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FESTIVALS / PRIX Royaume-Uni

Dawn de Laila Pakalniņa l’emporte au 2e Festival du film du Calvert Journal

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- Parmi les lauréats figurent également Warsaw: A City Divided d'Eric Bednarski (meilleur long-métrage documentaire) et My Favorite War d'Ilze Burkovska-Jacobsen (meilleur film d’animation)

Dawn de Laila Pakalniņa l’emporte au 2e Festival du film du Calvert Journal
Dawn de Laila Pakalniņa

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

Yesterday, the Calvert Journal Film Festival announced the award winners of its second edition. The virtual festival, organised by the prestigious, London-based publication, unspooled over the course of two weeks (18-31 October) and screened 35 titles, with films from across six competition categories battling it out to be named Best Film in their individual section. A special Audience Choice Award was also given to one film from across all categories, including the out-of-competition special screenings section.

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Hot docs EFP inside

The winning pictures were selected by an independent jury of renowned industry figures: Ukrainian producer Natalia Libet, Czech anthropologist and documentarian Pavel Borecký, New Zealand-born, Berlin-based film critic and curator Carmen Gray, Bosnian actor and educator Selma Alispahić, Kosovar filmmaker Norika Sefa, Lithuanian director Romas Zabarauskas, Latvian programmer Zane Balčus, Scottish film critic and journalist Amber Wilkinson, and Kazakh filmmaker Adilkhan Yerzhanov.

The Award for Best Fiction Feature was bestowed upon Laila Pakalniņa’s Dawn [+lire aussi :
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. The jury’s supporting statement praised how the veteran Latvian director “handles with subtlety and depth her ambiguity and wilfully elusive intentions”, and described it as “a very complex film, where one feels one is going through a range of emotions” as well as “a blend of culture, history, and political and social commentary, all wrapped up in a visually exquisite world that is as appealing as it is informative”. The Latvian-Estonian-Polish co-production centres on an idealistic young man living in a commune in Soviet Latvia, who rebels against his violent father. In doing so, he sets a series of events in motion that nobody could have predicted.

Next, the Prize for Best Documentary Feature went to Eric Bednarski’s Warsaw: A City Divided. In particular, the jurors appreciated how the picture “contextualises rare, archival found footage of the Warsaw Ghetto with personal testimony from survivors, and reflections on its modern-day legacy, to shed light on its place within the Holocaust, as well as Polish history”.

Meanwhile, Ilze Burkovska-Jacobsen’s My Favorite War [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Ilze Burkovska Jacobsen
fiche film
]
was crowned Best Animation Film. According to the jury, the Latvian director managed “to bring the past to life and emphasise the emotional themes of the director’s personal history”, making “the subject of propaganda accessible for younger as well as older audiences”.

Here is the full list of this year’s award winners:

Best Fiction Feature
Dawn [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
fiche film
]
– Laila Pakalniņa (Latvia/Estonia/Poland)

Best Documentary Feature
Warsaw: A City Divided – Eric Bednarski (Poland)

Best Animation Film
My Favorite War [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Ilze Burkovska Jacobsen
fiche film
]
– Ilze Burkovska-Jacobsen (Latvia/Norway)

Best Short Film
History of Civilization – Zhannat Alshanova (Kazakhstan)

Best Experimental Film
Microcassette – The Smallest Cassette I’ve Ever Seen – Igor Bezinovic and Ivana Pipal (Croatia)

Best Student Film
The Vibrant Village – Weronika Jurkiewicz (Hungary)

Audience Choice Award
Rhythms of Lost Time – Anisa Sabiri (Tajikistan)

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(Traduit de l'anglais)

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