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Venice Film Festival, from LaLaLand to the Voyage of Time, sketches by Nesta Morgan

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Teapots and Modern Dance, at Venice

 

Director Damian Chazelle is hitting the double chord joyously as Emma Stone wins best actress, with modern dance we’re going into a dream in the real world, playing out the rhythms of a speech pattern, nursing fantasies in La La Land until lights out… the music casts a thin veil, a dream space astrumpeter Lee Morgan, plays blue notes on his life in Kasper Collins’s documentary, I Called Him Morgan.

I draw Actress Alicia Viksander in The Light Between Oceans with Michael Fassbender, she responds dreamlike “Oh, are we on a desert island? Oh, that’s gorgeous!”. Whilst talking on the character experience Alicia goes onto say “What am I supposed to feel about loss? I learned not to look for that answer” and Michael reflects “What can I offer a child? Forgiveness”

 

DirectorRama Burshtein, actor Assaf Amir and cast bring us their love story Through The Wall, Laavor at Hakir, and relate their own desires to being on this set, dreaming… 
“I wanted to be the one, to experience. I wanted to be in love, listening, learning … to… I just fell in love, hope, a rare important lioness role and “Wow!”

 

Wim Wenders directs Les Beaux Jours D’Aranjuez with Sophie Semin and Paulo Branco; picturing the differences between men and women, he alludes to the lightness of being french with beautiful text on the subject of a jukebox “we better make it into a comic, show what they can’t tell one another… and traverser la musique!”

 

Actors Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner experiment on Arrival, see what you are thinking, acting without words, word’s limit emotions; they refer to Love, to Anxiety and Amy’s favourite word, “Ma”.

 

Charles Siskal, directs the documentary on William Powell’s book, his life and the surmise of the American Anarchist, in which Powell’s clear headed reasoning and purpose of thought are expressed in his wordsThink for yourself. Remorse not regret. My skeleton in print. I live with that. Bought a Gun”. 

 

Tom Ford directs Nocturnal Animals and Amy Adams, who he professes to be “a female version of me”, and goes onto describe “The absurdity” of “my head inside the artist, I fell in love with these women, my true self… and the red velvet sofa”, not surprisingly as Ford’s designs on colour furnish the production, and go as far as to bring inspiration to actor Jake Gyllenhaal’s reading for his role from “a hue of red paper, the metaphor of heartbreak playing itself out, and a peculiar shade of colour to the script”. Actor Aaron Taylor Johnson accepts a part, saying “Take me on that journey, puppeteer me forward”, whilst Amy Adams sits by Tom Ford he confesses “I have fantasies of revenge but just the thought of it is not satisfying”.

 

Christopher Murray directs El Cristo Ciego, The Blind Christ offering“a parable language, a human look, a point of view” where “Faith is the sound that fills the emptiness”, he comments “It’s nice, it’s amazing!”

 

Jaeger Le Couture winner and Actor Liev Schreiber, describes his part in The Bleeder as “The right choice”, with humour as director Philippe Faladreau provides “Something gritty and sexy in the design of the film, and embraces the flaws of the hand held camera”, then goes onto dance, like “a pathetic ridiculous person” while Naomi Watts, actress, goes into costume for her audition sporting “Red boots, fake boobs, leopard print tights, all art forms there to connect to yourself” and she says “Wow, did you just do that!” Philippe says “It’s beautiful, thank-you! Can I take a photo?

 

La Culture Francaise - Allemande is brought to the front by director Francois Ozon with Frantz.

Paula Beer wins best young actress for her portrayal, in both tongues, of a love torn soul drawn into mourning and faced with the imagery of Manet’s painting, Le Suicide. The voyeur experiences next to no narrative content in this painting, but an association of sacrifice, idealism or heroism, and with Frantz we wait to learn the time, the place and the protagonist for love and death; we listen to Frantz recall “The noise is terrifying. The sound of the wind in the leaves. I can’t hear the notes. Le Suicide, Manet”.

 

Ulrich Seidl directs, and documents a poignant tale in Safari; a giraffe stands tall in nature, paired with a mate; then a shot, the fallen giraffe is transported alone, skinned, sacrificed as pleasure to the rich, and needs for the poor. There is a reference to “a Textbook hit”, and I find a parody to the story of Charles Siskal’s documentary film American Anarchist in which William Powell has a lifetime of reflection on his own textbook writings on weapons of destruction. Finding a youthful protagonist in the internet, a part of Powell wanted to learn more but had a hard time admitting responsibility for the acts, and fate, of offering anarchist recipes. His deliberately provocative wish to do more in light of the consequences of and autonomy in the Anarchist Cookbook, a constant companion; even out of the picture is a man who is moral, ethical, against government; there is foresight in the man, rhetoric, and anger association showing some kind of empathy to google.

 

James Franco states his love for literature as big as for film, an alias in Mice and Men, all with the eyes In Dubious Battle; look at the work, and he comments on a lack of consideration for the working class.

Jude Law plays The Young Pope with “just a joy, on these beautiful sets and colourful, wonderful compositions” directed by the humour and attention to detail of Paulo Sorrentino, “Very nice!” he comments.

 

Martin Koolhoven, director of Brimstone with actress Dakota Fanning and Emilia Jones, jests on

the consequence of violence to playing with a mute, and then “Well, I think it looks like America, but we’re in the EU!”

 

Directors Mariano Cohn and Gaston Duprat's El Ciudadano Ilustre, The Distinguished Citizen is “Muy bueno!” and leading actor Oscar Martinez goes on to win the Volpi Cup award for Best Actor in his well designed performance as a Nobel Prize wining writer from Spain returning to his home town in Argentina. From sets balanced with comfort of a prize and the Mies Van der Rohe Barcelona chair in a large open vista’d apartment to the aged vintage car seat of a broken down car and comic nostalgic props of a South American hotel room; the sets surround his encompassing performance and the camera shapes his character well.

 

Mel Gibson directs Hacksaw Ridge, and offers insight “Do something extraordinary and fantastic in life. One word, just survival. Operate from a position of love. Technical and emotional.”

Andy Garfield, actor, suggests “Real superheroes didn’t wear any spandex”. Mel comments “I just simply can’t touch it!” … “he’s dressed up in her dress” and “Wow! What a beautiful drawing”.

 

An unpredictable award for direction went to La Region Salvaje, The Untamed where I can only imagine the sheer fantasy of an iconic octopus personifying both male and female sexual desires touched the jury as it played against the scenes of a classic film Monte and the story of a man’s own enduring climax over a mountain.

 

At this point I took to the Art Biennale and sketched my way through exhibits at Arsenale.

 

Kim Rossi Stewart, director, producer, writer of Tommaso had one word “Bellisimo!”

 

Exhibited in The Bad Batch film is alter ego for director, Ana Lily Amipour, whose own life experience in one of the film locations where she claims “I had puberty there, part of my DNA” is cross referenced to her ideal films Romancing the Stone and The Princess Bride; each bring us adventure, reality, but only lead her to tease out self-dramas and quote “I think the Bad Batch is everywhere”, “anamorphic, explaining how I picked the music is like explaining how I had sex!” to A canibal that falls in love with his next meal”. On the casting, Amipour was drawn to the face of actress Suki Waterhouse, who goes onto say “I was really frightened, like an orange being peeled”

Producer Gabai makes light of their alternative production company “We didn’t know what the fuck we were doing when we started the company”.

 

Tai Kato, directs The Ondekoza, a well choreographed homage and masterpiece on Japanese culture and the art of performance with the Japanese professional taiko drumming group called "Ondekoza", the sound is enhanced by the strength of thunder and rain on the roof of the Sala Giardiniafter which the Voyage of Time : Life’s Journey directed by Terence Malick follows the path of Mother nature and earth cohabiting and exploring creation in the universe.

 

I sketch as the words from Mel Gibson’s table, drift over his cup of tea,

“he’s playing Pope and she’s incensed… get the kinetic feel on film, extraordinary energy… a beautiful proximity, dissolve into the real frame…”

 

drawn in Venice

 

Nesta

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Liev Schreiber as The Bleeder at Venice Film Festival 2016 sketch by Nesta

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Liev Schreiber as The Bleeder at Venice Film Festival 2016 sketch by Nesta

Jaeger Le Couture winner and Actor Liev Schreiber, describes his part in The Bleeder as “The right choice”, with humour as director Philippe Faladreau provides “Something gritty and sexy in the design of the film, and embraces the flaws of the hand held camera”.

