Tag Archives: Teddy Award 2020

TEDDY TODAY: Saturday the 22nd of February 2020

As the third day of the Berlinale is slowly approaching with more insightful events and screenings, we have prepared for you another selection of films that will be screened today all around Berlin.
Also, in case you missed any of the screenings we announced the other two days, you can find the re-screenings (with their location as well as times) at the end of this list.

Have fun creating your very own watchlist!

MINYAN
Cubix 7 – 15:30

Directed by: Eric Steel
Short Description: New York in the 1980s. Seventeen-year-old David, who is tentatively beginning to express his homosexuality in the East Village gay scene, gradually starts to question the strict rules of his Jewish community.

WHO CAN PREDICT WHAT WILL MOVE YOU
CinemaxX 3 – 15:30

Who-Can-Predict-What-Will-Move-You © Jack Davis

Directed by: Livia Huang
Short Description: “Nervous?” – “A little.” Two young men shooting hoops somewhere in Brooklyn. In the gradually gathering dusk, their shadows dance, entwined, to the cadence of basketball meeting pavement. Farewell is in the air. Emotions emerge to the surface. Tentatively, gently, director Livia Huang’s densely atmospheric film tells of desire and intimacy through gazes and gestures. What is memory, what is perhaps merely a dream? Or is everything dance in the end?

PARIS CALLIGRAMMES
Haus der Berliner Festspiele – 16:15

Directed by: Ulrike Ottinger
Short Description: From a topographic perspective, Ulrike Ottinger’s cinema is mostly located between Berlin and remote places in the Far East or the Far North. In Paris Calligrammes, she explores the landscape of her memories of the city that she called home for 20 years and that helped shape her beginnings as a painter and filmmaker. Nonetheless, the film maintains its intimate stance throughout, assembling a rich and emotionally charged repertoire of film clips, news reports, photos and songs with the same meticulous affection that people used to stick newspaper clippings and photos in a diary so they could write around them.

THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Delphi Filmpalast – 16:30

The-Twentieth-Century © Voyelles Films

Directed by: Matthew Rankin
Short Description: Toronto, 1899. The young William Lyon Mackenzie King is running for the office of prime minister. The satirical and anarchic fantasy biopic The Twentieth Century explores the tribulations of the young politician, who would go on to become a long-serving prime minister of Canada. Serious Oedipal conflicts, an obsession with worn shoes and anti-masturbation therapies make it difficult for the young Mackenzie King to pursue his calling. Driven on by his authoritarian mother, he stumbles through a claustrophobic world in the grip of a bitter winter in search of love.

PETITE FILLE
CinemaxX 3 – 19:00

Directed by: Sébastien Lifshitz
Short Description: When she grows up, she will be a girl. This is something Sasha has dreamed of since childhood. Her family soon realises how serious she is. In addition to interviews with the parents, who acknowledge their daughter as such without hesitation, the film depicts the family’s tireless struggle against a hostile environment as well as their everyday lives. We see Sasha at play, practising ballet and during a visit to a therapist specialising in gender identities. At school, Sasha is not allowed to appear as a girl but must wear gender-specific boys’ clothes.

VIL, MÁ
Kino Arsenal 1 – 20:00

Directed by: Gustavo Vinagre
Short Description: A drawing room with salmon-coloured walls, tapestries, busts, house plants, a dressmaker’s dummy. In a velvet armchair with gold trim sits Wilma Azevedo, 74, Brazil’s “queen of sadomasochistic literature”. She is asked by the director to tell the story of her life, which quickly branches out into a series of detailed erotic anecdotes involving green bananas, dildos made of sandpaper and over-stimulated nerves. In static shots of a moving figure, a still life of passions retold comes into focus.

AUTOMOTIVE
CinemaxX 1 – 20:30

Directed by: Jonas Heldt
Short Description: In Ingolstadt, 20-year-old Sedanur spends her nights sorting car parts on the assembly line for the robots. Times are tough because Audi is about to cut a tenth of its workforce. Sedanur has no desire to find a husband and have children. She dreams of driving her own Mercedes one day. But when the diesel crisis kicks in, she is one of the first to be let go. At the same time, 33-year old Eva, a headhunter working for Audi, is looking for experts to automate some of their logistics. Eva knows that one day, even her own job will be replaced by algorithms. Two very different representatives of a generation in which, sooner or later, everyone will be replaceable, and for whom work as the basis of life is neither a certainty nor necessarily a source of identity.

