Emily Atef
Emily Atef (born May 6, 1973) is a German-born French-Iranian film director and screenwriter renowned for her introspective dramas that delve into themes of identity, loss, and human relationships.[1][2] Born in Berlin to a French-Iranian family, Atef relocated to Los Angeles at the age of seven with her parents and brother, later living in the Jura region of France and London before returning to Berlin to pursue her passion for cinema.[2][1] She studied filmmaking at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin (DFFB), where she honed her skills in narrative and documentary styles.[1] Atef's career began with the documentary XX to XY: Fighting to Be Jake (2002), which explored gender transition, followed by the short film Sundays (2003).[1] Her debut feature, Molly's Way (2005), co-written with Esther Bernstorff, centers on a young Irish woman searching for her father in Germany and earned 11 international awards, including the Grand Prize at the Mar del Plata International Film Festival and Best Screenplay at the Munich Film Festival.[1][3] Subsequent works include The Stranger in Me (2008), a drama about pregnancy and emotional turmoil that received the German Independence Award for Best Film and the Otto Sprenger Award; Kill Me (2012), a poignant story of euthanasia co-developed at the Cannes Cinéfondation residency; and 3 Days in Quiberon (2018), a black-and-white portrayal of actress Romy Schneider's final days that won Atef the German Film Award for Best Direction and Best Film.[2][4] More recent films such as More Than Ever (2022), which premiered at Cannes and addresses terminal illness, and Someday We'll Tell Each Other Everything (2023), a Berlin Film Festival Golden Bear contender exploring post-reunification tensions, have further solidified her reputation for nuanced character studies.[5][6][2] As of November 2025, Atef is attached to direct an untitled biopic on Farah Pahlavi, the former Empress of Iran.[7] She recently directed her English-language debut, the female-empowerment drama Call Me Queen (2025), set in Kenya during the 1990s AIDS crisis and centering on the friendship between a Rwandan woman from Nairobi's slums and an Irish journalist; production wrapped in March 2025 after being presented at the Venice Gap-Financing Market.[5] Her films, often co-written with collaborators and featuring strong female leads, have garnered critical acclaim across major festivals, highlighting her commitment to authentic, emotionally resonant storytelling.[3][6]Early years
Early life
Emily Atef was born on May 6, 1973, in Berlin, Germany, to French-Iranian parents.[8][1] Her father is Iranian and her mother is French, which contributed to her early immersion in a blend of cultural influences from the outset.[9] She has an older brother, Cyril Atef, who later became a professional drummer.[10] At the age of seven, Atef relocated with her family from West Berlin to Los Angeles, California, where they lived for several years.[2][3] This move exposed her to American culture and English as a primary language during her elementary school years. When she was thirteen, the family moved again to the Jura region in eastern France, the area where her mother had grown up, allowing Atef to deepen her connection to French heritage and language.[2][11] These frequent relocations, including a later brief period in London during her adolescence, fostered a profoundly multicultural upbringing marked by constant adaptation to new environments.[1] Growing up amid these shifts, Atef was surrounded by diverse cultures and multiple languages, including German from her birthplace, French from her mother's side, Persian through her father's Iranian roots, and English from her time in the United States and beyond.[11][5] This nomadic childhood, characterized by living between continents and navigating familial bilingualism, ignited her early fascination with themes of identity and personal narrative.[12] Such experiences of displacement and cultural hybridity would later inform her artistic focus on similar motifs in her filmmaking.[13]Education
After completing her secondary education in France, Atef moved to London in the early 1990s, where she attended a theatre school for several years to train as an actress.[2] This period immersed her in the London theatre scene, providing foundational experience in performance and storytelling before transitioning to film.[14] In 2001, Atef returned to Berlin and enrolled at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin (DFFB), one of Germany's premier film schools, to study directing.[3][15] The DFFB's curriculum emphasized practical filmmaking, allowing students to specialize in areas such as directing while collaborating across disciplines like screenwriting and cinematography.[16] Her multicultural upbringing, spanning Germany, the United States, France, and Iran, likely influenced her decision to pursue cinema studies in Berlin, a hub for European arthouse traditions.[1] During her time at DFFB, Atef developed her directorial voice through hands-on projects, though specific student films from this era are not widely documented.[17] The academy's focus on international cinema and mentorship from established filmmakers exposed her to diverse influences, shaping her approach to narrative and visual storytelling in subsequent works.[18] She graduated in 2008, equipped with the skills to enter the professional film industry.[9][19]Career
