By Elizabeth Fennessy
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Film talisman Robert Altman once said, ‘Filmmaking is a chance to live many lifetimes’. Film festivals transport their visitors across a plane of hundreds of different lifetimes and interwoven stories; dragging them through countless emotions. The Berlin International Film Festival does exactly this every year.

One of the largest and most prestigious in the world, The Berlin International Film Festival, also often known as Berlinale, is held in Berlin each year. The star-studded festival is considered one of the ‘Big Three’, sitting prettily beside Venice Film Festival and Cannes Film Festival. Berlinale’s public attendance is the largest of any film festival in the world, with around 300,000 tickets sold and half a million admissions every year from all over the world. Many of these are celebrities and A-listers who walk the red carpets of the event. About 400 films are shown across nearly one thousand screenings over the 10-day immersive experience. Of these, 20 compete for the festival’s most esteemed awards: the Golden Bear (Goldener Bär) and a number of just as important Silver Bears (Silberner Bärs).

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"The Berlin International Film Festival’s diverse programme offers something for every attendee, inviting them to come face-to-face with unexplored milieus and attitudes, to reignite their desire to become lost in the realm between traditional narrative structures and remarkable aesthetics."

The Berlin International Film Festival was the brainwave of US military film officer based in Berlin after World War Two. In the 1950s, Oscar Martay formed a committee of members of the Berlin Senate and the German film industry. The group began to lay the groundwork for the festival, “a showcase of the free world”. The first was held in 1951, which culminated in Martay winning a Golden Bear for his realisation of Berlinale. Since its beginning, the festival has expanded to become the global phenomenon it is today.

Special Screenings and Alluring Presentations

Above all, the festival is a playground for cinephiles, a space for creative exploration and expression, for entertainment and enthralment. Its programme presents a unique spectrum of screenings and special presentations. Attendees are able to experience different cinematic genres, lengths and formats across many venues. Generation, boasts an array of films from and for younger cineastes. Meanwhile, Encounters is an alluring presentation of more daring works, both aesthetically and structurally, and is the festival’s most popular. The Berlin International Film Festival’s diverse programme offers something for every attendee, inviting them to come face-to-face with unexplored milieus and attitudes, to reignite their desire to become lost in the realm between traditional narrative structures and remarkable aesthetics.

The Star-Studded Berlinale Special Gala

The festival’s most prestigious slot, however, is the Berlinale Special Gala, comprised this year of 15 films from 12 different countries, 6 of which are documentaries and 9 feature films. Of the total 15 films, 12 are world premieres, thus offering attendees exclusive screenings before the rest of the world. The Special Gala features films intended for the widest public audience and is accompanied by filmmakers and their star-studded casts. Previous years have seen appearances from the likes of Helen Mirren and George Clooney. Among the celebrity attendees this year were Nick Cave and Emma Thompson. The Special Gala is held at the festival’s largest, grandest venue – the Friedrichstadt-Palast in the centre of Berlin.

The Friedrichstadt Palace

Of course, Berlinale’s predominant attraction is its diverse array of films. However, there are certainly other features to behold, to be enjoyed by the festival’s more casual film fans and affluent travellers. One of these is the Friedrichstadt-Palast itself. The awe-inspiring venue which welcomes star-studded audiences and also hosts the festival’s exclusive world premieres is the largest and most modern show palace in Europe. The venue exhibits a sleek, art-deco exterior. Its ivory-coloured stone walls and steps elevate the glamour of the Special Gala. The interior is no different. The palace’s high ceilings and towering pillars make it both a fitting space for the Gala and also a special attraction for Berlinale’s more luxury visitors.

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"Above all, the festival is a playground for cinephiles, a space for creative exploration and expression, for entertainment and enthralment."

The Berlin International Film Festival offers a unique space for both the film fan and luxury traveller for the exploration of new cultures, of undiscovered attitudes and universes through hundreds of different lenses. Berlinale brings its visitors pleasing aesthetics, moving narratives, celebrity appearances and grand architecture all in the span of ten days. As the largest in the world, The Berlin International Film Festival exudes a prestige that makes it an unforgettable experience. The 73rd annual festival will be held next year in February.

Elizabeth Fennessy

Elizabeth is a London-based travel writer whose affinity with the hustle and bustle of city life has taken her to various European hotspots such as Berlin, Edinburgh, Madrid and Barcelona. Elizabeth is interested particularly in the arts, sustainability and fine dining experiences, which she strives to share with her readers.