LA CASA DELL’AMORE
Delphi Filmpalast – 21:30

The-House-of-Love © Effendemfilm and Lab 80 film

Directed by: Luca Ferri
Short Description: Throughout its 77 minutes, the film never once leaves the small Milan apartment of Bianca Dolce Miele. “I’m always here, any time,” she promises her clients in a deep, throaty voice. “Give me half an hour to put on something sexy for you.” Bianca’s appearances in this film are self-determined and withstand any kind of normative gaze. The punters and friends who come calling each bring their own understanding of Bianca and the role of her profession: one quotes from the Bible, another sings a murder ballad, a third sets up a pristine white table upon her ambiguously gendered body, from which he eats tinned meat.

SI C’ÉTAIT DE L’AMOUR
Zoo Palast 2 – 22:00

Directed by: Patric Chiha
Short Description: The film about Gisèle Vienne’s dance piece “Crowd” is a techno party gone rave, awash with repetitive movements, physical and emotional encounters between fifteen bodies charged with sexual energy. Through staged one-on-one conversations between the performers, we learn about the background story of their characters. In this way, the characters in the choreography become the characters of the film: there is a trans* boy, a “Nazi” boy that desires a gay boy, a girl attracted to troubled people and a woman who exudes raw sexuality.

TEDDY TODAY: Thursday the 20th of February 2020

Following in the footsteps of last year’s Teddy Award, we are going to create a blog article for each day of the Berlinale in order to keep you up to date with our Teddy films, where they will be screened as well as screening dates and times.

Starting from today, we will give you a little insight into all the queer movies of the 70th Berlinale.

Since the articles’ main purpose will be to inform you of all the queer films in the festival, don’t forget to also keep an eye on our social media channels because we’ve got more events coming up soon! Enough with the talking now. Here’s the first film of today’s article:

LAS MIL Y UNA

English translation: One in a Thousand
Directed by: Clarisa Navas
Short description: Iris is 17 and takes each day as it comes. When she meets the cool Renata, her life changes abruptly. While her friends explore their sexuality, Iris finds herself faced with new emotions and noisy rumours.

 

TEDDY BAR

We’re thrilled to announce our very own TEDDY BAR! During this year’s Berlinale you can visit us at Potsdamer Platz to grab a snack (or two), quench your thirst and maybe meet some new people inbetween screenings and events.

TEDDY invites everybody to visit our new bar – stop by for delicious snacks, great coffee and tasty drinks in a cosy and relaxing atmosphere at Sony Center, one of Berlin’s biggest hot spots! Vegan and vegetarian options available. The TEDDY BAR opens on February 17th – mark your calendars!

Open daily from 12pm!

Send your requests for reservations to bar@teddyaward.org

TEDDY BAR Bellevuestr. 1 , 10785 Berlin
TEDDY BAR Bellevuestr. 1 , 10785 Berlin

ANNIE HEGER

Annie Heger is the host of the 34th TEDDY AWARD ceremony.

She is a NDR columnist, comedian, 100% human-activist, literature award winner, singer, the loudest Liza in the north and a bird of paradise among the Nordic seagulls. Annie hosts country-wide festivals, Prides and panel discussions, she sings and fights loudly, dances wildly and can party just as much as she can be political. She knows how to celebrate with us and how to challenge us.

Save your ticket now: https://bit.ly/2U0mPr0

Foto: Linn Marx

TEDDY 2020: THE JURY


We are very happy to announce and introduce to you the Jury of the 34th TEDDY AWARD, which will be awarded on February 28th in the VOLKSBÜHNE BERLIN!

Cristian Rodríguez (Santander, Spain, 1981) is a Journalist, holds a Masters in Comparative Literature Studies and was also trained in Film Editing. He has always focused on communication and cultural production related areas: for six years he was in charge of Grupo Sinnamon’s Contents Department (Barcelona), having also worked with clients such as Desigual (in Paris), festivals like Walk & Talk and Panazorean IFF (on Azores Islands), magazines (as a music critic for Playground, Rockdelux) and filmmakers like Zoraida Roselló. He currently lives and works in Lisbon, where he is programmer and director of Queer Lisboa and Queer Porto – International Queer Film Festivals since 2015.