Amy Adams with Nocturnal Animals director Tom Ford at Venice film Festival 2016 by Nesta

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Amy Adams with Nocturnal Animals director Tom Ford at Venice film Festival 2016 by Nesta

Tom Ford directs Nocturnal Animals and Amy Adams, who he professes to be “a female version of me”, and goes onto describe “The absurdity” of “my head inside the artist, I fell in love with these women, my true self… and the red velvet sofa”, not surprisingly as Ford’s designs on colour furnish the production, and go as far as to bring inspiration to actor Jake Gyllenhaal’s reading for his role from “a hue of red paper, the metaphor of heartbreak playing itself out, and a peculiar shade of colour to the script”. Actor Aaron Taylor Johnson accepts a part, saying “Take me on that journey, puppeteer me forward”, whilst Amy Adams sits by Tom Ford he confesses “I have fantasies of revenge but just the thought of it is not satisfying”.

Paula Beer wins best young Actress with Frantz at Venice Film Festival by Nesta

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Paula Beer wins best young Actress with Frantz at Venice Film Festival by Nesta

La Culture Francaise - Allemande is brought to the front by director Francois Ozon with Frantz, as Paula Beer wins best young actress for her portrayal, in both tongues, of a love torn soul drawn into mourning and faced with the imagery of Manet’s painting, Le Suicide

Best Actress Award to Emma Stone in LaLaLand directed by Damian Chazelle at Venice Film Festival 2016 by Nesta

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Best Actress Award to Emma Stone in LaLaLand directed by Damian Chazelle at Venice Film Festival 2016 by Nesta

Director Damian Chazelle is hitting the double chord joyously as Emma Stone wins best actress, with modern dance we’re going into a dream in the real world, playing out the rhythms of a speech pattern, nursing fantasies in La La Land until lights out…

The 22nd Annual Brainwash Drive/In-Bike-In/Walk-In Movie Festival Winners

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Brainwash

The First Prize Award winner: Dance of the Neurons – Jody Oberfelder

2nd Grand Prize: High Signs – Damien Patrik

Third Prize Award: Head – Stav Levi

Fourth Prize: Clyde’s Game – William Howard

Fifth: “Ahavot Be’kitsur/Short Love – Yaron Yarkoni

The Audience Choice AND Best Feature Film Awards: Curse of the Man Who Sees UFOs – Justin Gaar/Carlos de los Rios

Palmarès de la 7ème édition du Festival International du Film de la ROCHE-SUR-YON.

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Voici le PALMARES de la 7ème édition du Festival International du Film
de la ROCHE-SUR-YON.
REPRISE GRAND PRIX DU JURY INTERNATIONAL
- PROBLEMSKI HOTEL de Manu RICHE - 
MARDI 18 octobre à 20h au PANTHEON
 

 

 
 

Awards 14th International Festival Signes de Nuit

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fisdn 14

 

 

Award

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The 14th International Festival Signs of the Night / October 2016 / Lisbon, Portugal
Short Film Competition Award

 

MAIN AWARD

The French Revolution
HaMahapeicha HaTzarfatit
Hai Afik | Israel | 2015 | 0:21:00 

The French RevolutionO

Special Mentions for Main Award:

Limbo
Konstantina Kotzamani | Greece, France | 2016 | 0:30:00 

The Gift
Sophie Perrier | Switzerland | 2015 | 0:20:45

 


SIGNS AWARD
The Signs Award for Documentary honors films, which express in a surprising way sensible and perturbing aspects of reality.

Behemoth - or the Game of God
Jeremih Mosese | Lesotho, Germany | 2015 | 0:13:00

Behemoth - or the Game of God

 

NIGHT AWARD
The Night Award for Documentary honors films, which represent reality in an ambivalent and enigmatic way, avoiding stereotypes of representation and simple conclusions.

The Reflection of Power
Mihai Grecu | France | 2015 | 0:09:00

The Reflection of Power

 

fisdn


The 14th International Festival Signs of the Night / October 2016 / Lisbon, Portugal
Documentary Competition Award

MAIN AWARD

Brothers
Bracia

Wojciech Staron | Polen | 2015 | 1:11:00

Brothers

 

Special Mentions for Main Award:

Kings of Nowhere
Los Reyes del Pueblo que no Existe
Betzabé Garcia | Mexico | 2015 | 1:23:00

Resplandor
Fernando Priego Ruiz | Argentina | 2016 | 0:50:00

 

SIGNS AWARD
The Signs Award for Documentary honors films, which express in a surprising way sensible and perturbing aspects of reality.

American Reflexxx
Ali Coates, Signe Pierce | United States | 2014 | 0:14:00

American Reflexxx

 

NIGHT AWARD
The Night Award for Documentary honors films, which represent reality in an ambivalent and enigmatic way, avoiding stereotypes of representation and simple conclusions.

Symbolic Threads

Matthias Wermke, Lutz Henke, Mischa Leinkauf | Germany | 2015 | 0:15:00

SYMBOLIC THREADS

 

Special Mention for Night Award:

When You Awake
Jay Rosenblatt | USA | 2016 | 0:11:00

 

Special Mentions for EDWARD SNOWDEN AWARD
The Edward Snowden Award honors films, which offer sensible (mostly) unknown informations, facts and phenomenons of eminent importance, for which the festival wishes a wide proliferation in the future.

Life after Guantánamo
La Vida después de Guantánamo

Esteban Cuevas | Argentina | 2016 | 0:31:00

The Spirit of the Forest
El Espiritu del bosque
Monique Muntig | Belgium, Camerun | 2015 | 0:50:00

 

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The 14th International Festival Signs of the Night / October 2016 / Lisbon, Portugal
Cinema in Transgression Competition Award

MAIN AWARD

The Case of Former Psychiatric Hospital Ward Attendant
Nikolay Nasedkin | Russia | 2016 | 0:39:00

The Case of Former Psychiatric Hospital Ward Attendant

 

Special Mention for Main Award:

Hypertelia
Jonathan Palomar | Canada, Columbia | 2015 |0:10:00

 

SIGNS AWARD
The Signs Award for Documentary honors films, which express in a surprising way sensible and perturbing aspects of reality.

Black Code
Louis Henderson | France | 2015 | 0:21:00

Black Code

 

Special Mentions for Signs Award:

Most of Us don't Live There
Laura Marie Wayne | Canada, Cuba | 2015 | 0:25:00

Procedere
Delia Schiltknecht | Switzerland | 2015 | 0:06:00

NIGHT AWARD
The Night Award for Documentary honors films, which represent reality in an ambivalent and enigmatic way, avoiding stereotypes of representation and simple conclusions.

Final Gathering

Alain Escalle | France | 2016 | 0:13:00

Final Gathering

 

Special Mentions for Night Award:

Psaume
Nicolas Boone | France | 2015 | 0:48:00

Scorched Water
Alexander Hick | Germany, Ecuador | 2015 | 1:16:00

 

EDWARD SNOWDEN AWARD
The Edward Snowden Award honors films, which offer sensible (mostly) unknown informations, facts and phenomenons of eminent importance, for which the festival wishes a wide proliferation in the future.

The Great Wall

Tadhg O'Sullivan | Ireland | 2015 | 1:14:00

The Great Wall

 

 

 

 
 


FNC 2016 Awards

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OCTOBER 16, 2016  |  AWARDS #FNC2016: DAY 12

YESTERDAY: THE CLOSING CEREMONY OF THE 45TH FNC WAS THE SCENE OF AN EXPLOSION OF JOY, HUGS AND FRENZIED DANCING.

TODAY: LAST DAY TO SEE THE WORKS OF SEVERAL RENOWNED FILMMAKERS.

 

 

 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  NEWS
A NEW FILM THEATRE IN MONTREAL

During the closing ceremony, co-founder and programing director Claude Chamberlan made an announcement of great importance concerning a new venue for film in Montreal:

"In my opening speech, I expressed my deep admiration for independent film festivals and venues in Quebec, for their diversity, their courage and their importance!

I had also lamented the mysterious and highly questionable bankruptcy of the Cinéma Parallèle and the Cinéma Excentris. I said I was looking for a venue, a place for a New Cinéma Parallèle. Good news ! I found and it is a gorgeous place ... and near a metro station! The Parallel rides again and celebrates in family its 50 years in 2017.

