamed
Moustakis Yiorgos Mtingwa Hamis Muchena Nyaradzo
Müller Dominique
Pavlovskaya Natalia
Pekun Didem Perez-Pabon Natalia
Petrovic Magdalena
Petrovic Dragan Philipson Stephen Piazza Antonio Pirveli Rusudan Piskorzynski Filip Pors Katrin Pullen Ben Pululu Makela Luyeye
Pykäläniemi Toni r
Rafei Rania Raghuram Alka Ramadan Mohamed
Rasheed Ahmed Rath Rachel Rattini Martin Reese Enno Relayze Chiang Jonatan
Richards Leigh Rijneke Ricky Rodriguez Gabino s
Sakova Martina
Salas Rodriguez Juan
Miguel
Saleh Omar Sandemo Sindre Sanner Lindsay Schettino Giuseppe
Schmitt Vincent Schmoller Ezequiel
Scott-Wilson Charlotte Sekulovic Nikoleta Sempi Tobia Shah Sonal Shaibu Husseini Shalaby Neveen Shekhar Mayank Shirazi Raha Sievers Rasmus Sikavica Miroslav
Silva Joana Slot Marleen Soudjian Khajag Stålskjær Osen Hilde
Stefanidou Erifili Stotz Eva Streiber Gregor Sumit Rezwan Shahriar
Susman Dan Syczynski Filip Sys Renée t
Tadic Marija Tanios Wassim Taurisia Meiske Tawengwa Patience Tayler James Taylor Nigel Teirlinck Nathalie Thandi Anthony
Tierney Sarah Titova Elena Tjipura Vivid Kapukirue
Tocinovski Kamka Todorov Nikolay Todorovic Dennis Toft Jacobsen Esben
Toledo Piza Tonacci Daniel
Tran Aline Trencsenyi Klara Uggadóttir Isold Uraiqat Isam Uricaru Ioana Url Vanessa v
Van Maele Govinda Vela Vargas Paola Vera Carlos Verdugo Gabriel Victoria January Vidrascu Diana Vidyarthi Jatin Vinevicius Justinas Vouaux-Massel Ugo
Vray Julien
W
Wagner Jan Walka Claire Wang Yumeng Wang Lillian Wang Chia Wei Wang Wei Jen Wee Derek Wernke Christine
Westin Jennifer Whitwham William Wilkinson Nick Wilson Christopher
Winstanley Chelsea
Wittock Zoé Wong Joyce
Y-Z
Yoko Breeze Vuyisa Yokoyama Shogo You Mi Zack Maya Zafari Mohammad Mehdi
Zaggia Valentina
Zagorchinov Dian Zaraket Ali Zimrani Makafui Zoka Negar 75
epilogue stay tuned
our sincere thanks to:
ALFRED HERRHAUSEN SOCIETY
Wolfgang Nowak, Ute Weiland and
Jessica Barthel.
ARRI Fritz Sammer.
ARTE Hans-Robert ­Eisenhauer,
Kathrin Brinkmann.
It was an exciting year for the Campus – and a thoroughly
“emotional“ process – getting ready to welcome 350 Talents
and more than 100 experts in Berlin. This year’s focus centres
on emotions as cinema’s finest asset – and we sincerely hope
that everyone joining us at the sixth edition will experience
some of those special moments which touch the heart: maybe while listening to a persona in the limelight whose films
you’ve always admired or maybe as you figure out the “missing link“ in the puzzle of putting together your next project
or when you happen to meet a new soul mate with whom
you decide to stay in touch or on learning something from
somebody that truly encourages and inspires you. After all,
filmmaking is a highly emotional process, which is probably
why so many people are attracted to the world of cinema at
a professional level. This despite the fact that emotions in
this business are sometimes hard to bear as everyone involved is well aware. Usually, an emotional upheaval results
when reality strikes the dream factory and forces film professionals to overcome obstacles of versatile shades and shapes.
Hopefully, the Campus will provide you with some useful
pro­fessional tools in dealing with the difficult aspects of
­filmmaking.
Entering its sixth year, the Campus is in the very happy phase
of seeing the fruits of its labour taking shape in a way and
at a pace we hadn’t anticipated. A sizeable number of for­mer
participants are returning to the Berlinale; their films now
part of the festival program – selected by independent ­juries.
