Die Mitglieder der Internationalen Jury 2026, Wim Wenders (Präsident), Min Bahadur Bham, Bae Doona, Shivendra Singh Dungarpur, Reinaldo Marcus Green, HIKARI und Ewa Puszczyńsk, vergeben folgende Preise:
Goldener Bär für den Besten Film
Gelbe Briefe (Yellow Letters)
von İlker Çatak
Silberner Bär Großer Preis der Jury
Kurtuluş (Salvation)
von Emin Alper
Silberner Bär Preis der Jury
Queen at Sea
von Lance Hammer
Silberner Bär für die Beste Regie
Grant Gee
Everybody Digs Bill Evans
Silberner Bär für die Beste Schauspielerische Leistung in einer Hauptrolle
Silberner Bär für die Beste Schauspielerische Leistung in einer Hauptrolle: Sandra Hüller © Richard Hübner / Berlinale 2026
Sandra Hüller in:
Rose
von Markus Schleinzer
Silberner Bär für die Beste Schauspielerische Leistung in einer Nebenrolle
Anna Calder-Marshall & Tom Courtenay in:
Queen at Sea
von Lance Hammer
Silberner Bär für das Beste Drehbuch
Geneviève Dulude-de Celles
Nina Roza
von Geneviève Dulude-de Celles
Silberner Bär für eine Herausragende Künstlerische Leistung
Yo (Love is a Rebellious Bird)
von Anna Fitch, Banker White
Tricia Tuttle Intendantin der Internationalen Filmfestspiele Berlin - © Richard Hübner / Berlinale 2024
Bevor die Gewinner*innen geehrt wurden, sagte die Berlinale-Intendantin Tricia Tuttle ein paar Worte über die vergangenen zehn Tage:
This Berlinale has taken place in a world that feels raw and fractured. Many of people arrived carrying grief, anger and urgency about what is happening far beyond these cinema walls. Those feelings are real. They belong in our community. We hear them.
We have also been publicly challenged this year. That comes with being a visible cultural institution in a polarised moment. Criticism is part of democracy. So is disagreement. We respect people speaking out, even when we do not agree with every claim that is made about us.
What I am proud of is this. Over these ten days, the Berlinale has remained what it was founded to be. A place where people gather in public, where everyone is welcome, across difference, to sit together in the dark and look at the world through the eyes of others.
278 films from 80 countries. Filmmakers who risked a great deal to tell their stories. There are films about violence, injustice, memory, and survival and also art and love and friendship.
Free expression at the Berlinale is not one voice. It is many voices. Sometimes calm. Sometimes angry. Sometimes it looks silent but it is speaking through cinema. These voices can be contradictory. A festival does not resolve the world’s conflicts. But it can make space for complexity, listening, and humanising each other.
And we see this complexity reflected in the films — these do not offer one perspective — though they do all share something. They share a deep care about this world, and about people. They urge, they inspire, they demand, and they quietly or loudly insist that we SEE.
And this diversity of perspective will be reflected in the films which will be awarded tonight. Tonight is their space, and a chance for us to listen.
If this Berlinale has been noisy and emotionally charged, that is not a failure of cinema. That is the Berlinale doing its job. This is cinema doing its job.
Thank you to our filmmakers, our audiences, and our extraordinary, wonderful Berlinale team.