In this beautiful and accessible location, will be presented movies and special events in collaboration with festivals and distributors here and abroad. The programming of the place will be provided by programmers of the Festival du nouveau cinema".

* Location and programming will soon be announced.

 
 
 
 

     THE STUDENT                            TONI ERDMANN                                  WEREWOLF
OCTOBER 16  |  NEWS
AWARDS AND PRIZES

During our closing ceremony, we had the great pleasure to announce the award winners of this 45th edition. Without further adue, here are our most prestigious prizes' recipients :

Louve d’Or presented by Québecor
Toni Erdmann by Maren Ade

Prix de l’innovation Daniel Langlois
The Student
 by Kirill Serebrennikov

Prix d’interprétation
Peter Simonischek
 in Toni Erdmann

Grand Prix Focus Québec/Canada
Werewolf
 by Ashley McKenzie

Prix du public Temps Ø
Prank
 by Vincent Biron

Loup argenté presented by Paraloeil
Undisclosed Recipients by Sandro Aguilar

Grand Prix innovation presented by Prim
La Péri by Balthazar Auxiètre (Innerspacevr)

Prix des RPCÉ presented by l'ÉCAL et Ulule
Les Beiges by Étienne Lacelle (Université Concordia)

Prix Les p'tits loups presented by la Régie du cinéma
One Two Tree by Yulia Aronova

COMPLETE LIST OF WINNERS

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  COMPÉTITION INTER.
SCREENING OF LOUVE D'OR
TONI ERDMANN

We are happy to announce that you can see the gold Louve today at noon at theCinéma Impérial. All profits made by this projection will go to Singa Quebec.

This projection was made possible through the support of Metropole Films.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 

FILMS TO SEE ON THIS LAST DAY

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  INCONTOURNABLES
THE WOMAN WHO LEFT

Recipient of the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, the second Lav Diaz presented at the FNC takes us into the life of a woman trapped by mistake. A 226 minutes film offering a transcendental experience.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  HISTOIRE(S) DU CINÉ.
VOYAGE À TRAVERS LE CINÉMA FRANÇAIS

Bertrand Tavernier sign this documentary as an act of gratitude to all those that arose in his life. Becker Renoir, Godard Chabrol, through Gabin, Jaubert and Constantine...

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  INCONTOURNABLES
AFTER THE STORM 

by Hirokazu Kore-Eda.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  INCONTOURNABLES
MADEMOISELLE 

by Park Chan-wook

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 
 
      FRANÇAIS 
 
Festival du Nouveau Cinéma
 
 

OCTOBER 16, 2016  |  AWARDS
#FNC2016: DAY 12

YESTERDAY: THE CLOSING CEREMONY OF THE 45TH FNC WAS THE SCENE OF AN EXPLOSION OF JOY, HUGS AND FRENZIED DANCING.

TODAY: LAST DAY TO SEE THE WORKS OF SEVERAL RENOWNED FILMMAKERS.

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  NEWS
A NEW FILM THEATRE IN MONTREAL

During the closing ceremony, co-founder and programing director Claude Chamberlan made an announcement of great importance concerning a new venue for film in Montreal:

"In my opening speech, I expressed my deep admiration for independent film festivals and venues in Quebec, for their diversity, their courage and their importance!

I had also lamented the mysterious and highly questionable bankruptcy of the Cinéma Parallèle and the Cinéma Excentris. I said I was looking for a venue, a place for a New Cinéma Parallèle. Good news ! I found and it is a gorgeous place ... and near a metro station! The Parallel rides again and celebrates in family its 50 years in 2017.

In this beautiful and accessible location, will be presented movies and special events in collaboration with festivals and distributors here and abroad. The programming of the place will be provided by programmers of the Festival du nouveau cinema".

* Location and programming will soon be announced.

 
 
 
 

     THE STUDENT                            TONI ERDMANN                                  WEREWOLF
OCTOBER 16  |  NEWS
AWARDS AND PRIZES

During our closing ceremony, we had the great pleasure to announce the award winners of this 45th edition. Without further adue, here are our most prestigious prizes' recipients :

Louve d’Or presented by Québecor
Toni Erdmann by Maren Ade

Prix de l’innovation Daniel Langlois
The Student
 by Kirill Serebrennikov

Prix d’interprétation
Peter Simonischek
 in Toni Erdmann

Grand Prix Focus Québec/Canada
Werewolf
 by Ashley McKenzie

Prix du public Temps Ø
Prank
 by Vincent Biron

Loup argenté presented by Paraloeil
Undisclosed Recipients by Sandro Aguilar

Grand Prix innovation presented by Prim
La Péri by Balthazar Auxiètre (Innerspacevr)

Prix des RPCÉ presented by l'ÉCAL et Ulule
Les Beiges by Étienne Lacelle (Université Concordia)

Prix Les p'tits loups presented by la Régie du cinéma
One Two Tree by Yulia Aronova

COMPLETE LIST OF WINNERS

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  COMPÉTITION INTER.
SCREENING OF LOUVE D'OR
TONI ERDMANN


We are happy to announce that you can see the gold Louve today at noon at theCinéma Impérial. All profits made by this projection will go to Singa Quebec.

This projection was made possible through the support of Metropole Films.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 

FILMS TO SEE ON THIS LAST DAY

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  INCONTOURNABLES
THE WOMAN WHO LEFT

Recipient of the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, the second Lav Diaz presented at the FNC takes us into the life of a woman trapped by mistake. A 226 minutes film offering a transcendental experience.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  HISTOIRE(S) DU CINÉ.
VOYAGE À TRAVERS LE CINÉMA FRANÇAIS

Bertrand Tavernier sign this documentary as an act of gratitude to all those that arose in his life. Becker Renoir, Godard Chabrol, through Gabin, Jaubert and Constantine...

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  INCONTOURNABLES
AFTER THE STORM 

by Hirokazu Kore-Eda.

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 
 
 
 

OCTOBER 16  |  INCONTOURNABLES
MADEMOISELLE 

by Park Chan-wook

RESERVE YOUR SEAT

 
 

 

60th BFI London Film Festival Winners

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Résultat d’images pour Certain Women, directed by Kelly Reichardt

The 60th BFI London Film Festival in partnership with American Express® announced this year’s Festival Awards’ winners at its high profile Awards dinner, at Banqueting House, Whitehall, this evening. Hosted by Michael Sheen and with an address from BFI Chair Josh Berger, guests included Abi Morgan, Alicia Vikander, Anna Friel, Anthony Chen, Athina Rachel Tsangari, Bola Agbaje, David Dehaney, David Nicholls, David Tennant, Edmund Coulthard, Florence Pugh, George Amponsah, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Guy Lodge, John Maclean, Kerry Fox, Lily James, Louise Osmond, Matthew Macfadyen, Oli Hyatt, Radu Jude, Sarah Gavron, Sara Ishaq, Sean McAllister and Michael Fassbender, who presented the BFI Fellowship to this year’s recipient Steve McQueen.

OFFICIAL COMPETITION WINNER – BEST FILM: Certain Women, directed by Kelly Reichardt

Recognising inspiring, inventive and distinctive filmmaking, the winner of the Best Film Award, went to Kelly Reichardt’s Certain Women, the impeccable study of the lives of three very different women in Montana. The award was announced by President of the Official Competition jury, Athina Rachel Tsangari, whose film Chevalier won the LFF Best Film prize in 2015.

The film jury said “In a vibrant year for cinema it was the masterful mise en scène and quiet modesty of this film that determined our choice for Best film. A humane and poignant story that calibrates with startling vulnerability and delicate understatement the isolation, frustrations and loneliness of lives unlived in a quiet corner of rural America

Tsangari’s fellow jurors were multi BAFTA-winning British screenwriter Abi Morgan whose credits include Shame, The Iron Lady, & Birdsong, the Primetime Emmy-winning The Hour and whose Suffragette opened the 2015 LFF; Anthony Chen, the Singaporean writer, director, producer who collected the Festival’s Sutherland Prize in 2013 for Ilo Ilo; Gugu Mbatha-Raw, British star of Belle who appeared in an episode of Black Mirror which screened as part of the Festival’s LFF CONNECTS programme and Radu Jude, the Silver Bear-winning Romanian director and screenwriter (Aferim! 2015) whose Scarred Hearts screened in this year’s Festival.

