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    Home » With “Fatherland,” Sandra Hüller Continues Her Run Of Standout Cannes Performances

    With “Fatherland,” Sandra Hüller Continues Her Run Of Standout Cannes Performances

    By SHOOTSunday, May 17, 2026No Comments75 Views
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    August Diehl (from left), Sandra Hüller, Pawel Pawlikowski, Hanns Zischler and Lukasz Zal pose for photographers upon arrival at the premiere of the film "Fatherland" at the 79th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 14, 2026. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP)

    By Jake Coyle, Film Writer

    CANNES, France (AP) --

    For Sandra Hüller, eruptions of emotion don’t come naturally. She prefers to be quiet and calm, and often her screen presence radiates intensity when she’s simply watching. But when she explodes — whether in grief or karaoke — she can be magnificent.

    “It’s not something that I like to do, particularly,” Hüller says, sitting in a garden in Cannes. “Maybe I like the characters more who don’t erupt all the time because these are very annoying people, I don’t know.”

    She takes a drag on a cigarette and considers it further.

    “I like to observe more than I like being observed. When I do something big, of course I’m the center of attention. Maybe that’s the root of it. But you are not my therapist so we will not find out today,” Hüller says, and laughs.

    The full range of Hüller’s talent is on full display this year in four films that run from big to small. Foremost among them is “Fatherland,” the Cannes Film Festival entry by Paweł Pawlikowski, the Polish director of “Ida” and “Cold War.”

    In the first week of Cannes, “Fatherland” (which Mubi will release later this year) was widely acknowledged as a clear standout, and a possible Palme d’Or favorite. Like “Ida” and “Cold War,” it’s elegantly shot in black and white, uncommonly brief (82 minutes) and throbs with the pain of postwar Europe.

    Hüller plays Erika, the daughter of the German author Thomas Mann (Hanns Zischler). They return to Germany in 1949 on a road trip, toggling between the American-controlled West Germany and the Soviet-ruled East Germany. Their former country no more, they are betwixt, as Thomas says, “Mickey Mouse or Stalin.”

    For Hüller, who was born in East Germany, “Fatherland” follows her chilling turn in Jonathan Glazer’s “The Zone of Interest,” set near a concentration camp. In “Fatherland,” her character was staunchly opposed to the Nazis, but is now living amid their blithely unremorseful collaborators.

    “A void is hard to portray, and I think it’s a big deal trying it,” says Hüller. “We talked about this in school. It’s part of our history classes. But I never got into the specifics of what it felt like. We know a lot of pictures of the women cleaning up the streets because the men were dead or somewhere in prison. But what it meant to not know the country you were born in anymore is something we weren’t familiar with.”

    A streak of standouts
    Several of Hüller’s performances have already been indelible parts of the Cannes Film Festival: the 2016 comedy “Toni Erdmann” and the 2023 Palme d’Or winner “Anatomy of a Fall.” “Fatherland” is likewise a standout, but it comes during the kind of year actors dream of.

    At the Berlin Film Festival earlier this year, Hüller won best leading performance for “Rose,” a gender exploration set in the aftermath of the Thirty Years’ War. In the March box-office hit “Project Hail Mary,” she co-starred alongside Ryan Gosling and, at Gosling’s urging, performed one of the movie’s best scenes: a karaoke rendition of Harry Styles’ “Sign of the Times.” She also co-stars in Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s much-anticipated “Digger,” due out later this year.

    “I’m almost 50 now and I feel very blessed that I can have this experience right now,” Hüller says. “For some of my peers, it’s a gap in the journey or the end of the journey.”

    If her character in “Fatherland” is torn between worlds, Hüller is moving frictionless between the movie realms of Europe and Hollywood.

    “I’ve been looking at the things that came my way and I have been thinking about whether I can say yes to them or not, if I’m ready to do them,” she says. “There are some experiences coming my way that I’ve never had before and I would be very, very stupid if I wouldn’t use them.”

    “Not so much for success reasons,” she continues. “It’s really more of a question of growth — and getting to know more spaces so you can move more freely through the world. There’s a lot of pleasure in this. It’s also dangerous. But it’s far out of my comfort zone.”

    Expanding the frame
    Still, success has come with a cost. Hüller considers herself a theater actor first, and is desperate to return to the theater collective she grew out of. She still directs with them, but her notoriety is too much to be part of an ensemble.

    “I miss theater like a heartbroken person,” she says, her eyes welling up. “Even when I talk about it with you, I start crying.”

    As pared away as Pawlikowski’s films are, he occasionally adds things, too. During filming, he had an idea for a scene where Erika, after quietly growing skeptical of her father’s optimism about a good Germany, shouts at him.

    “I said, ‘Listen, if it’s bad, I’m not going to put it in, just do your best.’ And she did brilliant,” Pawlikowski says. “That was the luxury of an actress who can do so much. I was just watching, like, how did she do this? It’s so much better than what I imagined.”

    Hüller didn’t expect Pawlikowski’s style to change her methods, but it did. Pawlikowski’s frames leave a lot of space. She had to find how to exist in them without becoming a statue.

    “It has a lot to do with presence and awareness and focus, and with a rich inner movement that’s not necessarily seen on the outside,” says Hüller. “But you can feel it, in some way. The more precise this inner movement is, the better it works in that very precise frame. That’s something I had to find out.”

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    Category:News
    Tags:Cannes Film FestivalFatherlandSandra Hüller



    Ewan McGregor and Danny Boyle Reflect On The Life-Changing Film “Trainspotting”

    Saturday, June 6, 2026
    This image released by Sony Pictures Classics shows Ewan McGregor in a scene from "Trainspotting." (Liam Longman/Sony Pictures Classics via AP)

    Ewan McGregor, for a fleeting moment after "Trainspotting" came out, felt like a rock star. It wasn't his first significant project; it wasn't even his first film with director Danny Boyle. And he was, in his words, fairly arrogant and cocksure at the time. But that kinetic film about four heroin addicts in late-1980s Scotland was and, 30 years later, remains defining — in his career, in the culture and in his understanding of what true artistic satisfaction can feel like. "It's very much in that early part of my career, and of course, even today, probably the most important piece of work that I was involved in, just because it had such a massive effect on my life. Not only because of what it did, but because of how it felt to make," McGregor told The Associated Press in a recent interview. "It set the bar unknowingly high because it's been quite hard to match ever since." Both McGregor and Boyle are a little wistful about the time, and what they made, as the film marks its 30th anniversary re-release. A 4K digital restoration started in theaters nationwide on Friday (6/5). Though "Trainspotting" was very much of its moment with its Britpop soundtrack, its Thatcher-era grit, its darkly comedic tone and shrewd blend of giddy highs and tragic lows, it's also one that has stood the unforgiving test of time. "You get kids coming up to you who are 17 who said they'd just seen it," Boyle said. "I could be their grandfather … yet it still spoke to them." Putting Hollywood on hold Boyle was a hot commodity after "Shallow Grave," a 1994 black comedy about flatmates in Edinburgh starring McGregor, and Hollywood was calling. Literally. A peak-famous Sharon Stone cold-called him and asked if he'd want to come make a film with her. But he had... Read More

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