A film about Ireland and fallen women with Cillian Murphy will open the Berlinale

The German festival dedicated to cinema will be held in Berlin from February 15 to 25, 2024 with the presentation of the prize list and the famous Bears.

France Télévisions – Culture Editorial

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The first sketches of the Bears of the Berlinale which will take place this year from February 15 to February 25, 2024. (JENS KALAENE / DPA PICTURE-ALLIANCE / AFP)

The 74th Berlin Film Festival will open in the colors of Ireland, with a drama about the treatment of women in Catholic institutions in the country, led by actor Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer), announced the organizers this Thursday, January 18.

The film titled Small Things Like These takes place in the mid-1980s. He is ssigned by Belgian director Tim Mielants, who previously directed Cillian Murphy in the series Peaky Blinders. It does not yet have a release date in France.

Tribute to the Irish

The film looks back at one of the scandals that rocked Northern Ireland in recent years. The revelation of how thousands of women “fallen” in the eyes of the Church were sent to “Madeleine laundries” and put to work to wash away their sins. “We are convinced that this story, which combines kindness towards the most vulnerable and the desire to fight against injustice, will resonate with everyone,” said Berlinale artistic director Carlo Chatrian.

The festival, which will be held from February 15 to 25, will unveil on Monday January 22 the list of films competing for the Golden Bear, won last year by French documentary filmmaker Nicolas Philibert for On the Adamant. The continuation, and second part, of this triptych on psychiatry, entitled Averroes and Rosa Parkswill be shown in Berlin, out of competition.

Among the announcements already made, the presidency of the jury is entrusted to the Mexican-Kenyan actress Lupita Nyong’o, who will be the first black person to occupy this prestigious position. An honorary Golden Bear must be awarded to American director Martin Scorsese (Raging Bull, The Freedmen…).

Losing momentum in recent years, the Berlinale also announced the appointment of a new director from April 2024, the American Tricia Tuttle. She will succeed Mariette Rissenbeek and Carlo Chatrian, who have directed the festival as a duo since 2020, and for a final edition this year.


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