Organisers reveal Berlin Film Festival line-up

Nineteen films are competing for the top prize

Festival will run from February 13 to 23. Photo: Reuters

BERLIN:

Richard Linklater's new feature about a Broadway composer, a documentary about young people in war-torn Ukraine and a homage to 1960s' spy films were among the films unveiled on Tuesday as part of the 2025 Berlin Film Festival's competition line-up.

"This is a major A-list festival with a thriving market," said new festival director Tricia Tuttle, with guests from more than 150 countries coming to the 75th edition of the festival.

The 19 films in contention for the festival's Golden Bear top prize feature several directors making their return to the German capital, including Romania's Radu Jude, with his new dark comedy Kontinental '25, and South Korea's Hong Sang-soo with his languorous family comedy What Does that Nature Say to You.

Linklater, the US director known for Before Sunrise, makes a buzzy return to the festival after more than a decade with Blue Moon, about composer Lorenz Hart – the other half of famous songwriting team Rodgers and Hart – with an all-star cast including Ethan Hawke, Margaret Qualley and Andrew Scott.

Reflection in a Dead Diamond is Belgium-based duo Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani's maximalist spy feature, while Dreams stars Jessica Chastain as an heiress who falls in love with a Mexican ballet dancer, and If I Had Legs I'd Kick You about a child's mysterious illness features Rose Byrne along with late-show TV host Conan O'Brien and rapper A$AP Rocky.

Timestamp is Kateryna Gornostai's observational documentary about life in Ukraine after Russia's 2022 invasion marks one of the more overtly political entries this year.

The Berlin Film Festival, which this year runs from February 13 to 23, is considered more political than its peers – Cannes, Venice, Sundance and Toronto.

"We do not shy away from this. It's arguably in the DNA of the city itself and also in the festival itself," US-born Tuttle told reporters.

The festival ends on the day of Germany's national election, though Tuttle said it does not plan to mark the event in any way other than encouraging people to vote.

Outside the competition, Oscar-winning Parasite director Bong Joon-ho's sci-fi Mickey 17 with Robert Pattison will have its German premiere during the festival, as will James Mangold's Bob Dylan biopic with Timothée Chalamet in A Complete Unknown.

US director Todd Haynes heads the international jury that will award this year's top prize. Run Lola Run director Tom Tykwer's new film The Light will open the festival. Reuters

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