MEXICO CITY -- Intimidades de Shakespeare y Victor Hugo, a documentary about a serial killer in Mexico City, scored three awards at the fifth edition of the Mexico City International Contemporary Film Festival.
Yulene Olaizola's Intimidades won the International Federation of Film Critics' prize, the Audience Award, and the Kodak Prize at the film fest's closing ceremony Saturday evening here in the nation's capital.
Also coming up big was the Mexican drama Parque Via, from first-time director Enrique Rivero. Parque Via, the first production of upstart shingle Una Comunion, walked away with the Audience Award and best Latin American picture. It tells the story of a hermetic caretaker looking after an abandoned Mexico City home.
Best director went to French director Serge Bozon for his WWI drama La France. Also receiving kudos was Liberation Day, a drama about genocide in Rwanda from Korean-American filmmaker Lee Isaac Chung. Chilean helmer Jose Luis Torres Leiva's El Cielo, la Tierra y la Lluvia garnered the Mexico City FICCO Prize, and the festival gave best documentary to Carlos Casas' Hunters Since the Beginning of Time.
For best Latin American documentary, the FIPRESCI jury selected Calle Santa Fe, a story about a political activist returning to Chile from exile.
Yulene Olaizola's Intimidades won the International Federation of Film Critics' prize, the Audience Award, and the Kodak Prize at the film fest's closing ceremony Saturday evening here in the nation's capital.
Also coming up big was the Mexican drama Parque Via, from first-time director Enrique Rivero. Parque Via, the first production of upstart shingle Una Comunion, walked away with the Audience Award and best Latin American picture. It tells the story of a hermetic caretaker looking after an abandoned Mexico City home.
Best director went to French director Serge Bozon for his WWI drama La France. Also receiving kudos was Liberation Day, a drama about genocide in Rwanda from Korean-American filmmaker Lee Isaac Chung. Chilean helmer Jose Luis Torres Leiva's El Cielo, la Tierra y la Lluvia garnered the Mexico City FICCO Prize, and the festival gave best documentary to Carlos Casas' Hunters Since the Beginning of Time.
For best Latin American documentary, the FIPRESCI jury selected Calle Santa Fe, a story about a political activist returning to Chile from exile.
- Lots of first time filmmakers make up this year's Un Certain Regard. Here is the complete list. (Still below: Harmony Korine's Mister Lonely)Bross Malos HABITOSValeria Bruni-tedeschi Le RÊVE De La Nuit D’Avant (Bad Habits)Carmen Castillo Calle Santa Fe (Santa Fe Sreet)Chung Lee Isaac Munyurangabo (Liberation Day)Lola Doillon Et Toi T’Es Sur Qui ?Enrique Fernandez & César Charlone El BAÑO Del Papa (And Along Come Tourists)Eran Kolirin Bikur HATIZMORETHarmony Korine Mister LONELYKadri KÕUSAAR Magnusli Yang Mang Shan (Blind Mountain)Daniele Luchetti Mio Fratello È Figlio Unico (My Brother Is An Only Child)Cristian Nemescu California Dreamin' (Nesfarsit) California Dreamin' (Endless)Jaime Rosales La Soledad (Fragments Of Loneliness) Barbet Schroeder L’Avocat De La TERREURCéline Sciamma Les PIEUVRESRobert Thalheim Am Ende Kommen TOURISTENEkachai Uekrongtham Kuaile Gongchang...
- 4/19/2007
- IONCINEMA.com
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