The Berlin Film Festival (Berlinale) has sparked controversy in the international film community over its silence on Gaza and its stance toward artists who have voiced pro-Palestinian views.
A group of 81 filmmakers ,including Javier Bardem, Tilda Swinton and Adam McKay, signed an open letter criticizing the festival and calling on cultural institutions not to remain silent in the face of violence against Palestinians.
Open Letter to the Berlinale – Feb. 17, 2026
We write as film workers, all of us past and current Berlinale participants, who expect the institutions in our industry to refuse complicity in the terrible violence that continues to be waged against Palestinians. We are dismayed at the Berlinale’s involvement in censoring artists who oppose Israel’s ongoing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and the German state’s key role in enabling it. As the Palestine Film Institute has stated, the festival has been “policing filmmakers alongside a continued commitment to collaborate with Federal Police on their investigations”.
Last year, filmmakers who spoke out for Palestinian life and liberty from the Berlinale stage reported being aggressively reprimanded by senior festival programmers. One filmmaker was reported to have been investigated by police, and Berlinale leadership falsely implied that the filmmaker’s moving speech – rooted in international law and solidarity – was “discriminatory”. As another filmmaker told Film Workers for Palestine about last year’s festival: “there was a feeling of paranoia in the air, of not being protected and of being persecuted, which I had never felt before at a film festival”. We stand with our colleagues in rejecting this institutional repression and anti-Palestinian racism.
We fervently disagree with the statement made by Berlinale 2026 jury president Wim Wenders that filmmaking is “the opposite of politics”. You cannot separate one from the other. We are deeply concerned that the German state-funded Berlinale is helping put into practice what Irene Khan, the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Opinion recently condemned as Germany’s misuse of draconian legislation “to restrict advocacy for Palestinian rights, chilling public participation and shrinking discourse in academia and the arts”. This is also what Ai Weiwei recently described as Germany “doing what they did in the 1930s” (agreeing with his interviewer who suggested to him that “it’s the same fascist impulse, just a different target”).
All of this at a time when we are learning horrifying new details about the 2,842 Palestinians “evaporated” by Israeli forces using internationally prohibited, U.S.-made thermal and thermobaric weapons. Despite abundant evidence of Israel’s genocidal intent, systematic atrocity crimes and ethnic cleansing, Germany continues to supply Israel with weapons used to exterminate Palestinians in Gaza.
The tide is changing across the international film world. Many international film festivals have endorsed the cultural boycott of apartheid Israel, including the International Documentary Festival Amsterdam, the world’s biggest, as well as BlackStar Film Festival in the U.S., and Film Fest Gent, Belgium’s largest. More than 5,000 film workers, including leading Hollywood and international figures, have also announced their refusal to work with complicit Israeli film companies and institutions.
Yet Berlinale has so far not even met the demands of its community to issue a statement that affirms the Palestinian right to life, dignity, and freedom; condemns the ongoing Israeli genocide of Palestinians; and commits to uphold the right of artists to speak without constraint in support of Palestinian human rights. This is the least it can – and should – do.
As the Palestine Film Institute has said, “we are appalled by Berlinale’s institutional silence on the genocide of Palestinians, and its unwillingness to defend the freedoms of speech and expression of filmmakers”. Just as the festival has made clear statements in the past about atrocities carried out against people in Iran and Ukraine, we call on the Berlinale to fulfil its moral duty and clearly state its opposition to Israel’s genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes against Palestinians, and completely end its involvement in shielding Israel from criticism and calls for accountability.

Signed by
- Adam McKay
- Adèle Haenel
- Alan O’Gorman
- Alexandra Juhasz
- Alexandre Koberidze
- Alia Shawkat
- Alison Oliver
- Alkis Papastathopoulos
- Ana Naomi de Sousa
- Angeliki Papoulia
- Antigoni Rota
- Ariane Labed
- Artemis Anastasiadou
- Ashley McKenzie
- Avi Mograbi
- Bahija Essoussi
- Ben Russell
- Bingham Bryant
- Blake Williams
- Blanche Gardin
- Brett Story
- Brian Cox
- Camilo Restrepo
- Carice Van Houten
- Charlie Shackleton
- Cherien Dabis
- Christopher Young
- Dali Benssalah
- David Osit
- Deragh Campbell
- Dustin Defa
- Eleni Alexandrakis
- Elhum Shakerifar
- Emilie Deleuze
- Eyal Sivan
- Fernando Meirelles
- Fil Ieropoulos
- Geoff Arbourne
- Hany Abu Assad
- Hind Meddeb
- James Benning
- Javier Bardem
- John Greyson
- Jon Jost
- Khalid Abdalla
- Leah Borromeo
- Lukas Dhont
- Mahdi Fleifel
- Mai Masri
- Malika Zouhali-Worrall
- Manuel Embalse
- Marina Gioti
- Marion Schmidt
- Merawi Gerima
- Miguel Gomes
- Mike Leigh
- Miranda Pennell
- Namir Abdel Messeeh
- Nan Goldin
- Narimane Mari
- Nina Menkes
- Pascale Ramonda
- Patricia Mazuy
- Paul Laverty
- Pedro Pimenta
- Peter Mullan
- Phaedra Vokali
- Robert Greene
- Saeed Taji Farouky
- Saleh Bakri
- Samaher Alqadi
- Sarah Friedland
- Sepideh Farsi
- Shirin Neshat
- Smaro Papaevangelou
- Sofia Georgovassili
- Tatiana Maslany
- Thodoris Dimitropoulos
- Tilda Swinton
- Tobias Menzies
- Tyler Taormina