The Sundance Film Festival Recap 

Filed under: Entertainment News on Monday, January 29th, 2007 by Entertainment History | No Comments

The Grand Jury Prize for dramatic film went to “Padre Nuestro,” a darkly troubling moral thriller about Mexican illegals in New York that its director, Christopher Zalla, described as “the prodigal son meets Cain and Abel.” “Grace Is Gone,’ ‘ about a man (John Cusack, in schlump disguise) who drives his daughters to a Florida theme park instead of telling them their mother has been killed serving in Iraq, won the Audience Award for dramatic film, while its writer-director James C. Strouse was given the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award .

The Grand Jury Prize for documentary film went to “Manda Bala,” an inquiry into Brazilian corruption that somehow connects frog farms, kidnappings, and outer-ear reconstruction while remaining outrageously provocative. The film, which suggests a breakthrough fusion of Errol Morris and Quentin Tarantino, also won an Excellence in Cinematography award.

The tension at any Sundance — and 2007 has been no different — is always between art and commerce, commitment and genre, the indie community (whatever that is) and Hollywood. The acting award was emblematic of the divide, split between Tamara Podemski’s performance as a world-weary Native American in “Four Sheets to the Wind” and Jess Weixler playing a teenage girl with a nasty sexual mutation in the horror-comedy “Teeth.” Weixler arrived late for the ceremonies, having had to disembark a plane bound for her next job.

Strenuously anti-Oscar, the Sundance awards featured an onstage DJ to set the mood, casual clothes on everyone, and speeches that were impromptu, heartfelt, and occasionally incomprehensible. “I wrote a couple of names down on my Blackberry — how lame is that?” said “Manda Bala” director Jason Kohn before launching into an endearingly random litany of cast, crew, and agents.

By contrast, winners in other competitions were marked by an awareness of political quandaries and hard-won victories. “Enemies of Happiness,” about an Afghani woman running for her country’s parliament, won the World Cinema Jury Prize for documentary film, while “Sweet Mud” won the World Cinema dramatic film competition for its story of madness and loyalty on an Israeli kibbutz.

The documentary jurors awarded a Special Jury Prize to Charles Ferguson’s merciless dissection of the war in Iraq, “No End in Sight.” In his acceptance speech, the director thanked “my Iraq crew and bodyguards in Baghdad” and said he had “tried to make a film about policy and facts.”

The audience awards for international films were less rigorous. David Sington’s “In the Shadow of the Moon,” about the Apollo missions, won the World Cinema Audience Award for documentary, while the dramatic award was given to a popular favorite, “Once,” a scruffy musical romance set in Dublin.

There was a family vibe to many of the acceptances. Moms and dads were thanked as both spiritual and financial investors, and many of them were present at the ceremony. With the audience award winner for documentary, “Hear and Now,” the parents came onstage, since Irene Taylor Brodsky’s film is about her mother and father receiving cochlear implants and experiencing the world of sound after six decades of deafness.

Married filmmaking couples, a longstanding indie tradition, were also present. “Grace Is Gone” director Strouse was accompanied to the podium by his pregnant wife/co producer Galt Niederhoffer, and when Sean Fine and a teary Andrea Nix Fine accepted the directing award for their documentary “War/Dance,” about Ugandan child refugees, the husband noted “This is actually a lot like our wedding. Andrea cried the whole time.”

 

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The Sundance Film Festival give prize to Padre Nuestro and other 

Filed under: Entertainment News on Monday, January 29th, 2007 by Entertainment History | No Comments

The Sundance Film Festival drew to a close on Sunday with organisers calling it a landmark year for independent film-makers who added breadth and depth to movies dealing with global issues, war and family.

Padre Nuestro wonthe jury prize for best film drama by a United States’ film-maker with a tale of a young illegal immigrant from Mexico who travels to New York seeking a father he never knew.

Manda Bala earned the jury award for best US documentary with a tale of crime and corruption in Brazil.

Grace is Gone, starring John Cusack as a father of two whose wife dies in Iraq, picked up the audience trophy for favourite drama and a writing award for film-maker James Strouse.

Grace also was among the movies whose distribution rights were sold in one of the most active markets in years at Sundance.

