The governing body of the Berlin International Film Festival failed to decide on the contract of director Tricia Tuttle during an extraordinary meeting on February 26, 2026. The meeting, convened by Germany's culture minister Wolfram Weimer, addressed criticism over political statements made by filmmakers at the festival. Tuttle has received widespread support from staff, film professionals, and the Israeli film community amid calls to protect artistic freedom.
The 76th Berlin International Film Festival, known as the Berlinale, concluded on February 22, 2026, after running from February 12. During the event, controversy arose when prominent attendees, including jury president Wim Wenders, initially avoided discussing politics, leading to accusations of censorship. Tensions escalated on closing night as several prize-winners used their acceptance speeches to express support for Palestine and Gaza. A photograph of festival leadership with filmmakers, featuring a visible Palestinian flag, also drew criticism.
In response, Germany's culture minister Wolfram Weimer called an extraordinary meeting of the festival's governing body, KBB GmbH, on February 26, 2026, to discuss the Berlinale's future direction. A spokesman for Weimer stated, “This morning, a supervisory board meeting of KBB GmbH took place in the Chancellery. The topic was the Berlinale. Talks on the Berlinale will continue in the coming days between the director, Tricia Tuttle, and the supervisory board.” No decision was made regarding Tuttle's contract.
Support for Tuttle has been robust. Over 500 festival staffers signed an open letter praising her as “a more intelligent, ethical and responsive leader” dedicated to the festival's principles. A petition backing her has surpassed 1,400 verified signatures from film industry figures, including directors Sean Baker, Todd Haynes, and actress Tilda Swinton. The petition warns that personnel changes based on such statements could undermine “the relationship between artistic freedom and institutional independence,” emphasizing the Berlinale as a space for “divergent perspectives and a plurality of voices.”
Israel's film community, including leaders from the Docaviv Film Festival, Jerusalem Film Festival, and Israel Film Fund, sent a letter to KBB highlighting Tuttle's “commitment to diversity of voices, non-censorship and creating a space of open debate.” They valued her platform for Israeli cinema, noting films like Assaf Machnes's “Where To,” which involved Palestinian collaborators. Tuttle told Variety, “The Berlinale doesn’t boycott culture workers. Artists are the people who can hold a mirror up and ask difficult questions. Isolation is not the answer.”