Interview with Cristian Rodríguez

Sylva Häutle creates visibility for queer alternative lifestyles as director and curator of the QFFM Queer Film Festival Munich. Since its founding in 2015, she has directed the festival and made the QFFM a permanent institutional part of the Munich festival landscape. In 2011 she completed her studies of Social and Cultural Anthropology with a focus on Visual Anthropology at the LMU Munich. As a queer feminist political activist, she brings different groups together, forges networks and alliances, and creates cultural spaces for queer life and desire in Munich. In 2019, she was the first openly pansexual person to speak at the IDAHOBIT demo in Munich, is a board member of QueerCulture e.V. and a founding member of the queer network muQ*, whose goal is to break down the boundaries within the LGBTIQ+ scene. She does not own a single houseplant.

Interview with Sylva Häutle

Nataleah Hunter-Young is a film programmer and PhD candidate in Communication and Culture at Ryerson and York Universities in Canada. She has supported festival programming for theToronto International Film Festival, the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, and the Durban International Film Festival in South Africa. You can find recent writing by Nataleah with Xtra, Canadian Art Magazine, the Gardiner Museum, and issue 58 of PUBLIC: Arts| Culture | Ideas for which she also served as co-editor. She was born and raised in community.

Interview with Nataleah Hunter-Young

Ksenia Ilina is a film critic and curator based in Russia. She has an MA in Film Theory and Art Criticism from St Petersburg State University. In her graduation thesis, she focused on the history of the cult film phenomenon through its queer component. Since 2015, she has worked as a film critic for
several film portals and magazines in Russia. At the same time, as a film journalist she closely collaborates with a Russian LGBT film festival Side by Side. Ksenia is also a creator and curator of the Invisible Film Festival based in St Petersburg, specializing in different forms of videoart and queer
films.

Interview with Ksenia Ilina

Heitor Augusto works as a freelance programmer, film critic,
lecturer and translator and is based in Sao Paulo, Brazil. He curated the retrospective Black Brazilian Cinema: Episodes of a Fragmented History (Belo Horizonte Short Film Festival) and has programmed for Festival de Brasília, Tomie Ohtake (a leading museum for contemporary art), among other festivals, retrospectives and film clubs. He’s the head programmer for NICHO 54, institute of which he is a co-founder, working for the promotion of film education to underrepresented segments of the Brazilian population. With more than a decade of experience in the film industry, his writing has been published in different outlets and he has used his experience in the field to hold workshops in critical writing. For the last six years he has also lectured on underrepresented events and players in the history of cinema. Through this his work has helped to uncover systemic invisibilization perpetuated by traditional approaches of film history, providing healing to historically shattered subjectivities, as well as being an integral part of forging his own identity. His recent curatorial projects have been focusing on experimental and queer expressions in Black film, as well as connecting the experiences from the African Diaspora.

Interview with Heitor Augusto

Gao Yitian is a producer, senior film programmer and operation director at FIRST International Film Festival. He joined FIRST since the year of 2013. Over the past years, he has partnered with many young Chinese talents and played an active role in the production of many award-winning Chinese language films, including TASTE OF BETEL NUT (dir. HU Jia, 2017), WRATH OF SILENCE (dir. XIN Yukun, 2017), ENIGMA OF ARRIVAL (dir. SONG Wen, 2018) and AN ELEPHANT SITTING STILL (dir. HU Bo, 2018), which have been enthusiastically acclaimed by domestic and international audiences.

Chris Belloni (1980) is a documentary filmmaker, producer and director of the International Queer & Migrant Film Festival Amsterdam, which he initiated in 2015. His debut film I am gay and Muslim screened at film festivals worldwide. In 2018, he initiated LGBT & arts related projects in Azerbaijan and in the Western Balkans region. His most recent film Up
Close & Personal: LGBT Police was released in 2019. In 2020 he will launch a multiple year project on activism and human rights in the Caribbean region. Recently, he was juror at Oslo/Fusion Festival, Festival Internacional de Cine sobre Diversidad Sexual y de Género del Uruguay and PriFest Prishtina International Film Festival. Also, Chris Belloni is nominated for most influential Amsterdammer of the Year 2020, an award for a person who did
something remarkable for the city of Amsterdam.

Interview with Chris Belloni