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EUROPEAN FILM AWARDS 2021

L’Académie européenne du cinéma va rendre hommage à Márta Mészáros

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- La cinéaste hongroise va devenir, à la cérémonie des EFA, la première réalisatrice femme d’Europe centrale et d’Europe de l’Est à recevoir le prix récompensant l’ensemble d’une carrière

L’Académie européenne du cinéma va rendre hommage à Márta Mészáros
La réalisatrice Márta Mészáros sur le tournage de Don't Cry, Pretty Girls! (© Gyula Szóvári)

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

On the occasion of this year's 34th European Film Awards and in recognition of a unique contribution to the world of film, the European Film Academy takes great pleasure in presenting Márta Mészáros with the Lifetime Achievement Award for her outstanding body of work. In the 34 years of its existence, this is the first time the Lifetime Achievement Award goes to a female director from Central-Eastern Europe.

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Born in Hungary, Márta Mészáros grew up in the Soviet Union and made her first feature film The Girl, Hungary’s first feature film directed by a woman, in 1968. Her international breakthrough came in 1975 when she won the Golden Bear – the first one for a female director – in Berlin with Adoption, the intimate portrait of the bond between a lonely middle-aged woman and a 17-year-old girl. Nine Months, about the life and love of a young woman who works in a factory, won the FIPRESCI Prize in Cannes (1977). This was followed by Just Like at Home, about a man returning to Hungary from America and befriending a girl, won the 1978 San Sebastian Silver Shell. She returned to Cannes in competition in 1980 with The Heiresses about a Jewish shop girl who is commissioned by her sterile friend to have a baby.

Her films often pick up her own experiences or what her family went through, most evidently so in her “Diary” films. The first of these, Diary for My Children, introduces us to teen-aged Juli, an orphan struggling to become an independent woman. It won the Cannes Grand Prix in 1984. Diary for My Loves (1987) follows Juli to Moscow where she studies Film and back to Hungary and the turmoil of the time. The film received the Silver Bear in Berlin. In Diary for My Mother and Father (1990), Juli is growing up to be a director in Hungary after the 1956 uprising. She also made a film about Imre Nagy, the leading figure of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution (The Unburied Man, 2004). Her latest film, Aurora Borealis [+lire aussi :
critique
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(2017) looks back at post-war Vienna from an unusual mother-daughter angle.

Throughout her courageous and innovative films, Márta Mészáros has been devoted to depicting the lives of women, giving a voice to independent and complex women. On the occasion of this honorary award, and in partnership with the European Film Academy, MUBI will present a focus on Márta Mészáros from mid-November on, highlighting a selection of her films.

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(Traduit de l'anglais)

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