Early career
Emily Atef began her professional filmmaking career in Berlin during the early 2000s, starting with short films that showcased her emerging voice in exploring personal and cultural narratives. Her debut short documentary, XX to XY: Fighting to Be Jake (2002), followed a transgender individual's journey and earned the audience award at the Long Island International Film Festival.[15] This was followed by the short film Sundays (2003), which received the best short film award at the Lucca Film Festival in 2004.[15] Although specific assistant director roles are not widely documented, Atef's early work in Berlin built on her training at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie (DFFB), where she honed her skills in narrative storytelling. Atef's debut feature film, Molly's Way (original title: Mollys Weg, 2005), co-written with Esther Bernstorff, centers on a young Irish woman searching for the father of her unborn child in Germany. Produced in Germany with a runtime of 90 minutes, it was financed through German public funding bodies amid the industry's lengthy development processes, which can span 2 to 7 years for independent projects. The film premiered at the 2005 Munich Film Festival, where it won Best Screenplay, and went on to earn 11 international awards, including the Grand Prize at the Mar del Plata International Film Festival.[1][4] Atef's second feature film, The Stranger in Me (original title: Das Fremde in mir, 2008), delved into themes of identity and mental health through the lens of postpartum depression. Co-written with frequent collaborator Esther Bernstorff, the film follows a young mother, Rebecca (played by Lena Lauzemis), whose joy turns to despair after giving birth, straining her relationship with partner Julian (Volker Bruch). Produced in Germany with a runtime of 99 minutes, it was financed through German public funding bodies amid the industry's lengthy development processes, which can span 2 to 7 years for independent projects. The film premiered in the Critics' Week section at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, where it received initial praise for its sensitive handling of a taboo subject, though some critics noted its clinical approach limited deeper psychological exploration. It won the German Independence Award for Best Film at the Oldenburg International Film Festival and the Otto Sprenger Award.[20][21][22][23][24][25] As a French-Iranian filmmaker working in the German industry, Atef faced challenges typical of multicultural artists, including protracted funding timelines that delayed projects and required persistent advocacy for personal stories. Her early collaborations, particularly with screenwriter Bernstorff on Molly's Way and The Stranger in Me, helped shape her focus on intimate, character-driven explorations of emotional turmoil and cultural displacement, establishing a foundation for her subsequent career.[24][3]Breakthrough films
Emily Atef's breakthrough in the 2010s came with her feature film 3 Days in Quiberon (2018), a black-and-white biographical drama that marked a significant elevation in her international recognition. The film centers on a pivotal three-day period in 1981, when iconic actress Romy Schneider retreats to a spa hotel in Quiberon, Brittany, to undergo a health regimen and grants her final interview to journalists alongside a photo session, revealing layers of her personal turmoil and resilience without delving into overt tragedy.[26][27] Starring Marie Bäumer in a transformative lead performance as Schneider, alongside Birgit Minichmayr as journalist Alice Schwarzer and Robert Gwisdek as photographer Robert Lebrun, the production captured Atef's growing affinity for intimate character studies rooted in real historical moments.[28] Principal photography occurred primarily in France, on the Quiberon Peninsula and nearby locations like Saint-Dégan, to authentically recreate the coastal setting's isolating yet therapeutic atmosphere.[29] This project exemplified Atef's evolving biographical drama style, which emphasized nuanced portrayals of complex historical figures, particularly women navigating fame and personal adversity, as seen in her focus on Schneider's life amid post-war European cinema's cultural shifts. Building on themes from her earlier works like the 2012 film Kill Me, which explored emotional isolation, 3 Days in Quiberon refined this approach by blending factual events—drawn from Schneider's actual 1981 Stern magazine interview—with fictionalized interpersonal dynamics to humanize her legacy.