My Sister’s Good Fortune
Germany / 1995 / 85'
Plot
Directed by Angela Schanelec in 1995, this German film explores the complexities of family and personal relationships through a minimalist, intimate, and contemplative narrative. The film centers on a love triangle drama that explores the complexities of personal and family relationships.
The main plot revolves around Christian, an attractive and irresponsible photographer, who is torn between two women: Ariane and her half-sister, Isabel. Christian has fallen in love with Isabel, his girlfriend's sister, plunging the three characters into a chaotic and emotionally complex situation.
The film avoids easy moralizing and explores the mysteries of desire and identity without offering absolute answers. The narrative shows the characters repeating patterns and going around in circles, unable to free themselves from the ties that bind them, even after decisions are made.
Full Cast and Crew
Screenings
| 25/11/2025 | 20:30h | LA CASA ENCENDIDA | Gratuito |
Director
Angela Schanelec
Angela Schanelec (Aalen, Germany, 1962) began her career as a theater actress with the Thalia Theatre in Hamburg and the Schaubühne in Berlin. She then studied directing at the German Film and Television Academy, where she took classes from filmmaker Harun Farocki and was in the same class as Christian Petzold and Thomas Arslan, with whom she formed what is known as the Berlin School. Her work as a filmmaker began in the mid-1990s, creating a unique and essential style that led critics to compare her to auteurs such as Robert Bresson, Michelangelo Antonioni, and Chantal Akerman.
Angela Schanelec's films have been selected for major festivals such as Cannes, where she competed in the Official Selection – Un Certain Regard with Marseille (2004) and Plätze in Städten (1998), and Locarno, where she participated in the Official Selection with Der traumhafte Weg (2016). Schanelec's cinematic consecration came with I Was at Home, but..., winning the Silver Bear for Best Director at the Berlinale, the Silver Astor for Best Director at Mar del Plata, and the Zabaltegi-Tabakalera Award for Best Film at San Sebastián. A thrilling work that speaks to us of grief, motherhood, and lack of communication.
Music, her latest feature film, is a fascinating contemporary interpretation of the tragedy of Oedipus, which won her the Silver Bear for Best Screenplay at the last Berlinale and the awards for Best Director and Best Cinematography at the 68th edition of the Valladolid International Film Week.