Many more former participants keep us updated on their
film projects and a whole array of community activities
­ xisting and functioning independently in all corners of the
e
world. We cherish this networking; it makes us proud and is
our source of inspiration and motivation to develop the
Campus and its through-the-year activities even further. The
recent relaunch of our website was our main contribution to
this growing community.
The Campus #6 marks the beginning of an experiment to
­develop a professional platform on our website, and this
needs your input and feedback in order to become – hopefully within the one year construction period – a full-fletched
virtual Campus with major opportunities waiting to be
­discovered by young filmmakers, to find team members in
exciting new ventures or to get projects into the next stage
of production, and to promote your finished films inter­­n­ationally.
We hope you will enjoy your stay at the Campus so much,
that you’ll stay tuned long after Berlin.
AUSWÄRTIGES AMT (FEDERAL FOREIGN OFFICE)
Dr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Dr. Andreas
Görgen, Martin er, Ludwig Linden,
Harald Schindler and Michael Kröner.
AVID Technology
Michael Dalock-Schmidt and Veronika Lode.
BACCOS Lars and Ante.
BERLINER PILSNER Bettina Pöttken,
Harro Fischer and Dirk Streich.
BOXFISH FILMS
Christiane Steiner, Philipp Graf, Karen
Rudolph, Kathrin Wirth, Kerstin Heckenrath,
Andrea Ruhl and Ricarda Disla.
Dr. Bernd Pirrung.
SOFIA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
GOETHE-INSTITUT MANILA Richard Künzel.
GAHRENS & BATTERMANN Michael Kugel.
GEROLSTEINER
Stefan ­Kitanov, Mira Staleva.
SOURCES 2 Renate and Marion Gompper.
Stefan Göbel and Karsten Hoffmann.
GOROL & PARTNER Stephan Gorol,
Anne Reckmann and Leonie Würfel.
Sonja Heinen and Dr. Kathi Bildhauer.
TALENT PROJECT MARKET
TOP-IX
HEINRICH BÖLL FOUNDATION
Torino e Piemonte Internet Exchange
Silvano Giorelli.
Barbara Unmüßig, Peter Siller,
Jan Engelmann, Simone Schmollack,
Monica Reddig and Angelika Wieland.
Susanne Franke, Birgit Raabe, Nikola Fölster.
TYPE FACE Anja Joos.
THEATERKUNST
HEBBEL AM UFER (HAU 1-3)
U.S. EMBASSY BERLIN
Matthias Lilienthal, Sonja Hildebrandt,
Elisabeth Knauf, Kirsten Hehmeyer,
Matthias Schäfer and the entire HAU team
for their cool location.
Peter Claussen and Wolfgang Brandt.
VITA VERDE Philip Friedberg.
VOLKSWAGEN Stephan Grühsem, Heike Lichte,
Christiane Krebs-Hartmann, Maren Weißner,
Wolfgang Müller-Pietralla and Marco Kentsch.
HFF – ACADEMY FOR TV AND FILM
“KONRAD WOLF“ Prof. Dieter Wiedemann,
Paul Howson, Gil Satwant and Elke Ritt.
CANON Bettina Steeger.
Prof. Martin Steyer, Prof. Lothar Holler
and Holger Lochau.
Matthias Behrens.
DEUTSCHE WEINE
HOGAN HARTSON RAUE BERLIN
Monika Reule and Thomas Klaas.
DEUTSCHE WELLE Rainer Traube, Melanie
Matthäus, Bettina Kolb, Fred Oelschlegel
and the DEUTSCHE WELLE Trainees.
Prof. Peter Raue and Dr. Mareile Büscher.
Jens Rietdorf and Robert Wagner.
HOUSE OF WORLD CULTURES
Dr. Bernd Scherer, Shaheen Merali
and Doris Hegner.
DEUTSCHES FILMORCHESTER BABELSBERG
HUGO BOSS
Klaus-Peter Beyer and the musicians.
Philipp Wolff and Claudia Schmidt.
Dr. Rainer Rother and Christa Schahbaz.
DOLBY Hubert Henle and Julian Pinn.