[30] Critics lauded the film for its sensitive depiction of female vulnerability, highlighting Schneider's struggles with motherhood, loss, and media scrutiny against the backdrop of 20th-century European history, where her career bridged German and French cinematic traditions.[31][32] Atef's directorial techniques in 3 Days in Quiberon demonstrated a maturation toward subtlety and immersion, employing long takes, naturalistic black-and-white cinematography by Thomas Kiennast that leveraged available coastal light to evoke emotional rawness, and a emphasis on unhurried, intimate dialogues to convey psychological depth. These choices created a claustrophobic yet poetic intimacy, mirroring Schneider's confined emotional state during the spa retreat.[27][28] The film premiered in competition at the 68th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2018, where it received strong praise for its performances and Atef's restrained storytelling, earning Marie Bäumer the Silver Bear for Best Actress.[33] It subsequently toured the late-2010s festival circuit, including screenings at the Chicago International Film Festival, Sydney Film Festival, and San Francisco International Film Festival, amplifying Atef's profile among arthouse audiences.[34] Commercially, 3 Days in Quiberon achieved modest success for an independent drama, grossing approximately $1.88 million worldwide, with notable earnings in Germany and France, underscoring its appeal in European markets.[35] The film's critical reception, including seven wins at the 2018 German Film Awards (Lolas), solidified Atef's reputation for crafting empathetic portraits of women's inner lives within historical contexts.[36]Recent and upcoming projects
In 2022, Atef directed More Than Ever (Plus que jamais), a drama exploring the emotional strains of a terminal illness diagnosis on a young couple's relationship, with protagonist Hélène seeking solace in the Norwegian fjords.[37] The film premiered at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival in the Un Certain Regard section, marking Atef's return to the Croisette after her earlier works.[38] It received international distribution, including releases in France, the United States, and several European markets, highlighting Atef's growing appeal beyond German cinema.[39] Atef's 2023 film Someday We'll Tell Each Other Everything (Irgendwann werden wir uns alles erzählen) adapts Daniela Krien's 2013 novel, centering on a 19-year-old woman in rural East Germany during the 1990 summer of reunification, as she navigates a secretive affair with a twice-her-age farmer amid themes of youthful impulsivity and hidden traumas.[40] The project premiered in competition at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival, emphasizing Atef's interest in post-Cold War personal reckonings.[41] Looking ahead, Atef's English-language debut Call Me Queen, adapted from Lara Santoro's 2007 novel Mercy, is a female empowerment drama set in 1990s Nairobi, Kenya, depicting the bond between a Rwandan single mother from the slums and an Irish journalist confronting the AIDS crisis.[5] Production wrapped in March 2025 after filming in Nairobi from January to February, with no release date announced as of November 2025, underscoring Atef's pivot to African narratives of resilience and solidarity.[42] In February 2025, Atef was announced as director for an untitled biopic on Farah Pahlavi, the last Empress of Iran, scripted by Juliette Towhidi and focusing on her exile since 1979, personal losses, and enduring cultural legacy.[7] The project draws on Atef's Iranian heritage, with development ongoing and unconfirmed casting rumors circulating in industry reports.[43] These endeavors reflect Atef's evolving career trajectory toward global stories and cross-continental collaborations, building on the critical and commercial success of her breakthrough films to secure larger-scale productions outside Europe.[5]Personal life and influences
Personal life
Emily Atef has long resided in Berlin, Germany, returning there around 2002 after her studies to establish it as her professional and personal base. This choice reflects a return to her birthplace following a childhood marked by international relocations, which have shaped her perspective on cultural fluidity and belonging.[44] Atef maintains a private personal life, with limited public details available about her relationships or marriage, consistent with her preference for discretion away from the spotlight. She is married and has a daughter, born in 2011, and her husband plays a key role in supporting family responsibilities during her frequent travels for work. Atef has spoken about the challenges of balancing motherhood with her career, including feelings of guilt when away from her daughter, yet she prioritizes full presence during family time. Her family includes her brother, musician Cyril Atef, sharing their French-Iranian heritage from their parents.[24][45] Atef's French-Iranian background fosters ongoing ties to her ancestral roots, including inspiration drawn from her Iranian heritage, though she keeps such connections largely personal. Her early displacements—moving from Berlin to Los Angeles at age seven and then to France at thirteen—have contributed to a worldview attuned to themes of migration and identity, without direct ties to her professional output. In her downtime, Atef enjoys simple pursuits such as walking, traveling with loved ones, and reflective thinking, which help recharge her amid a demanding schedule.[7][44][24]Artistic influences