“For so many different reasons, this work is exceptional in terms of how much of it will get into the marketplace, and the range of issues and maturity of the film-makers,” said festival director Geoffrey Gilmore, who hailed this year as a “landmark year”.

Sundance, which is backed by Robert Redford’s Sundance Institute, is the top US gathering for movies made outside Hollywood’s mainstream studios, and each year festival favourites top movie marquees worldwide.

With wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Africa making headlines, “indie” film-makers at this year’s edition were looking outward for their subject matter as opposed to the insular and more personal movies that played in the 1990s.

Yet, even as that world view seemed to dominate Sundance, many festival movies were grounded in the idea that family is where people seek safety in troubled times.

Padre Nuestro and Grace were examples of tales of family bonds set against issues of illegal immigration and death during wartime, respectively.

But those movies were not the only ones. The audience award for best documentary went to Hear and Now, in which film-maker Irene Taylor Brodsky detailed a year in the life of her deaf parents, who decided to undergo surgery so they could hear.

Sundance juries also handed out honours for international movies, and the World Cinema drama prize went to Israeli movie Sweet Mud, about a boy dealing with his mentally ill mother on a kibbutz in the 1970s.

Denmark’s Enemies of Happiness, which details the life of an Afghan woman politician, earned the World Cinema jury prize for best documentary, and a special jury prize went to non-fiction film No End in Sight, about US policy mistakes in the Iraq war.

Like many award winners at Sundance, No End director Charles Ferguson took the opportunity to address the US-led war in Iraq with an eye towards the future, not the past.

“It might be too late for Iraq, but I hope it isn’t too late for this country to conduct itself differently in the future,” he said.

World Cinema audiences gave In the Shadow of the Moon, an emotional tale of the Apollo astronauts from Britain’s David Sington, the trophy for top documentary, while Irish musical Once earned the audience award for best drama.

Husband-and-wife Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine won the documentary director’s award for War/Dance about child soldiers in Uganda, an issue they had no idea existed until they began their work.

The directing award for drama went to Jeffrey Blitz for Rocket Science, about a high-school stutterer who learns lessons in love while on the debating team.

 

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Helen Mirren and Forest Whitaker Top SAG Awards 

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Helen Mirren and Forest Whitaker once again took the top acting prizes at the Screen Actors Guild Awards at the weekend.

Mirren won best actress for her role as Elizabeth II in The Queen, whilst Whitaker was named best actor for his portrayal of the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. Both are British films.

The road-trip comedy Little Miss Sunshine won the award for best ensemble cast, while the best supporting actor and actress gongs both went to stars of the musical Dreamgirls, Eddie Murphy and Jennifer Hudson.

Accepting her award, Mirren joked the main obstacle for her to overcome with regard to playing Elizabeth II was the monarch’s conservative wardrobe.

“I thought, I can’t play anyone who chooses to wear those clothes. I just can’t do it,” said Mirren, who also won the award for best actress in Elizabeth I, in which she played another famous queen of England.

“But I learned to love the person who chooses to wear those clothes, because I learned to love a person without vanity, but with a great sense of discipline that I understand. With a great sense of duty that I understand. And with a great deal of courage, and that I understand.”

Mirren also picked up the award for best actress in a TV series for playing Elizabeth I. Her co-star, Jeremy Irons, got a gong for his portrayal of the Tudor monarch’s lover, the Earl of Leicester.

Fellow Briton Hugh Laurie was honoured for his role as cantankerous Dr Gregory House in US TV drama House.

Backstage, Mirren said: “It’s been the most incredible year for me, ever. That’s been amazing at this end of my life.”

The Queen and Little Miss Sunshine are both up for best picture at the Academy Awards, which this year will take place on February 25. Also in the running are the dramas The Departed, Babel and Letters From Iwo Jima.

Eddie Murphy told reporters that the cast of Dreamgirls were pleased with their eight Oscar nominations but disappointed to have been missed off the list for best picture.

“We got eight nominations, that was a great thing. We were happy about that,” he said. “I was so happy to be nominated, I wasn’t feeling disappointment about anything. I was caught off guard that we didn’t get nominated for best picture but I’ve just been happy, non-stop happy.”

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