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Channing Tatum draws on real-life parenting for Berlinale drama ‘Josephine’

By Thomson Reuters Feb 20, 2026 | 11:14 AM

By Miranda Murray and Hanna Rantala

BERLIN, Feb 20 (Reuters) – Channing Tatum recalled on Friday how he has had conversations with his daughter similar to those depicted in his role as a father ​in the sexual assault drama “Josephine,” which is competing for the ‌Berlin Film Festival’s top prize.

The film opens with Tatum’s character, Damian, going on a morning run with his 8-year-old daughter, Josephine, played by newcomer Mason Reeves.

Josephine runs ahead of her father and inadvertently witnesses a sexual assault, drawing her family into an uncomfortable ‌court case ​while she tries to make sense of what ⁠she saw and how ⁠it fits into her budding view of the world.

“I promise you, that conversation that I had with Josephine underneath the bridge is a conversation that I’ve had with my daughter,” he told journalists.

He recounted buying ​ice cream for his daughter after she got into a fight at her preschool with a boy who was bullying her friend.

“If someone is ⁠doing something that you are asking them ⁠not to do and they don’t listen, you have ​the full right to protect yourself. I will back you up forever,” he ​recalled telling his now 12-year-old daughter.

REAL LIFE INSPIRATION

Director Beth de Araujo ‌said the film draws on her real-life experience interrupting a sexual assault with her father in San Francisco.

“I just wanted to take the hypervigilance I was left with after that day and explore it through the eyes ⁠of an 8-year-old girl,” said the director about her second feature film.

De Araujo said that she found Mason while scouting for a girl to play Josephine ⁠at a farmers’ market ‌in San Francisco.

“Working with Mason was not a challenge. ⁠She was a gift. She’s an incredibly talented actor ​who ‌is so emotionally and intellectually intelligent for her years,” ​said de ⁠Araujo.

Tatum and Gemma Chan, who plays Josephine’s mother, Claire, said they were given time ahead of shooting to hang out and make Mason feel comfortable.

“We had a little competition, didn’t we? Like who could hang on to the monkey bars the longest,” said Chan.

“Mason won.”

(Reporting by Miranda Murray and Hanna Rantala: Editing ​by Sharon Singleton)