Emily Atef's artistic influences draw from a diverse array of international cinema, reflecting her multicultural background as a German-born filmmaker of Iranian descent who has lived in France, the United States, and the United Kingdom. This heritage has exposed her to a broad spectrum of storytelling traditions, amplifying her appreciation for introspective and socially nuanced narratives.[46] In the 2022 Sight & Sound directors' poll, Atef selected the following top 10 films, emphasizing character-driven dramas and existential explorations: A Woman Under the Influence (1974) by John Cassavetes; The Decalogue (1989) by Krzysztof Kieślowski; La ciénaga (2001) by Lucrecia Martel; Melancholia (2011) by Lars von Trier; Adoption (Örökbefogadás, 1975) by Márta Mészáros; Crimson Gold (Talaye Sorgh, 2003) by Jafar Panahi; Sátántangó (1994) by Béla Tarr; Elena (2011) by Andrey Zvyagintsev; Timbuktu (2014) by Abderrahmane Sissako; and Woman in the Dunes (Suna no onna, 1964) by Hiroshi Teshigahara. These selections underscore her affinity for arthouse works that probe human vulnerability and societal constraints.[46] Atef has cited specific filmmakers as key inspirations, including Michael Haneke, whose The White Ribbon (2009) she described as a "masterpiece" for its unflinching examination of authoritarian roots, influencing her casting choices and thematic depth. Similarly, Gus Van Sant's Last Days (2005) served as a major influence on her approach to intimate, observational portraits in 3 Days in Quiberon (2018), particularly in capturing isolation and finality. In a separate interview, she reiterated her admiration for Panahi's Crimson Gold, Cassavetes' A Woman Under the Influence, Kieślowski's The Decalogue, von Trier's Melancholia, and Steve McQueen's Hunger (2008), forming her core top five favorites that shape her focus on personal and political introspection.[47][48] Her influences evolved from exposure to American independent cinema during her time in Los Angeles—evident in her affinity for Cassavetes and Van Sant—to a deeper engagement with European and Iranian arthouse traditions after returning to Berlin, where films like Panahi's and Haneke's resonated with her exploration of identity and marginalization.[48]Filmography
Feature films
Emily Atef's feature films as director are presented below in chronological order.| Year | Title | Runtime | Genre | Description | Screenplay | Production Countries | Languages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Molly's Way | 84 minutes | Drama | An Irish woman travels to Poland to find the father of her unborn child, knowing only his first name and occupation. | Emily Atef and Esther Bernstorff | Germany | English, Polish, German [49] [50] [51] |
| 2008 | The Stranger in Me (Das Fremde in mir) | 99 minutes | Drama | A young couple grapples with postpartum depression following the birth of their child. | Emily Atef and Esther Bernstorff | Germany | German [23] [52] [53] |
| 2012 | Kill Me (Töte mich) | 91 minutes | Drama | A teenage girl aids an escaped convict in fleeing to France in exchange for his assistance in her suicide. | Emily Atef and Esther Bernstorff | Germany, France, Switzerland | German, French, English [54] [55] [56] |
| 2018 | 3 Days in Quiberon (3 Tage in Quiberon) | 115 minutes | Drama | Actress Romy Schneider grants her final interview to journalists during a three-day stay at a French rehab clinic in 1981. | Emily Atef | Germany, Austria, France | German, French [26] [33] |
| 2022 | More Than Ever (Plus que jamais) | 123 minutes | Drama | A woman diagnosed with a terminal illness journeys to Norway seeking solitude, straining her relationship with her partner. | Emily Atef and Lars Hubrich | France, Luxembourg, Norway | French, English, Norwegian [57] [58] [59] |
| 2023 | Someday We'll Tell Each Other Everything (Irgendwann werden wir uns alles erzählen) | 129 minutes | Drama | In rural East Germany shortly after reunification, a young woman moves in with her boyfriend's family and develops a forbidden attraction to his older brother. | Emily Atef, based on the novel by Daniela Krien | Germany | German [60] [61] [62] |
| 2025 | Call Me Queen | TBD | Drama | An Irish journalist and a Rwandan single mother in 1990s Nairobi form an alliance to address the AIDS crisis. | Emily Atef, Jeannine Dominy, Hawa Essuman, and Josune Hahnheiser | UK, France, Germany | English [63] [5] [42] |
Short films and documentaries