FIRST FEATURE COMPETITION WINNER – THE SUTHERLAND AWARD: Julia Ducournau for Raw

The long-standing Sutherland Award is presented to the director of the most original and imaginative first feature in the Festival, and this year’s winner is Julia Ducournau for Raw, about a young woman’s insatiable appetite for flesh in a playful coming-of-age body horror tale. The winner was announced by the jury president, and BAFTA-winning Sarah Gavron, director of last year’s Suffragette.

About Raw, Sarah Gavron said “It is a film that shocked and surprised us in equal measure. We admired the way the director did something completely unexpected with the genre. We enjoyed the outrageousness of the story-telling, and the glee with which events unfolded. We loved the eerie originality of the setting, the dark, dark humour, the great score and the truly distinctive visual language. And the bold charismatic acting of the women at the centre of a film that is both unique and unsettling and will quite literally make some swoon”.

The jury also gave a special commendation to Uda Benyamina's Divines for its standout female performance from Oulaya Amamra and for its great energy and veracity.

Sarah Gavron’s fellow jurors were novelist and screenwriter David Nicholls(Far from the Madding Crowd, One Day); director and producer George Amponsah who’s film The Hard Stop featured in the Debate strand last year (LFF 2015); chief UK film critic for Variety Guy Lodge; British actor Matthew Macfadyen (Anna Karenina, Frost/Nixon); and Nira Park, the BAFTA-nominated British producer of Spaced and the celebrated Three Flavours Cornetto Trilogy.

DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION WINNER – THE GRIERSON AWARD: Starless Dreams directed, produced and written by Mehrdad Oskouei

The Grierson Award for the best documentary recognises outstanding feature-length documentaries of integrity, originality, technical excellence or cultural significance. The award went to Starless Dreams, a thoughtful and complex portrait of juvenile delinquent women at the extreme margins of Iranian society, by veteran documentarian Mehrdad Oskouei. Announcing the winner was Jury President and Grierson, RTS and International Emmy-winner Louise Osmond

Louise Osmond commented Starless Dreams is the story of young women in a juvenile detention centre in Iran. By that description you’d imagine a dark film exploring a bleak world of broken young lives. This film was the very opposite of that. It took us into a world none of us knew anything about - the street kids, thieves and children of crack addicts of Iran - and showed us a place full of humour, life and spirit. Beautifully paced with great characterisation and a very strong sense of place, director Mehrdad Oskouei captured the fears and friendships of these teenagers with such humanity. The profoundly moving irony of the film is that it was in this detention centre, with others like them, that these girls finally found a sense of family and home; you feared for them most the day they were released back into their family’s care. It’s a film that stays with you for a very long time”.

Joining Louise Osmond on the jury were the factual producer and director David Dehaney; producer, director and writer Edmund Coulthard whose credits include McQueen and I and Hunger; the Vice Chairman of the Grierson Trust Sanjay Singhal and the director, producer and cinematographer Sian Mcallister, whose documentary feature debut A Syrian Love Story was BAFTA-nominated.

SHORT FILM COMPETITION WINNER – BEST SHORT FILM AWARD: 9 days – From my window in Aleppo, directed by Issa Touma, Thomas Vroege and Floor van de Muelen

This year marked the second year of presenting the Best Short Film Award which recognises short form works with a unique cinematic voice and confident handling of chosen theme and content. The award went to 9 Days – From My Window in Aleppo. The award was presented by John Maclean.

Jury president and Academy-Award®-winner, Mat Kirkby said “When Syrian photographer Issa Touma decided to pick up his camera and film events from his window in Aleppo, he did not know whether he would be alive to finish the filming. Not only does his documentary show what one person, one camera and a restricted view of an alleyway can do to reveal something as complex, confusing, and terrifying as a civil war, but also it demonstrates the power of film to reach the wider world, and make those of us more fortunate re-assess the freedom we take for granted.”

Kirkby’s fellow jurors comprised award-winning playwright and screenwriter Bola Agbaje; director-screenwriter, former Screen Star of Tomorrow and John Maclean who won a BAFTA for Pitch Black Heist (2011), and the Sundance Grand Jury Prize for Slow West in 2015; the ICA’s Cinema and Film Programme Manager, Nico Manzano; co-founder of Blue Zoo Animation Studio, Oli Hyatt and the writer, director and Academy Award® nominee Sara Ishaq(Karam Has No Walls, 2012).

 

BFI FELLOWSHIP Steve McQueen (as previously announced)

This year’s BFI Fellowship was presented to the visionary Turner-prize-winning video artist, and Oscar-winning filmmaker Steve McQueen by his frequent collaborator Michael Fassbender. McQueen was accompanied by his producer wife Bianca Stigter and close family and friends to celebrate his receiving the highest accolade the BFI Board of Governors can bestow.

Chelsea Film Festival Winners

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CHELSEA FILM FESTIVAL
ANNOUNCES ITS 2016 WINNERS

Grand Prix
JESSICA
Scott Foley

Petite Prix
PAPÉ
Nicolas Polixene

 

 

 

Feature Film Awards

 

Best Director
Ali Atshani
PARADISE
 

Best Screenplay
PENUMBRA
Shannan Leigh Reeve

 

BestCinematography
OLVIDADOS
Carlos Bolado

Best Documentary
THE HARD STOP
George Amponsah

 

Best Actor
Mohamad Ali Najafian
PARADISE

Best Supporting Actor
Mehran Rajabi Ferasati
PARADISE
 

 

Best Actress
Noémie Merlant
TWISTING FATE
(A TOUS LES VENTS DU CIEL)
 

Best Supporting Actress
Lara Lemon
OFF PISTE

 

 

 

Short Film Awards

 

Best Director
Umar Saeed
THE LEARNING ALLIANCE

Best Screenplay
NOCTURNES
Tommy Lefort

 

BestCinematography
RINGER
 Luc Nicknair

Best Documentary
THE LEARNING ALLIANCE
Umar Saeed

 

Best Actor
Guillaume Clément
HAPPINESS IF I CAN

Best Supporting Actor
Jeremy Luke
CONSULT AND CONQUER
 

 

Best Actress
Carole Desfassiaux
DON'T PLAY
 

Best Supporting Actress
Krystal Vayda
CONSULT AND CONQUER
 

 

Special Jury

SEPARATION
Sylvie Audcoeur

Special Jury
FOR REAL THO
Baptist Penetticobra

 

 

 

CFF was founded by actresses Ingrid & Sonia Jean-Baptiste to give voices to the unheard by providing a platform to independent films and discovering new talents.

Chelsea Film Festival Board of Directors consists of renowned industry insiders: Paul Calderon, Elizabeth Kemp, and John Patrick Shanley.

The Advisory Board includes: Bruno Chatelin, Georges Leclere, Jeff Bandman, Pascal Chemin, Michel Abramowicz, Michael Ruotolo, Pascal Bonifay, Patrick Braoude, Ron Agam, Thandeka Zwana, Thembi Mtshali-Jones, Wissam Chahine and more.

The Chelsea Film Festival program highlighted international feature-length, short films and documentaries from independent or emerging filmmakers. The Fourth Edition of the Chelsea Film Festival highlighted films about Youth and will introduce foreign films to the public.

As Ingrid Jean-Baptiste, Founder of The Chelsea Film Festival, stated:
 

“Making the World a Better Place by Giving a Voice to the Unheard”


The Chelsea Film Festival (CFF) held its fourth edition in New York from October 13-16, 2016 at the Katie Murphy Amphitheatre (FIT), David Dubinsky Student Center (FIT), Cinépolis Chelsea, and other locations in Manhattan.

 

 

 

Our Mission:
 

The Chelsea Film Institute is a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit cultural organization that will help expose the underprivileged youth in Chelsea, NYC to the arts. Throughout the year, CFI will offer free Arts classes to these economically disadvantaged children.

Chelsea Film Festival (CFF) is an international film festival, enlightening the work of emerging filmmakers, producers, and actors. It offers a wide range of films, such as shorts, documentaries, and feature-length pieces. It empowers the work of risk-taking storytellers and remains committed to its mission to discover and develop independent artists and audiences around the world.
 
Connect with Chelsea Film Festival on our Social Media pages.

