dc.contributor.author
Ullmann, Viktor
dc.date.accessioned
2024-07-02T07:15:15Z
dc.date.available
2024-07-02T07:15:15Z
dc.identifier.uri
https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/43922
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-43632
dc.description.abstract
This dissertation is concerned with the representation of Iranian films
and filmmakers at the Berlinale during the Dieter Kosslick’s tenure as festival
director (2001–2019). Since this representation unfolded not only on the silver
screen, but especially on the various stages of the festival, from the red carpet
to the press conference to the awards ceremony, my analysis is dedicated to the
performative dimension of the phenomenon. Given the methodological
approach of theater studies that enhances my background in Islamic Studies, I
consequently examine the staging of Iranian cinema at the Berlinale.
To comprehend the genealogy of these festival stages and work out a
regarding methodological framework, I initially address the phenomenon of
late 19th century world exhibitions, from which the film festival format evolved
in the 1930s. Here, crucial elements of cultural representation at urban mass
events were established, from the form of the national competition crowned by
the host to the exhibition of the non-West and the exotic at separate colonial
exhibitions. Since the performances of the Berlinale take place in the scenery
of Berlin, a look into the recent history and the character of the city is also
necessary. Taking cue from Martina Löw’s proposal to examine cities in terms
of their specific “inherent logic,” my dissertation subsequently addresses the
trope of the divided city. Soon after the war, West Berlin was framed as a
beacon of liberalism through spectacularly staged efforts like the Berlin Airlift
of 1948/49. The origin of the Berlinale, which in 1951 was founded as a
“Schaufenster der Freien Welt” (Showcase of the Free World), is to be
understood in this context, too. In later years, the Berlinale established itself as
an explicitly political festival and a “bridge between East and West,” which in
the 1980s started an effort to showcase East German and the wider East Bloc
cinema.
Many of these representational traditions and visual tropes, the
genealogy of which I trace in the first half of my work, impacted the staging of
Iranian films and filmmakers at the Berlinale from 2006 onwards. Iranian
cinema’s wave of success at international film festivals had already ebbed down
in the late 1990s, but under the new festival director Dieter Kosslick, the
Berlinale began to invite films from the Islamic Republic extensively in the
2000s to offer its stages to the filmmakers, which were framed as restricted and
repressed. The paradigms of censorship, repression, and rebellion, which
impacted the presentation and reading of these films from the beginning, were
seamlessly embedded into the brand of the “political festival” as well as into
Kosslick’s understanding of the political as a spectacular counterweight to
entertainment and glamour.
The most emblematic case of the festival’s branding as a platform for the
cinematic rebellion of Iranian filmmakers is Jafar Panahi, with whom the last
two chapters of my dissertation are concerned. After the director was convicted
to a 20-year occupational ban and a prohibition to travel to foreign film
festivals in 2010, he emerged as the poster boy of political cinema at the
Berlinale. In 2011, the festival invited him into the international jury and
dedicated large parts of its 61st edition to the absent and allegedly imprisoned
filmmaker. Two years later, this performance evolved onto the silver screen,
when his film Pardeh (Closed Curtain) was shown in the festival competition.
While this cinematic therapy session presented Panahi as a depressive and
restricted filmmaker, he returned in good sprits in 2015. In his film Taxi, he
can be seen as a witty rebel who is back behind the driving wheel and in
control of his creative process, breaking his chains with the help of the
Berlinale live in front of the audiences.
Given the myth of the suffering and isolated city of Berlin, which after
1945 with international support regained its status as a global metropolis,
Panahi’s three-part stage play of the absent jury member to the silenced
filmmaker who finally celebrates his comeback live in front of a global
audience on the stage of the Berlinale thus turned out to be extremely suitable
for the festival, which accordingly crowned him with the Golden Bear in 2015.
Following an analysis of his staging in Berlin as well as his films Pardeh and
Taxi, I conclude that the performances of Iranian films and filmmakers at the
Berlinale are far more telling of the character and the needs of the festival (and
its host city) than about the actual state of Iranian cinema.
en
dc.format.extent
xiv, 413 Seiten
dc.rights.uri
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject
Iranian Cinema
en
dc.subject
Cultural Studies
en
dc.subject
Representations of Muslim Societies in Europe
en
dc.subject
Film Festival Studies
en
dc.subject
Berlin International Film Festival
en
dc.subject.ddc
700 Künste und Unterhaltung::790 Sport, Spiele, Unterhaltung::791 Öffentliche Darbietungen, Film, Rundfunk
dc.subject.ddc
300 Sozialwissenschaften::300 Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie::306 Kultur und Institutionen
dc.subject.ddc
900 Geschichte und Geografie::950 Geschichte Asiens::955 Geschichte Irans
dc.title
Staging Iranian Cinema at the Berlinale
dc.contributor.gender
unknown
dc.contributor.firstReferee
Krawietz, Birgit
dc.contributor.furtherReferee
Shaw, Wendy M. K.
dc.date.accepted
2021-09-13
dc.identifier.urn
urn:nbn:de:kobv:188-refubium-43922-2
refubium.affiliation
Geschichts- und Kulturwissenschaften
refubium.note.author
The text of this document is published under a CC BY 4.0 license, All images are explicitly excluded from this license.
en
dcterms.accessRights.dnb
free
dcterms.accessRights.openaire
open access