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Last updated on May 27, 2012 at 19:02 EDT

Clooney film brings grit and glamour to Berlin

February 10, 2006
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By Mike Collett-White

BERLIN (Reuters) – The gritty reality Berlin’s film
festival prides itself on bringing to the screen blends with
Hollywood glamour on Friday when Oscar nominee George Clooney
takes his political thriller “Syriana” to Europe.

Already released to favorable reviews in the United States,
the story of a world-weary CIA agent caught up in a web of
intrigue and corruption in the global oil business promises to
be the highlight of the second day of the annual Berlinale.

The 44-year-old heartthrob is expected to be on the red
carpet at an evening screening, giving him yet more exposure in
the runup to the Oscars on March 5.

Clooney has been nominated for three Academy awards,
including best supporting actor in Syriana and best screenplay
and director for “Good Night, and Good Luck,” the
black-and-white McCarthy-era drama.

Both films have helped the American win a reputation as a
champion of anti-establishment cinema and earned him titles
like “The most dangerous man in Hollywood” on magazine covers.

Two other leading Oscar contenders, Heath Ledger and Philip
Seymour Hoffman, are also expected in Berlin to promote films.

Syriana bridges two important themes at this year’s event.

One is the power big business wields and the corruption
that sometimes goes with it, an issue also taken up by
“L’Ivresse du Pouvoir” (Comedy of Power), a film that has been
compared to the scandal surrounding French oil giant Elf
Aquitaine.

Also in Berlin is “Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price,” a
documentary critical of the supermarket chain’s business
practices.

Syriana also explores the war on terror, portraying how a
young man is transformed into an Islamic extremist willing to
give his life to strike Western interests in the Middle East.

British director Michael Winterbottom brings to Berlin “The
Road to Guantanamo,” which follows the fate of three Britons
caught in Afghanistan by U.S.-led forces after the 2001
military offensive and imprisoned in the U.S. naval base.

And Italian Oscar winner Roberto Benigni gets into serious
scrapes in “La Tigre e la Neve” (The Tiger and the Snow) when
he rushes to Iraq to save a girlfriend wounded in an Allied air
attack on the country shortly after the 2003 invasion began.

While Syriana is not among films competing for the main
Golden Bear prize in Berlin, entrants “En Soap” and “Slumming”
both screen on Friday.

En Soap (A Soap) is a Danish production exploring the
relationship between a woman and her transsexual neighbor while
Slumming, an Austrian-Swiss film, is about a pair of wealthy
tricksters whose elaborate prank brings unexpected
consequences.


Source: reuters