EON SCREENWRITERS’ WORKSHOP
Alby James, David G. Wilson and
Selina Ukwuoma.
EUROPEAN FILM ACADEMY
Marion Döring, Bettina Schwarz and
Pascal Edelmann.
EUROMED AUDIOVISUAL II PROGRAMME
Safaa Kaddoui, Catherine Buresi and
Milojka Saule.
EUROPEAN FILM MARKET
Beki Probst, Karen Arikian, Wolfram Lutz,
Michael Hinz and Sydney Levine.
EUROPEAN FILM PROMOTION
Renate Rose and Karin Dix.
ewerk
Katrin Behrens, Katajun Fakhoury.
ifs internationale filmschule köln
Simone ­Stewens, Alexandra Ohlsen
and Miriam Edinger.
LONDON FILM SCHOOL Ben Gibson.
MANFRED DURNIOK FOUNDATION
Michiko Teramoto.
MEDIA TRAINING PROGRAMME
OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
Aviva Silver, Costas Daskalakis,
Arnaud Pasquali and Pauline David. ­
MEDIENBOARD BERLIN-BRANDENBURG
Kirsten Niehuus, Petra Maria Müller
and Rangeen Horami.
MoMA THE MUSEUM OF ­MODERN ART
NEW YORK Rajendra Roy.
NIPKOW PROGRAMME Uta Ganschow.
L‘Oréal Paris Heike Leder.
PAKT / g rafische gestaltung
Sonja Jobs and Sylvia Böhm.
ROBERT BOSCH stiftung Frank Albers.
FFA – GERMAN FEDERAL FILM BOARD
SCRIPT HOUSE BERLIN
Peter Dinges and Katja ­Jochum.
FIPRESCI Klaus Eder.
Franz Rodenkirchen and Jürgen Seidler.
FRENCH EMBASSY
Mirsad Purivatra and Emina Ganic.
Jean d‘Haussonville, Anne Tallineau,
Carole Lunt and Eliane Herment.
GOETHE-INSTITUT Prof. Dr. Jutta Limbach,
Dr. Hans-Georg Knopp and
Detlef Gericke-Schönhagen.
76
SPECIAL THANKS TO
Peter Cowie, Liz Rosenthal and Mark LeFanu.
BRITISH COUNCIL
DEUTSCHE KINEMATHEK –
MUSEUM FÜR FILM UND FERNSEHEN
Dorothee Wenner,
Director Berlinale Talent Campus
GOETHE-INSTITUT CARACAS Nikolai Petersen.
GOETHE-INSTITUT JOHANNESBURG
The Berlinale Talent Campus #6
SARAJEVO FILM FESTIVAL
SERVE-U
Phillip Sünderhauf and Andreas Buchholz.
SKILLSET
Janine Marmot, Dan Simmons, Emily Bullock,
Claire Doughty and Sandy ­Lieberson.
WAVE-LINE
20SEC.NET
KBB – KULTURVERANSTALTUNGEN DES BUNDES
IN BERLIN GMBH
Dr. Thomas Köstlin, Charlotte Sieben,
Johannes Emig, Marianne Bialek,
Susanne Grünberg, Petra Hemprich and
Stefan Martin. ­
BERLIN INTERNATIONAL FILMFESTIVAL
Our colleagues at the Berlin International Film
Festival: ­Johanna Muth, Karin Hoffinger &
Daniela Weber, Bernadette Kamp, Hendrike
Schwarze & Juliane Grieb. Johannes Wachs
and Wolfgang Janßen for… Everything!
Anne Gebhardt, Sabine Kaszemeik, Kerstin
Iskra and Eva Simhart for beeing the good
fairies. The section heads Alfred Holig­haus,
­Christoph Terhechte, Maike Mia Höhne,
Thomas Hailer and Wieland Speck and their
teams. Vincenzo Bugno. Dagmar Forelle,
Jolanda Darbyshire, Kathrin Schafroth,
Alex Steffen and Tim Gutzeit for handling our
industry sponsors. Markus Hönle, Gunnar
Gilgen and Irena Akopjan; Dominique Green,
Alexis Grivas and Nikolaj Nikitin for strategic
expert approach; Anne Marburger, Melanie
Hanschur and Sabine Buske for the good
communication, Frauke Greiner for being
with us at even odd hours; Rainer Chemnitius.