 
 
 

Carter Burwell is Best Film Composer of the Year at the 16th WSAwards, Jeff Beal is Best Television Composer of the Year

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Ryuichi Sakamoto received the Lifetime Achievement Award

On 19 October, the World Soundtrack Academy announced the winners of the 2016 World Soundtrack Awards in Capitole, Ghent. Film Fest Gent celebrated its 16th edition of the World Soundtrack Awards by focusing on television scores. Brussels Philharmonic and the Flemish Radio Choir performed scores from the most beloved television shows in recent history, conducted by Music Director Dirk Brossé. 

 

(leared photo by Jerroen Willems: Sándor Török, Jeff Beal, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Dirk Brossé, Hans Helewaut)

Sabam Award
Sándor Török (photo 1)

Best Original Score for a Belgian Production
'Cafard' by Hans Helewaut (photo 5)

Best Original Song written directly for a Film
‘None of Them Are You’ from ‘Anomalisa’
music & lyrics by Carter Burwell & Charlie Kaufman

Discovery of the Year
Joe Kraemer for 'Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation'

Public Choice
'Carol' by Carter Burwell

Television Composer of the Year
Jeff Beal (photo 2)

Film Composer of the Year
Carter Burwell

Lifetime Achievement Award
Ryuichi Sakamoto (photo 3)

 

On 20 October, the concert will be repeated but without the ceremony and with additional music. Highlights from the Gala's programme will be performed again but with the addition of tunes from clasic television series, such as 'Star Trek', 'Dynasty', 'The Simpsons' and 'Twin Peaks'.

The World Soundtrack Academy aims at supporting film, and now television music, sound design, composers and their worldwide promotion. In fifteen years time, the membership of the WSAcademy has grown into a group of 370 international film (music) professionals deciding on the nominees for the annual World Soundtrack Awards through several rounds of voting.

Those who can't get enough of Ryuichi Sakamoto can purchase the collection album with his best work, performed by Brussels Philharmonic and conducted by Dirk Brossé. The recordings took place in Flagey and was crowdfunded by his fans. The album, that is for sale on the webshop of Film Fest Gent, includes tracks from 'Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence' and 'The Revenant'.

The 43rd Film Fest Gent runs from 11 to 21 October in Kinepolis Gent, Studio Skoop, Sphinx, Vooruit, KASKcinema and Capitole. You can find info and tickets on www.filmfestival.be.

 

'A Quiet Passion' by Terence Davies and Home' by Fien Troch win at the 43rd Film Fest Gent internatinal competition

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On Friday 21 October, the international jury of Film Fest Gent, led by jury president Jeremy Thomas, announced the winners of the different competitions. 'A Quiet Passion' by Terence Davies won the Grand Prix for Best Film. The Georges Delerue Award for Best Music went to Johnny Jewel for his music for 'Home' by Fien Troch. Jeremy Thomas received the Lifetime Achievement Award for his entire career.

This year’s international jury consisted of producer and president Jeremy Thomas, director Tran Anh Hung, author Jonathan Coe and actresses Maaike Neuville, Lina El Arabi and India Hair.

1. OFFICIAL COMPETITION

- Grand Prix for Best Film: 'A Quiet Passion' by Terence Davies (2016, UK & Belgium)

This prize is worth €43,500 in total, which is split into a cash distribution grant of €20,000 as support of the film's release in Flanders and Brussels (in at least five movie theaters), and a media return of €23,500.

Motivation of the jury: "After a long and passionate discussion it was decided to recognize the film which some members of the jury considered the most daring and most rigorous of the twelve films in competition: 'A Quiet Passion' by Terence Davies."

- Georges Delerue Award for Best Music: Johnny Jewel for his music for 'Home' by Fien Troch (2016, Belgium)

This prize is worth €21,500 in total. It consists of a distribution grant worth €10,000 and a media return worth €11,500.

Motivation of the jury: "The music translates the inner world of the young characters, capturing all the energy and turbulence of their emotions."

- 'Glory' by Kristina Grozeva & Petar Valchanov received a special mention (2016, Bulgaria & Greece): "We would like to give a special mention to 'Glory' by Kristina Grozeva and Petar Valchanov, a film admired by all the jury for its humor and its political and moral honesty."

2. EUROPEAN SHORT FILM COMPETITION

- Ghent nomination for the EFA qualifying round: 'Timecode' by Giménez Peña Juanjo (2016, Spain)
This prize nominates its winner for the Prize for Best European Short of the European Film Academy 2016-2017. The winner will be announced in December 2017.

3. BEST BELGIAN STUDENT SHORT COMPETITION

- National Lottery Award for Best Belgian Student Short: 'Boi' by Anthony Nti (RITCS).
The winner receives the National Lottery Award for Best Belgian Student Short, worth €2,000. This film was chosen by a professional jury, with as members Stephan Streker, Samuel Lampaert, Karen Vázquez, Xavier Rombaut, Sachli Gholamalizad and Sanne Nuyens.

- ACE + The Fridge Public Choice Award for Best Belgian Short: 'Boi' by Anthony Nti (RITCS)
Last Sunday, the ACE + The Fridge Public Choice Award was announced, which consists of a grading session worth €6,500 at the audiovisual post production house ACE Image Factory for a next film project.

4. EXPLORE ZONE TRAIL

- Explore Award 2016: 'Grave' by Julia Ducournau (2016, France & Belgium)

The Explore Award was conferred on Thursday 20 October by the youth jury that gives out a publicity campaign for the film on various media outlets: Studio Brussel, Knack and De Morgen.

- 'Home' by Fien Troch received a special mention.


The winners of the Port of Ghent Public Choice Award and Canvas Audience Award will be announced on Monday 24 October.

 

Spectacular Antalya Film Festival closing with Life Time Award to Harvey Keitel

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International Antalya Film Festival closes in style with a glittering array of stars, including Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Harvey Keitel

The 53rd edition of International Antalya Film Festival comes to a close on Sunday 23rd of October, 2016, after eight days of extraordinary films, panels, and public events. The event, under the direction of Festival President and Mayor of Antalya Metropolitan Municipality, Menderes Türel, and Festival Director Elif Dağdeviren, this year screened over 134 films from 39 countries, including sidebars dedicated to the plight of refugees and life after military coups, and a national spotlight on contemporary Chinese cinema.

 

The festival’s closing ceremony will see the presentation of the prestigious Golden Orange awards for its National and International Competitions, chaired by Turkish auteur Semih Kaplanoğlu and British director Hugh Hudson, respectively. This year’s international jury comprises actresses Andie MacDowell, from the United States, and Nursel Köse, from Turkey, Dutch screen legend Rutger Hauer, Palestinian writer-director Najwa Najjar, American screenwriter Wash Westmoreland, and Sarajevo Film Festival director and producer Mirsad Purivatra.

 

In addition, the festival will welcome two very special guests for the evening: Emmy Award-winning actor Armand Assante, and American screen legend Harvey Keitel.

 

IAFF welcomes American star Armand Assante

who will perform at the festival’s closing ceremony

 

Assante made his screen debut in 1978, playing Sylvester Stallone’s brother in the actor’s directorial debut, the boxing drama ‘Paradise Alley’. But it was his role as Goldie Hawn’s dashingly handsome love interest in the smash hit ‘Private Benjamin’ (1980), which bought him to international stardom.

 

He has since carved out a career as one of the screen’s great tough guys, starring in Sidney Lumet’s ripped-from-the-headline drama 1990 ‘Q&A’ (a role which earned him a Golden Globe nomination); playing mob boss Carol D'Allesandro in Danny DeVito’s ‘Hoffa’ (1992), alongside Jack Nicholson; and stealing the screen as crime kingpin John Gotti in the 1996 TV biopic ‘Gotti’, for which he deservedly won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor. But he was also unforgettable as Sanchez, Queen Isabella's Minister of State, in Ridley Scott’s historical drama ‘1492: Conquest of Paradise’, and as the Cuban bandleader Cesar in ‘The Mambo Kings’, where he co-starred alongside Antonio Banderas.

 

More recently he has starred in Paul Borghese’s ‘Once Upon a Time in Brooklyn’ (2013) and lent his voice to the 2000 animated feature ‘The Road to El Dorado’. He continues to act in film and television, and has lent his support to humanitarian work in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey. A noted musician, Mr Assante will also sing at our closing ceremony, performing some of the songs of his idol, Frank Sinatra.

