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Bad Luck Banging goes all the way with top prize at Berlin film festival
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Berlin 2021 Golden Bear Winner | Hollywood Reporter
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film profile], described as a standalone sequel to his 2003 entry
Forest. Like this earlier film, the director s latest outing is an omnibus drama, telling seven (or, rather, six and a half) stories that deal with those emotions that we least want to feel.
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Apparently set over one night in various apartments, it begins with a teenage girl blaming her father for her mother s death. His response makes this probably the most brutal of the episodes.
Next up, a young woman works herself into a fit of jealousy over her boyfriend lending his camera to a girl named Anna, whom he once cheated on her with. He is worried that Anna has gone missing, but his girlfriend takes this as another transgression â and a twist will uncover the truth.
Le bijou de Céline Sciamma
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Hungarian Film and TV Biz Make Play for Global Stage at Berlin Festival
Alissa Simon, provided by
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For the first time ever, two Hungarian films are competing for the Berlinale’s Golden Bear: “Forest – I See You Everywhere,” a standalone sequel to the 2003 Berlinale hit “Forest,” from veteran auteur Bence Fliegauf, and “Natural Light” from feature debutant Dénes Nagy. Csaba Káel, chairman of the National Film Institute of Hungary (NFI), says, “I believe it demonstrates the vitality and strength of the Hungarian industry flourishing despite the unprecedented circumstances caused by the pandemic worldwide.”
The two films represent opposite poles of current Hungarian filmmaking. Brimming with discourse, the independently funded “Forest” tells multiple complex, engaging stories of contemporary life in Hungary. And as he did in his Berlinale-winner “Just the Wind” (2012), Fliegauf creates deep empathy for his characters who deliver sta