FESTIVALS / AWARDS Spain / Germany
Sisi & I wins the Audience Award at the German Film Fest Madrid
- Viewers at the 25th edition of the annual event have plumped for Frauke Finsterwalder’s daring and modern film as their favourite movie

Audiences at the German Film Fest Madrid have been won over by the umpteenth interpretation of the figure of the famous Bavarian princess, Sisi & I [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Frauke Finsterwalder
film profile], a co-production between Germany and Switzerland in which director Frauke Finsterwalder (Finsterworld [+see also:
trailer
film profile]) steers clear of a conventional biopic or politically correct approach. The gathering’s change of venue to the Embajadores Cinemas gave an extra boost to this annual showcase of modern German film, a German Films initiative that saw the involvement of the Goethe-Institut Madrid and the Embassy of Germany in Madrid.
The fascination for the figure of Empress Elisabeth of Austria continues to endure through time, and this was also glaringly obvious at the festival, where Finsterwalder’s second fiction feature – which had the honour of opening this Madrilenian celebration of German cinema – was crowned as the champion by the viewers. They granted it the Audience Award at this edition, picking it from among a selection of titles curated by singer Rocío Saíz (whom we saw playing a role in Zaida Carmona’s Girlfriends and Girlfriends [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Zaida Carmona
film profile]), critic and programmer Emilio M Luna, and journalist Rosana G Alonso.
The Hamburg-born director focuses on the last third of the monarch’s life, during which the roving Sisi, in freefall, heading straight towards an existential void, can only alleviate her pain and apathy through the company of her ladies-in-waiting. The film is an adaptation of the memoirs of Hungarian countess Irma Sztáray, who formed part of her entourage.
Finsterwalder’s camera depicts the desire and the camaraderie between these women in a timeless work of enormous aesthetic beauty, where the wardrobe and the score play a major role, with songs by Portishead, Nico and Le Tigre, and with costumes by Tanja Hausner (Rimini [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Ulrich Seidl
film profile], Sparta [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile]), who drew inspiration from the 1960s and 1970s.
Actresses Sandra Hüller (very popular at the moment after recently presenting her work in the award-winning Cannes Film Festival features Anatomy of a Fall [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Justine Triet
film profile] and The Zone of Interest [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile]) and Susanne Wolff (whom we glimpsed in Borrowed White and Bloody Marie [+see also:
film review
trailer
film profile]) not only take the audience by the hand to delve into the personal side of the legend, but at the same time capture the decline of a nobility paralysed by its vices.
The German Film Fest Madrid wrapped its 25th edition – which was held from 14-18 June – with some impressive figures: its overall theatre occupancy rate was 75%, and three of its sessions sold out completely.
In collaboration with
(Translated from Spanish)
Did you enjoy reading this article? Please subscribe to our newsletter to receive more stories like this directly in your inbox.