 

Harvey Keitel receives a Lifetime Achievement Award

 

One of the screen’s most distinctive and best-loved presences, Harvey Keitel has amassed a filmography that also functions as a history of modern American cinema, working alongside filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese, Brian De Palma, Francis Ford Coppola, Robert Altman, Spike Lee and Quentin Tarantino.

 

A native of New York City, Keitel was born in Brooklyn and grew up in Brighton Beach, before deciding at sixteen years of age to join the US Marine Corps, a move which took him to Lebanon during 1958’s Operation Blue Bat. Returning to the United States, he worked briefly as a court reporter before devoting himself to acting, studying under legendary drama coaches Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg.

 

He made his screen debut in 1967, in Martin Scorsese’s first feature, ‘Who’s That Knocking At My Door’, and later appeared in the classic ‘Mean Streets’ (1973), a breakthrough for both men. He continued the association in three further films: ‘Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore’ (1974), the Palme d’Or-winning ‘Taxi Driver’ (1976), and ‘The Last Temptation of Christ’ (1988). He also took a lead role in ‘Blue Collar’, the 1978 directorial debut of ‘Taxi Driver’s screenwriter Paul Schrader, and the same year starred in Ridley Scott’s debut feature ‘The Duellists’.

 

Thereafter, his filmography is studded with unforgettable performances in great films: re-teaming with Scott for ‘Thelma and Louise’ (1991), portraying legendary gangster Mickey Cohen in Barry Levinson’s ‘Bugsy’, the same year; taking the title role in Abel Ferrera’s cult classic ‘Bad Lieutenant’ (1992), and the same year, agreeing to work with a then-little known former video store clerk-turned-director, Quentin Tarantino, as ‘Mr White’ in ‘Reservoir Dogs’, a film he also helped produce.

 

Keitel subsequently re-teamed with Tarantino for another Palme d’Or winner, 1994’s ‘Pulp Fiction’ – and then shared in yet another Palme d’Or triumph the following year, with Jane Campion’s ‘The Piano’. He worked with Greek auteur Theo Angelopoulos on ‘Ulysses’ Gaze’ (1995), starred alongside John Travolta and Gene Hackman in Barry Sonnenfeld’s ‘Get Shorty’ (also 1995), and the same year turned in a stunning performance for Spike Lee in the crime drama ‘Clockers’. More recently, he has worked with Wes Anderson on two critically-acclaimed films, ‘Moonrise Kingdom’ (2012) and ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’ (2014).

 

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Yeşim Ustaoğlu’s “Tereddüt” (Clair Obscur) &Ümit Köreken’s “Mavi Bisiklet” (Blue Bicycle) festival favorites at Antalya

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Yeşim Ustaoğlu’s “Tereddüt” (Clair Obscur) &

Ümit Köreken’s“Mavi Bisiklet” (Blue Bicycle) festival favorites at International Antalya Film Festival

IAFF closes in glittering style bestowing Lifetime Achievement Awards

Legendary actor Harvey Keitel & Award-winning Iranian filmmaker

Asghar Farhadi

 

The 53rd edition of International Antalya Film Festival came to a close on Sunday October 23, at a glittering black-tie event at the newly renovated EXPO 2016 venue.

 

In the spirit of its long-time tradition the festival honors iconic figures from around the world and their contribution to cinema to educate and entertain audiences and to bring attention to individual stories and extraordinary events.  This year’s recipient of the Golden Orange Lifetime Achievement Awards went to legendary Oscar nominated actor Harvey Keitel (“Bugsy”), who first came to fame with his powerful gritty performances in “Reservoir Dogs,” and “Pulp Fiction;” and Award-winning Iranian writer/director Asghar Farhadi, who has recently in the last few years attracted international attention from his films “A Separation” that was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay; and Golden Globe nominated “The Past.”

 

During the eight-day event under the direction of Festival President and Mayor of Antalya Metropolitan Municipality, Menderes Türel, and Festival Director Elif Dağdeviren, the festival screened over 134 films from 39 countries, with a national spotlight on contemporary Chinese cinema and two special sidebars featuring Turkish and international fare dedicated to the plight of refugees and life after military coups.

 

The festival’s live-broadcast closing ceremony included the presentation of the festival’s prestigious Golden Orange Awards for both its National and International Competitions.  Chaired by Turkish auteur Semih Kaplanoğlu, the national Jury resided over ten feature films and bestowed the coveted statuette to Ümit Köreken’s Mavi Bisiklet / Blue Bicycle, for Best Film which also included a cash prize of 100.000 TL.

 

 

The National Jury which consisted of prominent figures in the international cinema arena - Harika Uygur, Orhan Topçuoğlu, Martha Otte, Beste Bereket, Mehmet Özgür, Sydney Levine - deliberated over twelve Turkish features and awarded the Golden Orange to Menderes Samancılar for Best Actor for his role in Kıvanç Sezer’s film Babamın Kanatları / My Father’s Wings, and the Best Actress award went to Ecem Uzun for her performance in Yeşim Ustaoğlu’s film Clair Obscur.

 

The International Jury headed by British director Hugh Hudson presented the Golden Orange award for Best International Feature Film to Yeşim Ustaoğlu’s film Tereddüt / Clair Obscur and a cash prize of 50.000 Euro.

 

This year’s international jury - Andie MacDowell, Turkish actress Nursel Köse, Dutch screen legend Rutger Hauer, Palestinian writer-director Najwa Najjar, American screenwriter Wash Westmoreland, Sarajevo Film Festival director and producer Mirsad Purivatra – screened ten feature films, and also award statuettes for Best Actor for Tamer Nafar for his role in Udi Aloni’s film Junction 48, and the Golden Orange Award for Best Actress went to Ecem Uzun for her performance in Yeşim Ustaoğlu’s film Clair Obscur.

 

The Golden Orange awards are made by possible by the generous support of the festival’s sponsors, which include the Antalya Metropolitan Municipality, Turkish Airlines, Sabah, Türk Telekom, 1000 Volt, TAV Passport, Rixos, ICF Airports, MAC.

 

INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION AWARDS

best feature film (by unanimous decision)

Tereddüt / Clair Obscur (Yeşim Ustaoğlu)

special jury prize

House of Others

best actor

Tamer Nafar – Junction 48

best actress

Ecem Uzun – Clair Obscur

best screenplay

Marina Seresesky– Open Door / La Puerta Abierta

best music

Udi Aloni– Junction 48

audience award

Open Door / La Puerta Abierta (Marina Seresesky)

 

NATIONAL COMPETITION AWARDS

best feature film

Mavi Bisiklet / Blue Bicycle (Ümit Köreken)

best actor

Menderes Samancılar – Babamın Kanatları / My Father’s Wings

best actress

Ecem Uzun – Tereddüt / Clair Obscur

best supporting actor

Haji Gul Eser – Toz / Dust

best supporting actress

Kübra Kip – Babamın Kanatları / My Father’s Wings

best screenplay

Ümit Köreken – Mavi Bisiklet / Blue Bicycle

best editing

Genç Pehlivanlar – Young Wrestlers

best music

Babamın Kanatları – My Father’s Wings

best debut feature

Babamın Kanatları – My Father’s Wings / Kıvanç Sezer

best film audience award

Babamın Kanatları – My Father’s Wings / Kıvanç Sezer

best art director

Devrim Ömer Ünal – Rauf

best cinematography

Vedat Özdemir – Rauf

dr. avni tolunay special jury award

Babamın Kanatları / My Father’s Wings

behlül dal jury special award

Genç Pehlivanlar / Young Wrestlers

film-yön best director award

Yeşim Ustaoğlu – Tereddüt / Clair Obscur

national documentary selection – audience award

Ben Ömer / I’m Ömer (Mesut Gengeç)

national short film selection – audience award

7 Santimetre / 7 Centimeters (Metehan Şereflioğlu)

motley selection – audience award

Yağmurlarda Yıkansam / Wish To Wash With Rain (Günten Taranç)

sümer tilmaç award

Aydede (Abdurrahman Öner)

 

 

 

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EFA Animated Feature Films 2016 & Comedies Nominated

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The European Film Academy proudly announces the nominations in the categories EUROPEAN ANIMATED FEATURE FILM 2016 and EUROPEAN COMEDY 2016. 