For support and advice: Ulrich and Erika
Gregor. And: Dieter Kosslick!
CAMPUS TEAM 2008 ­
Andrea, Anna, Christina, Christine, Debora,
Ivana, Jana, Janne, ­Johanna, Kathi, Lira, Maria,
Marcie, Marcus, Marjorie, Maya, Melanie,
Merle, Oli, Rubaica, Suse and Stefan.
77
team and imprint
berlinale talent campus 2008
Imprint
Director Event Agency Dorothee Wenner
Gorol & Partner – Stephan Gorol,
Anne Reckmann, Leonie Würfel
Finance & Administration Manager IT Project Management
Christine Tröstrum
Circulation 5.000
Cartography Runze & Casper, Berlin
Andrea Rieder
IT Technology
Programme Support
serve-u – Phillip Sünderhauf,
Andreas Buchholz
Photography Berlin International
Film Festival, David von Becker, Peter
Himsel, Alexander Janetzko, mai.foto –
Ute Langkafel, Filmarchiv Schnitt Verlag,
Köln, and all cooperation partners,
distributors, film productions
Melanie Sevcenko
Cover Design Assistant Finance & Administration Antonia Neubacher
Christina Janitz
Graphic Design
Assistant Sponsorship Anna Schnabel
Talent Administration Pakt, Sonja Jobs
Design Antonia Neubacher (Cover Design),
Pakt, Sonja Jobs
Consultants Print office Conrad GmbH
Peter Cowie, Sandy Lieberson
Marjorie Bendeck, Lira Lousinha,
Maria Casas, Johanna Baier,
Marcus Forchner
the berlin international film festival
Director Dieter Kosslick
Selection Commitee Marjorie Bendeck, Ivana Ivišić,
Marcie Jost, Stefan Pethke
Festival Manager
Johannes Wachs
Hands-on-training Head of Sponsorship
Marcie Jost, Janne von Busse
(Volkswagen Score Competition),
Liz Rosenthal, Debora Neumann,
Susanne Mann (Garage Studio),
Merle Kröger (Doc & Script Station),
Dr. Kathi Bildhauer, Sonja Heinen
(Talent Project Market),
Oliver Baumgarten, Rubaica Jaliwala
(The Talent Press),
Christiane Steiner, Maria Casas
(Berlin Today Award)
Dagmar Forelle
In cooperation with
Editorial Office Oliver Baumgarten,
Rubaica Jaliwala, Dorothee Wenner
20sec.net – Jens Rietdorf
Programme Assistant The Berlinale Talent Campus wishes to thank its partners
Co-Partner
Publisher
Berlin International Film Festival
Berlinale Talent Campus
Potsdamer Straße 5, 10785 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 25 92 05 15
Fax: +49 30 25 92 05 19
Email: [email protected]
www.berlinale-talentcampus.de
Supporter
an initiative of the Berlin International Film Festival,
a business division of the Kulturveranstaltungen
des Bundes in Berlin GmbH.
Guest Manager Jana Daedelow, Ivana Ivišić
Online Editor Marcus Forchner
Magazine Editors
Rubaica Jaliwala, Oliver Baumgarten
Press Coordinator boxfish films – Christiane Steiner,
Philipp Graf, Kathrin Wirth
78
The Berlinale Talent Campus Team 2008 (from left to right) – In the Back: Debora Neumann, Maria Casas,
Lira Lousinha, Christiane Steiner, Melanie Sevcenko, Kathi Bildhauer, Jana Daedelow, Marcie Jost.
Middle Row: Katja Mathan, Christine Tröstrum, Dorothee Wenner, Andrea Rieder, Marcus Forchner,
Marjorie Bendeck, Rubaica Jaliwala. Front Row: Stephan Pethke, Johanna Baier, Christina Janitz,
Ivana Ivišić, Kathrin Wirth.
The Berlinale Talent Campus is an initiative of the Berlin International Film Festival, a business division
of the Kulturveranstaltungen des Bundes in Berlin GmbH, in cooperation with MEDIA – Training programme
of the European Union, Auswärtiges Amt, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, Skillset and UK Film Council
and Volkswagen.