Berlinale
I Lost My Brother to an Ultra-Conservative Religious Order
Director Zita Effra's debut documentary tells the story of how her brother joined the Legion of Christ.
A New Documentary About African Refugees Was Filmed by a Refugee as He Fled to Europe
By giving an African refugee a camera, two filmmakers hoped to gain insight into the life of migrants from the perspective of migrants themselves. The result is the remarkable "Those Who Jump."
Bad Servants: Benoît Jacquot’s 'Diary of a Chambermaid' and a Critic’s Berlinale
Jacquot's film is compulsively watchable, refreshingly unsexy, and successful in its patchwork depiction of its protagonist's prison-like existence.
Here's Some of the Best Stuff I Saw at This Year's Berlinale
Including Pablo Larraín's El Club, Alex Ross Perry's Queen of Earth, and Sebastian Silva's Nasty Baby.
Scenery Seeks Movie: Herzog's 'Queen of the Desert' at the Berlinale
Werner Herzog has enacted the absurd over half a century of art and life—what can self-parody mean to him?
Jafar Panahi's Tehran Selfie: 'Taxi' Arrives at the Berlinale
The Iranian director's latest experimental feature, filmed in secret and smuggled out of his home country, is one of the Berlinale's most highly anticipated premieres.