Based on a list of films provided by CARTOON, the European Association of Animation Film, as well as on individual film submissions, a committee decided on the nominations in the category EUROPEAN ANIMATED FEATURE FILM. The committee consisted of EFA Board Member Antonio Saura, producer (Spain), director Tomm Moore (Ireland) and producer Anja Šošić (Poland), as well as CARTOON representatives Karsten Kiilerich (Denmark), Marc Du Pontavice (France), and Vincent Tavier (Belgium). 

The Nominations for EUROPEAN COMEDY were decided by a committee consisting of EFA Board Member Ada Solomon, producer (Romania), Nacho Carballo from Gijón IFF, distributor Kim Foss (Denmark), Nik Powell from NFTS (UK), and Marten Rabarts representing EYE Film Institute (Netherlands).

EUROPEAN ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

EUROPEAN COMEDY

MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI
MA VIE DE COURGETTE
Switzerland, France
66 min.                                          

A MAN CALLED OVE
EN MAN SOM HETER OVE 
Sweden, Norway
116 min.                                                    

DIRECTED BY: Claude Barras
WRITTEN BY: Céline Sciamma
PRODUCED BY: Max Karli
ANIMATION: Kim Keukeleire

WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY: Hannes Holm
PRODUCED BY: Annica Bellander Rune & Nicklas Wikström Nicastro

PSICONAUTAS, THE FORGOTTEN CHILDREN
PSICONAUTAS, LOS NIÑOS OLVIDADOS
Spain
75 min.

LOOK WHO´S BACK
ER IST WIEDER DA
Germany
110 min.

WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY: Alberto Vázquez & Pedro Rivero
PRODUCED BY: Farruco Castroman, Carlos Juarez & Luis Tosar
ANIMATION: Krhis Cembe

DIRECTED BY: David Wnendt
WRITTEN BY: David Wnendt & Mizzi Meyer
PRODUCED BY: Christoph Müller & Lars Dittrich

THE RED TURTLE
LA TORTUE ROUGE
France, Belgium
80 min.

ONE MAN AND HIS COW
LA VACHE
France
92 min.

WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY: Michael Dudok De Wit
PRODUCED BY: Vincent Maraval
ANIMATION: Michael Dudok De Wit

DIRECTED BY: Mohamed Hamidi
WRITTEN BY: Mohamed Hamidi, Alain-Michel Blanc & Fatsah Bouyahmed
PRODUCED BY: Nicolas Duval Adassovsky, Yann Zenou, Laurent Zeitoun & Jamel Debbouze


The nominated films will now be submitted to the over 3,000 EFA Members to elect the winner. The European Animated Feature Film 2016 and European Comedy 2016 will then be presented at the European Film Awards Ceremony in Wroclaw, Poland (European Capital of Culture 2016) on Saturday, 10 December - streamed live on www.europeanfilmawards.eu

85 countries in competition for foreign language Film Oscar

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60th anniversary of the Foreign Language Film Category

Eighty-five countries have submitted films for consideration in the Foreign Language Film category for the 89th Academy Awards®.  Yemen is a first-time entrant.

The 2016 submissions are:

Albania, “Chromium,” Bujar Alimani, director;

Algeria, “The Well,” Lotfi Bouchouchi, director;

Argentina, “The Distinguished Citizen,” Mariano Cohn, Gastón Duprat, directors;

Australia, “Tanna,” Bentley Dean, Martin Butler, directors;

Austria, “Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe,” Maria Schrader, director;

Bangladesh, “The Unnamed,” Tauquir Ahmed, director;

Belgium, “The Ardennes,” Robin Pront, director;

Bolivia, “Sealed Cargo,” Julia Vargas Weise, director;

Bosnia and Herzegovina, “Death in Sarajevo,” Danis Tanovic, director;

Brazil, “Little Secret,” David Schurmann, director;

Bulgaria, “Losers,” Ivaylo Hristov, director;

Cambodia, “Before the Fall,” Ian White, director;

Canada, “It’s Only the End of the World,” Xavier Dolan, director;

Chile, “Neruda,” Pablo Larraín, director;

China, “Xuan Zang,” Huo Jianqi, director;

Colombia, “Alias Maria,” José Luis Rugeles, director;

Costa Rica, “About Us,” Hernán Jiménez, director;

Croatia, “On the Other Side,” Zrinko Ogresta, director;

Cuba, “The Companion,” Pavel Giroud, director;

Czech Republic, “Lost in Munich,” Petr Zelenka, director;

Denmark, “Land of Mine,” Martin Zandvliet, director;

Dominican Republic, “Sugar Fields,” Fernando Báez, director;

Ecuador, “Such Is Life in the Tropics,” Sebastián Cordero, director;

Egypt, “Clash,” Mohamed Diab, director;

Estonia, “Mother,” Kadri Kõusaar, director;

Finland, “The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki,” Juho Kuosmanen, director;

France, “Elle,” Paul Verhoeven, director;

Georgia, “House of Others,” Rusudan Glurjidze, director;

Germany, “Toni Erdmann,” Maren Ade, director;

Greece, “Chevalier,” Athina Rachel Tsangari, director;

Hong Kong, “Port of Call,” Philip Yung, director;

Hungary, “Kills on Wheels,” Attila Till, director;

Iceland, “Sparrows,” Rúnar Rúnarsson, director;

India, “Interrogation,” Vetri Maaran, director;

Indonesia, “Letters from Prague,” Angga Dwimas Sasongko, director;

Iran, “The Salesman,” Asghar Farhadi, director;

Iraq, “El Clásico,” Halkawt Mustafa, director;

Israel, “Sand Storm,” Elite Zexer, director;

Italy, “Fire at Sea,” Gianfranco Rosi, director;

Japan, “Nagasaki: Memories of My Son,” Yoji Yamada, director;

Jordan, “3000 Nights,” Mai Masri, director;

Kazakhstan, “Amanat,” Satybaldy Narymbetov, director;

Kosovo, “Home Sweet Home,” Faton Bajraktari, director;

Kyrgyzstan, “A Father’s Will,” Bakyt Mukul, Dastan Zhapar Uulu, directors;

Latvia, “Dawn,” Laila Pakalnina, director;

Lebanon, “Very Big Shot,” Mir-Jean Bou Chaaya, director;

Lithuania, “Seneca’s Day,” Kristijonas Vildziunas, director;

Luxembourg, “Voices from Chernobyl,” Pol Cruchten, director;

Macedonia, “The Liberation of Skopje,” Rade Šerbedžija, Danilo Šerbedžija, directors;

Malaysia, “Beautiful Pain,” Tunku Mona Riza, director;

Mexico, “Desierto,” Jonás Cuarón, director;

Montenegro, “The Black Pin,” Ivan Marinović, director;

Morocco, “A Mile in My Shoes,” Said Khallaf, director;

Nepal, “The Black Hen,” Min Bahadur Bham, director;

Netherlands, “Tonio,” Paula van der Oest, director;

New Zealand, “A Flickering Truth,” Pietra Brettkelly, director;

Norway, “The King’s Choice,” Erik Poppe, director;

Pakistan, “Mah-e-Mir,” Anjum Shahzad, director;

Palestine, “The Idol,” Hany Abu-Assad, director;

Panama, “Salsipuedes,” Ricardo Aguilar Navarro, Manolito Rodríguez, directors;

Peru, “Videophilia (and Other Viral Syndromes),” Juan Daniel F. Molero, director;

Philippines, “Ma’ Rosa,” Brillante Ma Mendoza, director;

Poland, “Afterimage,” Andrzej Wajda, director;

Portugal, “Letters from War,” Ivo M. Ferreira, director;

Romania, “Sieranevada,” Cristi Puiu, director;

Russia, “Paradise,” Andrei Konchalovsky, director;

Saudi Arabia, “Barakah Meets Barakah,” Mahmoud Sabbagh, director;

Serbia, “Train Driver’s Diary,” Milos Radovic, director;

Singapore, “Apprentice,” Boo Junfeng, director;

Slovakia, “Eva Nová,” Marko Skop, director;

Slovenia, “Houston, We Have a Problem!” Žiga Virc, director;

South Africa, “Call Me Thief,” Daryne Joshua, director;

South Korea, “The Age of Shadows,” Kim Jee-woon, director;

Spain, “Julieta,” Pedro Almodóvar, director;

Sweden, “A Man Called Ove,” Hannes Holm, director;

Switzerland, “My Life as a Zucchini,” Claude Barras, director;

Taiwan, “Hang in There, Kids!” Laha Mebow, director;

Thailand, “Karma,” Kanittha Kwunyoo, director;

Turkey, “Cold of Kalandar,” Mustafa Kara, director;

Ukraine, “Ukrainian Sheriffs,” Roman Bondarchuk, director;

United Kingdom, “Under the Shadow,” Babak Anvari, director;

Uruguay, “Breadcrumbs,” Manane Rodríguez, director;

Venezuela, “From Afar,” Lorenzo Vigas, director;

Vietnam, “Yellow Flowers on the Green Grass,” Victor Vu, director;

Yemen, “I Am Nojoom, Age 10 and Divorced,” Khadija Al-Salami, director.

