
Berlin Film Festival opening film sends message that migrants welcome, says star
The film shows "that someone coming from the outside can also help and we can benefit from them and they don't want to take anything away from us," he told Reuters in an interview.
"It's in fact the opposite, they can contribute," said Eidinger, who plays the film's sellout father, Tim Engels.
Migration is a top concern for German voters ahead of national elections on Feb. 23, the last day of the festival, with the far-right, anti-Islam and anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party polling second in most surveys.
Politics threaten to overshadow this year's festival, despite organisers' hopes that conversation centres on cinema.
"Run Lola Run" director Tom Tykwer's nearly three-hour opus follows the Engels family, who are so preoccupied with their own lives, whether video games, work or clubbing, that they barely notice when the housekeeper dies at their smart Berlin apartment.
Tykwer, one of the creators of hit historical series "Babylon Berlin," told Reuters that while he sees shades of the Weimar Republic interwar period that saw the rise of the Nazis in the present day, people today are also notably different.
"We're really not the same crowd that lived 90 years ago. Like, we're not like our grandparents, so who are we?" he said, adding he wanted to look at what "we are doing with this world that's in such turmoil".
The family begins to bridge their disconnect after Farrah, a Syrian refugee played by Tala Al Deen, enters their lives as the new housekeeper, along with her unique light therapy device.
In contrast to the Engels family, Farrah lives in a small block apartment with several other women, without her family.
Nicolette Krebitz, who plays the mother, Milena Engels, said it was difficult to portray a character whose privilege and hypocrisy undergo such unflinching scrutiny in the film.
"You don't want to see yourself being a white privileged person, being unhappy about things compared to what the other leading lady in the film (Farrah) is experiencing," Krebitz told Reuters.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
US stops visitor visas for people from Gaza
WASHINGTON, Aug 16 (Reuters) - The U.S. State Department on Saturday said it was halting all visitor visas for individuals from Gaza while it conducts "a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days."


Reuters
5 hours ago
- Reuters
Australia grants asylum to former Hong Kong lawmaker and pro-democracy activist
HONG KONG/BEIJING, Aug 16 (Reuters) - Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Ted Hui has been granted asylum in Australia, the former lawmaker said in a Facebook post on Saturday, more than four years after he left Hong Kong where he faces criminal charges over the 2019 pro-democracy protests. Hui said he received written notice from the Australian Department of Home Affairs on Friday approving his claim and that his wife, children and parents were also granted visas. "When people around me say 'congratulations' to me, although I politely thank them, I can't help but feel sad in my heart. How to congratulate a political refugee who misses his hometown?" he said in the Facebook post. "If it weren't for political persecution, I would never have thought of living in a foreign land. Immigrants can always return to their hometowns to visit relatives at any time; Exiles have no home." The Home Affairs Department did not immediately respond to emailed questions sent after business hours. The Hong Kong government and China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to questions about the decision. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited Beijing last month as part of his administration's years-long push to improve ties with China. A former Democratic Party lawmaker, Hui left Hong Kong late 2020 after facing criminal charges over the 2019 pro-democracy protests. In 2023 Hong Kong accused him and seven others of national security offences, including incitement to secession, and put HK$1 million ($127,782) bounties on their heads. Australia said it was disappointed by the decision at the time and concerned about the law. Pro-democracy businessman Jimmy Lai is currently on trial in Hong Kong on charges related to a national security law imposed by Beijing and alleged sedition. ($1 = 7.8258 Hong Kong dollars)


Scottish Sun
6 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Truth behind North Korea's Benidorm resort exposed with ‘slave brigades' working 21-hour days & women sexually assaulted