Emily Atef began her filmmaking career with short films and documentaries produced during and shortly after her studies at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin (DFFB), focusing on intimate personal stories. These early works, primarily narrative and documentary formats under 60 minutes, marked her transition from educational exercises to professional endeavors, often addressing themes of identity and human resilience. Publicly available information on her student-era projects is limited beyond her two debut works.[15][64] Her debut, the 20-minute documentary XX to XY: Fighting to Be Jake (2002), follows Jake, a young British transgender man navigating his transition from female to male, blending interviews, music, and animations to highlight challenges against societal and medical barriers. It premiered internationally and received the Audience Award at the Long Island Film Festival (2003), Best Short at the Pittsburgh Film Festival (2003), and recognition at the LGBT Film Festival Philadelphia (2003).[64][15] In 2003, Atef directed the narrative short Sundays, a concise exploration of everyday relationships, which earned the Best Short Film award at the Lucca Film Festival (2004).[15]Television work
Emily Atef's contributions to television primarily consist of directing German TV films and episodes, often delving into themes of personal crisis, family dynamics, and ethical quandaries, with one foray into international series work. Her television projects demonstrate her ability to adapt nuanced character-driven storytelling to broadcast formats, frequently collaborating with public broadcasters like ZDF and ARD affiliates.[8] In 2016, Atef directed Wunschkinder, a 90-minute drama exploring a couple's desperate pursuit of parenthood through international surrogacy, starring Victoria Mayer and Godehard Giese; the film aired on ZDF and was produced by X Filme Creative Pool.[65][66] Her 2017 TV film Macht euch keine Sorgen! (Don't Worry, I'm Fine), a 89-minute family drama about a German teenager's radicalization and departure to join ISIS in Syria, featured Jörg Schüttauf and Leonard Carow and premiered on Das Erste (ARD) on April 11, 2018; Atef also contributed to the screenplay.[67][68] Atef co-wrote and directed the 2019 Tatort episode "Falscher Hase" (Run Rabbit Run), an 88-minute black comedy crime story inspired by the Coen Brothers' Fargo, centering on a botched robbery at a solar company; it starred Margarita Broich and Wolfram Koch and aired on Das Erste (ARD) via HR on September 1, 2019.[69][70] In 2020, she helmed Jackpot, a 88-minute thriller about a car depot worker (Rosalie Thomass) tempted by a found bag of cash, produced by Constantin Television and aired on SWR (ARD); the film earned a nomination for the Deutscher Fernsehpreis for Best Direction.[71][72][73] Atef's international television credit came in 2022 with directing two episodes of the final season of Killing Eve on BBC America and AMC: episode 5, "Don't Get Attached" (airing March 27), which follows Eve's investigation into a target linked to The Twelve, and episode 6, "Oh Goodie, I'm the Winner" (airing April 3), featuring escalating tensions among assassins; both episodes highlighted her skill in handling suspenseful ensemble dynamics.[74]Recognition
Awards and nominations
Emily Atef's films have garnered significant recognition in international and German cinema, with her receiving 14 awards and 19 nominations as director by 2025. Her accolades highlight her ability to blend personal and cultural narratives, positioning her as a key voice in German-Iranian filmmaking through honors at major festivals and national awards.[4] The following table summarizes her major awards and nominations, organized by year and film:| Year | Award | Film | Category | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Munich Film Festival | Molly's Way | Best Screenplay | Won |
| 2006 | Mar del Plata International Film Festival | Molly's Way | Grand Jury Prize | Won |
| 2008 | Cannes Film Festival (Critics' Week) | Das Fremde in mir | Grand Prize | Nominated |
| 2008 | Oldenburg International Film Festival | Das Fremde in mir | German Independence Award (Best Film) | Won |
| 2008 | Oldenburg International Film Festival | Das Fremde in mir | Audience Award | Won |
| 2009 | Studio Hamburg New Talent Award | Das Fremde in mir | Best Director | Won |
| 2008 | São Paulo International Film Festival | Das Fremde in mir | International Jury Award: Best Feature Film | Won |
| 2012 | Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival | Töte mich | Best Film (International Competition) | Nominated |
| 2018 | Berlin International Film Festival | 3 Days in Quiberon | Golden Bear | Nominated |
| 2018 | Deutscher Filmpreis (Lola) | 3 Days in Quiberon | Best Director | Won |
| 2018 | Deutscher Filmpreis (Lola) | 3 Days in Quiberon | Best Film | Won |
| 2022 | Cannes Film Festival | More Than Ever | Un Certain Regard Award | Nominated |
| 2022 | Cinemania Film Festival | More Than Ever | Best Film | Won |
| 2023 | Berlin International Film Festival | Someday We'll Tell Each Other Everything | Golden Bear | Nominated |