Dieter Kosslick (born 30 May 1948 in Pforzheim) is the director of the Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale). He has held this post since 1 May 2001 when he took over from Moritz de Hadeln.
Born in Pforzheim and raised in Ispringen, Dieter Kosslick studied Communication, Politics and Education in Munich. After receiving his master's degree, he stayed on at the university in the Bavarian capital as a research assistant before moving to Hamburg in 1979 to work as speechwriter and office administrator for the First Mayor Hans-Ulrich Klose and later as press spokesman for the "women's equality" unit. He left this position in 1982 to work as a journalist for the magazine "konkret".
In 1983 he became involved in film funding, firstly as managing director of Hamburg's cultural film fund (Hamburg Film Office). In 1986 he founded the European Low Budget Forum with the cinema "Kino auf der Alster". In 1988 he became managing director of the city's economic film fund (Hamburg Film Fund - Filmförderung Hamburg Schleswig-Holstein). The same year, he was a co-founder of EFDO (European Film Distribution Office) and became the president of this European organisation, a post he held until EFDO's dissolution in 1996.
In 1992 the federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia and WDR (West German broadcasting corporation) managed to get Dieter Kosslick to come from Hamburg to the Rhine to head up the barely one-year-old "Filmstiftung NRW" as its executive director. During his nine years in office North-Rhine-Westphalia became the leading German film site and established itself internationally as an important film region.
In July 2000 the federal state and city of Berlin as well as the Federal Government of Germany appointed him director of Germany's prestigious Berlin International Film Festival. Dieter Kosslick took up his new position in the capital as head of the Berlinale on May 1, 2001.
Until today Dieter Kosslick has launched new sections and initiatives within the Berlin Film Festival, among which are the section "Perspektive Deutsches Kino" for young German film, the Co-Production Market and the World Cinema Fund as well as the Culinary Cinema which is operating since 2007. The Berlinale has grown to become one of the most important film festivals in Europe.