‘THIS STORY ISN’T ABOUT REFUGEES, IT’S ABOUT OUTSIDERS’
▶ Lemma Shehadi finds out how director Burhan Qurbani’s ‘Berlin Alexanderplatz’ puts a contemporary spin on the classic Modernist tale
In a tea room on Rosenthaler Strasse, in Berlin’s Mitte district, Burhan Qurbani, 39, is gearing up for the premiere of his latest film at the Berlin International Film Festival this week. But although Berlin
Alexanderplatz is taking part in the Berlinale’s official competition, winning a coveted award isn’t at the forefront of the filmmaker’s mind.
“At my first Berlinale, I really wanted to win a Bear,” he says, referring to the competition’s prizes named after the city’s bear-adorned crest. “This year, I’m happy to give my actors, who gave their soul to the camera, the chance to show on the biggest screen in Berlin.”
Berlin Alexanderplatz is Qurbani’s third feature film, and tells the story of Franz Biberkopf, a refugee from subSaharan Africa and an illegal immigrant in the German capital. It is a contemporary adaptation of Alfred Doblin’s epic novel Berlin Alexanderplatz (1929), a Modernist classic set in the city during the days of the Weimar Republic, politically turbulent years that led to the rise of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, more commonly known as the Nazi party.
Qurbani was born in Germany to Afghan parents and his films centre on migration and identity. His first feature, Shahada, about the lives of three German-born Muslims, was nominated for the Berlinale’s Golden Bear in 2010.
“To research my films, I start with my own life,” he says. “My parents fled political persecution after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. They came to Germany with two suitcases. They struggled because they didn’t speak the language. My brother and I were brought up as Muslims.”
But taking on a seminal text in German literature required a different kind of bravery, and it took some groundwork to get approval to adapt the novel. “We met with Doblin’s youngest son, now in his nineties. It took some talking. He asked us to honour his father’s heritage,” recalls Qurbani. “For him, the novel was about an isolated person who eventually finds himself back in the community.”
But the benchmark for cinematic adaptations of the work was already high. A 15-hour rendition by Rainer Werner Fassbinder in 1980 is today considered a masterpiece of European cinema. “[At the time] the press slammed Fassbinder’s adaptation. We expect the same to happen to us,” says Qurbani.
In Doblin’s novel, convicted murderer Biberkopf attempts to become a good man as he navigates the city’s seedy underworld. Likewise in Qurbani’s film, Biberkopf, played by Portuguese-Guinean actor Welket Bungue, hopes to start afresh after washing up on a beach in southern Europe. But in Berlin, he meets the devious Reinhold, played by Albrecht Schuch, who draws him into the city’s illicit drug trade.
“Franz wants to be a good man,” explains Qurbani, “but he has lost his dignity, he struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder and forges toxic relationships.”
The film particularly aims to shed light on a marginalised community of sub-Saharan migrants in Germany, which Qurbani believes are often ignored. “Doblin’s Franz Biberkopf is a sub-proletarian. He’s part of everyday life and yet he’s invisible,” he says. “Likewise, sub-Saharan communities in Germany are often out of our sight while other communities of Turkish, Afghan or Arab origin have a strong voice in public life.”
Often dubbed Germany’s “first urban novel”, Doblin’s work attempts to capture the spirit of Berlin in the interwar years. Like many of his contemporaries including painter George Grosz, the author focused on the city’s criminals and maimed soldiers to convey the aftermath of the First World War and the fomenting of fascism.
For Qurbani, rendering the city 91 years after Berlin
Alexanderplatz was first published came with challenges. Today, Berlin is the capital of Europe’s largest economy. “Berlin is neither a beautiful nor a cinematic city. It was heavily destroyed by the war,” says Qurbani.
The director spent a year thinking about the film’s visual language. “We weren’t interested in showing real estate, tourism and high-street fashion brands,” he says. He intentionally avoided the visible gentrification of the Mitte, the area encompassing the Alexanderplatz and Rosenthaler Strasse, where
most of the novel takes place. Some scenes were shot outside Berlin, including on the construction site of a new highspeed railway in Stuttgart, a city in southern Germany.
“The film is less about Berlin as a physical space, but about the parallel societies living there, such as refugees and small-time criminals,” says Qurbani.
The film’s focus on the life of a refugee highlights political shifts in contemporary Germany. An estimated 1.3 million refugees have entered the country since 2015. “It was a beautiful moment of willk om mens ku lt ur ,” says Qurbani referring to the German concept of offering welcome and support to migrants.
This was, however, followed by a rise in right-wing resentment towards immigrants. Qurbani and I meet in the immediate aftermath of this month’s terror attack in Hanau, where a lone gunman killed nine people from immigrant backgrounds. “My father lived for 10 years in Hanau, the attack hurt me deeply,” he says.
Qurbani addressed rightwing extremism in his 2014 second feature, Wir sind jung.
Wir sind stark (We Are Young. We Are Strong), which was based on neo-Nazi riots targeting asylum seekers in 1992.
Giving voice to the misunderstood appears key to Qurbani’s filmmaking. “Cinema is a space for empathy. When you watch a film, you physically live the life of another person for two hours. You see another perspective, different communities that have the same problems. My work is part of a democratic dialogue,” he says. Does he worry that Berlin Alexanderplatz could perpetuate right-wing stereotypes about migration and crime? “We were aware of the dangers. We tried to give the main character agency over his story,” says Qurbani.
“This story isn’t about crime or refugees. It’s a story about outsiders.”