The competitive Foreign Language Film category was introduced in 1956 for the 29th Academy Awards.  In celebration of its 60th anniversary, the Academy has created a complete playlist of acceptance speeches and a poster gallery of all the Foreign Language Film Oscar® winners.

The 89th Oscars® will be held on Sunday, February 26, 2017, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT.  The Oscars also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

10 Documentary Short Subject contenders for the Oscars

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences today announced that the field of Documentary Short Subject contenders for the 89th Academy Awards® has been narrowed to 10 films, of which 5 will earn Oscar® nominations.

Voters from the Academy’s Documentary Branch viewed this year’s 61 eligible entries and submitted their ballots to PricewaterhouseCoopers for tabulation.

The 10 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title, with their production companies:


“Brillo Box (3¢ Off),” Brillo Box Documentary
“Close Ties,” Munk Studio - Polish Filmmakers Association
“Extremis,” f/8 Filmworks in association with Motto Pictures
“4.1 Miles,” University of California, Berkeley
“Frame 394,” Compy Films
“Joe’s Violin,” Lucky Two Productions
“The Mute’s House,” The Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film School
“The Other Side of Home,” Feeln
“Watani: My Homeland,” ITN Productions
“The White Helmets,” Grain Media and Violet Films

Nominations for the 89th Oscars® will be announced on Tuesday, January 24, 2017.

The 89th Oscars will be held on Sunday, February 26, 2017, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT.  The Oscars also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

Strong french presence at Stockholm festival and visionary Award to Frantz' Director François Ozon

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Stockholm Visionary Award 2016 goes to director François Ozon. Stockholm Visionary Award is awarded to the French director François Ozon. He visits the festival in conjunction with the swedish premiere of hos new film Frantz and will meet the audience during an exclusive Face2Face. 



Justification: This year’s winner of the Stockholm Visionary Award is the subversive and distinctly poetic François Ozon. With stylistic flair and precision, Ozon is a true master at looking into our inner, always with his trademark dark satire and an introspective looking glass that is passed on to the audience during the course of the film. The 2016 Stockholm Visionary Award goes to François Ozon. 



Critically acclaimed Frantz is an elegant love drama that was nominated for the Gold Lion previously this year in Venice and Paula Beer won a prize for her leading role. Ozon has released one film every year since his debut in 1997. Among his films are Sitcom, his second feature film which he competed with on Stockholm Internatinal Film Festival 1998. His most famous film is 8 women from 2002. The screening of Frantz on Stockholm Film Festival is the first in Sweden.  



Stockholm Visionary Award was founded in 2004 and is dedicated to visionaries within modern film. Peter Greenaway, Jacques Audiard och Wes Anderson are some of the previous winners. 

FRENCH FILMS at the festival

A Taste Of Ink by Morgan Simon (visiting)
Life, Animated by Roger Ross Williams
Agnus Dei by Anne Fontaine (visiting)
Katie Says Goodbye by Wayne Roberts
Being 17 by André Téchiné
Paris 05:59 by Olivier Ducastel, Jacques Martineau
Elle by Paul Verhoeven
Planetarium by Rebecca Zlotowski
Frantz by François Ozon (visiting)
The Dancer by Stéphanie Di Giusto (visiting)
Faultless by Sébastien Marnier
Reset by Thierry Demaizière
Rhapsody by Constance Meyer (short)
What tears us apart by Wei Hu (short)
Nœvus by Samuel Yal (short)
Somewhere by Mélody Boulissière (short)

 

More information about the films can be found in our programme directory:
http://www.stockholmfilmfestival.se/sv/junior/2016/program/alpha

Bogota Film Festival Bogocine 33 wrapped, with awards

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Gráfica alusiva a BOGOCINE CLOSE EVENT



Yesterday was held the closing ceremony and awards ceremony of the 33rd Bogota International Film Festival. 
The most important film event in the city global in nature and the only one that bears his name since 1984, with the World Premier of the film "Oh What a Gem" Ventura Pons.

AWARDS WERE ANNOUNCED

Alexis Award:
"Orika, Dreams of Freedom" group of complementary school day program, the Chamber of Commerce of Cartagena


Pre-Columbian Gold Circle Best Documentary on Environment:
"Microcosmos on a Balcony" Lina Crespo and Gabriel Escobar. Colombia.

Social Documentary:

Social Mention Best Documentary:
"Women on the Front, the Law of the Nobles" Lula Gomez. Spain.

Pre-Columbian Gold Circle Best Documentary Art "Enrique Grau":
"The Eye of Macondo" Andrés Sandoval. Colombia.


Pre-Columbian Gold Circle for Best Social Documentary:
"True Smile" John Ray. Spain.


Pre-Columbian Circle for Best Colombian Film of a new director:
"Shaman, the Ultimate Warrior" Sandro Meneses Potosi.

Special Jury Mention
"Kidnap Capital" of Felipe Rodriguez. Canada.


Pre-Columbian Bronze Circle Best Picture:
"Another Forever" by Juan Zapata. Brazil / Colombia.


Pre-Columbian Silver Circle Best Picture
"Charge" Alan Jonsson Gavica. Mexico.


Pre-Columbian Gold Circle Best Picture
"Sanctuary" Marc Brummund. Alamania.


Pre-Columbian Gold Circle Best Director:
Felipe Cano Ibanez for "The Seed of Silence". Colombia.


The balance:

The Festival paid tribute to the thirty years of the Colombian Film Heritage Foundation and the Catalan Film with a large sample of the latest Ventura Pons films.

He concentrated on the west of the city, in new places like Maloka and Procinal Salitre and continued with their traditional as the District Cinematheque, the Library and the National Museum.
We returned to the Botanical Garden José Celestino Mutis, and the Children's Museum, Uniandinos and we became present in three military prisons in Bogotá brightening their lives with comedies and films of different adventures to violent stories they see on Sunday television channels.

Cinema for the Blind presented "Golden Claws" with audio description in the program of Colombian films for our blind see our cinema.
Three universities received Festival program, the National, Catholic and Los Libertadores

The inauguration was tremendous with the presentation of D.W.´s "Intolerance", the conducting of Master Gillian Anderson and 45 musicians and 16 singers from the Conservatory of Music of the National University, thanks to the alliance with the culture of the University.

Special presentations of Taiwan, Italy and Catalonia

The agency Salgar Mullenlowe and joined to provide a memorable campaign theme, by Direktor.

This year the Festival was an alliance for the benefit of the environment with the Autonomous Corporation of Cundinamarca CAR, we present 47 videos on our functions.

The Festival was made possible by:

CAR, Day TV, Avianca, Zoom Canal, Unicef, Aviatur.com,A T Media, Hotel Tryp Embassy, Inci, Mullenlowe, Salgar, Direktor, Pelaez Hermanos, Mayor of Bogotá, the Army, HD Cinema Colombia, the Catalan Community, Colnodo, Embassy of Mexico, Serotav, Rever Agency, MPL, Marca Pais, Unicorn Films, Servientrega, Art is Colombia, the Office of the Government of Puerto Rico, Idartes and universities Tadeo Lozano,National, Catholic , Libertadores and Uniandinos.
To all of them and our wonderful team we thank them, because they made it possible for 33 Bogota International Film Festival.
Bogota International Film Festival

Thank you !

33 Bogota Film Festival 33

Festival de Cine de Bogotá

GREETINGS FROM BOGOTÁ

Gráfica alusiva a GREETINGS FROM BOGOTÁ

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