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) IT'S the showpiece beach resort at the heart of Kim Jong-un's plans for a holiday empire – but the 'North Korean Benidorm' hides a dark secret. The Wonsan-Kalma resort reportedly got its nickname after dictator Kim sent a fact-finding mission to Spain's Costa Blanca in 2017. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 12 North Korean tyrant Kim Jong Un opens Wonsan-Kalma pet project beach resort Credit: Reuters 12 The strip running along Wonsan before it was officially opened Credit: AFP 12 The resort has opened for its first guests Credit: East2West But unlike its Mediterranean rival, Wonsan-Kalma has a history filled with forced labour, human rights abuses – and poo. The horrors began right at the start of the project, when the regime press-ganged teenage schoolkids into 'shock brigades' of builders. Pyongyang propaganda bragged that these youths were building the resort's hotels at the rate of a storey per day in a December 2019 report. But by then two deadlines to finish the job had already passed, and with a third looming, builders were made to work almost round the clock in icy temperatures. Read more on North Korea COSTA DEL KIM First tourists visit North Korea's 'Benidorm' where 'minders' follow visitors Party chiefs mobilised workers 'in the bitter cold of January, February, and March, allowing them to sleep for only three hours a day,' a source told the Daily NK newspaper. And though the regime called the youths 'volunteers', really they had no real choice. People are forced into 'shock brigades' with the threat of arrest and detention in labour camps, according to a UN report about forced labour in North Korea. Recruits get a monthly wage that is 'only enough to buy two packs of cigarettes', the report added, and are fed so little that malnutrition is widespread. Workers at Wonsan lived off 'foul-smelling seaweed soup, salted radishes and yellow corn rice,' according to Daily NK. Female workers faced an added peril. First tourists visit North Korea's ghostly 'Benidorm' resort where 'minders' follow visitors & phones are 'bugged' One woman quoted by the UN recalled how shock brigade chiefs 'harassed' them and said 'many women were sexually abused'. North Korea expert Michael Madden described the backbreaking toil faced by 'volunteers' at Wonsan. He said: 'Youth Shock Brigades would be involved in digging foundations, framing, painting, paving, and moving materials and supplies. 'Pay for brigade members is minimal. 'In the past, the brigade members were not provided adequate food supplies and stole from local populations.' Today the resort welcomes Russian visitors and members of the North Korean elite. But guests may be surprised to learn that they're not the first to stay in the brand-new hotels. When the third deadline for finishing the resort passed in April 2020, the site lay almost abandoned for months as Covid-19 spread around the world. 12 The sea did not look particularly inviting for the first batch of visitors Credit: AFP 12 Kim shows his daughter Kim Ju Ae around the inside of one of the hotels Credit: Reuters 12 Kim waved to adoring fans at an opening ceremony at the end of June Credit: AFP Soon reports emerged that homeless wanderers – known as kkotjebi in North Korea – had moved in to the skeletal hotels. 'The buildings are no different from toilets, with bowel movements left behind by the kkotjebi everywhere,' a source told Daily NK. 'Now they're full of human waste and soot from fires.' The same report also revealed that the resort's planning chief and site manager had been sacked in 2019 amid mounting delays. It's a punishment with potentially fatal consequences. Mr Madden, the founder of North Korea Leadership Watch, and a fellow of the Stimson Center in Washington DC, said nothing had been heard of either of them since. If they were blamed for inefficiencies or incompetence, he said, they probably faced demotion, intensive indoctrination, and a manual labour assignment. 'On the other hand if there was malfeasance or some type of corruption, then both of these people have, at the least, faced a lengthy incarceration,' he continued. 'If these individuals had a habit of corrupt activities on Wonsan-Kalma and any previous projects, then one or both project managers faced the firing squad.' 12 Kim Jong Un opens Wonsan-Kalma pet project beach resort Credit: East2West 12 Kim Jong Un and his daughter Ju Ae inspecting a hotel during a visit to the resort Credit: AFP 12 Before it was a holiday destination, Wonsan was a missile launch site. Indeed the rockets continued blasting off even as the hotels took shape. And ultimately, that's how money spent by tourists will be used. Greg Scarlatoiu, executive director of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, warned holidaymakers not to fund Kim's 'tools of death'. He said: 'The money coming from tourists, mostly Russians at the moment, will go to the areas that the regime regards as critical to its survival. 'These are: keeping the Kim family rich, and the key elites happy, as well as developing nuclear weapons, ballistic missiles, and other tools of death.' The North Korean tourism push, which seeks to raise foreign currency, has also seen the regime open the Masikryong Ski Resort, and Yangdok hot springs resort. 12 A North Korean man makes the most of the water park at Wonsan after it opened Credit: AFP 12 The resort can accommodate up to 20,000 people, according to reports Credit: East2West