<p>Ukrainian President <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/volodymyr-zelenskyy" target="_blank">Volodymyr Zelenskyy </a>urged filmmakers to take sides in what he termed a battle between freedom and tyranny, drawing a parallel in his speech opening the Berlin Film Festival between Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the Berlin Wall.</p>.<p>Zelenskyy recalled his own experience as an actor, urging colleagues to "break the fourth wall" by directly addressing their audiences.</p>.<p>"For many years Potsdam Square was divided by the Berlin Wall," he said via video link. "Today Russia wants to build the same wall in Ukraine: a wall between us and Europe, to separate Ukraine from its own choice for its future."</p>.<p>Now in its 73rd year, the Berlinale owes its reputation as the most political of the main film festivals to its origins as a divided city on the front lines of the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the West.</p>.<p>Art could choose to take sides or remain neutral, which was tantamount to backing tyranny, said Zelenskyy, whose experiences on the very first days of the invasion a year ago are the subject of a Sean Penn documentary, "Superpower," that will premiere at the festival on Friday.</p>.<p>The festival's opening gala was briefly interrupted by activists from Last Generation gluing themselves onto the red carpet in protest against environmental degradation.</p>.<p>Stars attending this year include director Steven Spielberg, musician Bono, and actors Fan Bingbing and Anne Hathaway, who was one of many shown blinking back tears as Zelenskyy spoke.</p>.<p>Hathaway, who stars as a therapist whose own demons are as serious as any of her patients' in Rebecca Miller's "She Came to Me", the festival's opening film, hailed Zelenskyy as a "hero of our time".</p>.<p>This year's festival will include a focus on pro-democracy protests in Iran as well the conflict in Ukraine. Films backed by the Iranian and Russian governments are banned.</p>.<p>"Berlin is the city that broke the wall - the actual wall," said French-Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani, a jury member. "This year that is very important for us, for the people of Iran. We are fighting for freedom and we don't give up."</p>.<p>"Full disclosure: I'm kind of shaking," jury president Kristen Stewart told a news conference when asked how she felt about choosing a winner from among the 19 films in the main competition.</p>.<p>Outside the main competition, films hailing from Mexico to Australia will be screened, tackling topics from race and history in the United States to gender transition and sexual identity.</p>
<p>Ukrainian President <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/volodymyr-zelenskyy" target="_blank">Volodymyr Zelenskyy </a>urged filmmakers to take sides in what he termed a battle between freedom and tyranny, drawing a parallel in his speech opening the Berlin Film Festival between Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the Berlin Wall.</p>.<p>Zelenskyy recalled his own experience as an actor, urging colleagues to "break the fourth wall" by directly addressing their audiences.</p>.<p>"For many years Potsdam Square was divided by the Berlin Wall," he said via video link. "Today Russia wants to build the same wall in Ukraine: a wall between us and Europe, to separate Ukraine from its own choice for its future."</p>.<p>Now in its 73rd year, the Berlinale owes its reputation as the most political of the main film festivals to its origins as a divided city on the front lines of the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the West.</p>.<p>Art could choose to take sides or remain neutral, which was tantamount to backing tyranny, said Zelenskyy, whose experiences on the very first days of the invasion a year ago are the subject of a Sean Penn documentary, "Superpower," that will premiere at the festival on Friday.</p>.<p>The festival's opening gala was briefly interrupted by activists from Last Generation gluing themselves onto the red carpet in protest against environmental degradation.</p>.<p>Stars attending this year include director Steven Spielberg, musician Bono, and actors Fan Bingbing and Anne Hathaway, who was one of many shown blinking back tears as Zelenskyy spoke.</p>.<p>Hathaway, who stars as a therapist whose own demons are as serious as any of her patients' in Rebecca Miller's "She Came to Me", the festival's opening film, hailed Zelenskyy as a "hero of our time".</p>.<p>This year's festival will include a focus on pro-democracy protests in Iran as well the conflict in Ukraine. Films backed by the Iranian and Russian governments are banned.</p>.<p>"Berlin is the city that broke the wall - the actual wall," said French-Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani, a jury member. "This year that is very important for us, for the people of Iran. We are fighting for freedom and we don't give up."</p>.<p>"Full disclosure: I'm kind of shaking," jury president Kristen Stewart told a news conference when asked how she felt about choosing a winner from among the 19 films in the main competition.</p>.<p>Outside the main competition, films hailing from Mexico to Australia will be screened, tackling topics from race and history in the United States to gender transition and sexual identity.</p>