Nathaniel, concluding his report from the Indianapolis International Film Festival. I'm back in New York, sweet bustling megalopolis o' mine. I have to say a big thank you to the IIFF volunteers, particularly festival director Brian Owens who invited me. He took his long-time film obsession and really built something from scratch that more and more people come to enjoy annually and which continues to expand the cultural landscape of his home city. That's quite something. Well done.
Here's what went down as far as awardage goes from the three juries and audience.
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Documentary Jury Grand Prize -Beyond Belief directed by Beth Murphy
is about two American widows who travel to Afghanistan after losing their husbands in the 9/11 attacks.
Audience Award Narrative Feature -Mongol directed by Sergei Bodrov
This was one of the Oscar nominees last year as you know and will be opening on June 6th. Though it was definitely a handsome production it's still maddening to think about ---all the nominees are --given that the great 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days didn't even make the finalist list for that category. (Yes, it's going to be really hard to let that one go) Mongol, a bio on the early years of Genghis Khan, has strong technical merit and it sure is epic. Yet, for all the blood and guts I think it played like comfort food for the festival audiences who had been wading through a sea of tiny budgeted slow paced films before its premiere late in the festival.
Audience Award Documentary -Trying to Get Good directed by Doug McIntyre & Penny Peyser is a jazz documentary about Jack Sheldon
You can see more jury prizes at the official site and festival goodies at the IIFF blog
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I saw several good films that I'd recommend people see but few came without drawbacks or a shortfall that would make me hesitate before shouting "BEST". In the end, and I've heard this from other juries too, we ended up going with a compromise choice that shocked all of us in how comfortable we were arriving at it. You see, it's the furthest thing from a comfortable film. Our Grand Jury Prize went to a Russian entry from Aleksei Balabanov called Cargo 200. Plot descriptions don't do it justice but the title refers to the coffins that transported unfortunate Russian soldiers back from Afghanistan in the 80s. That said it's not a war film. We never meet a soldier and the film follows several disparate characters of various political and spiritual persuasions that all become entangled in the dead of night at a remote house where an ex con sells grain spirit. Bad shit goes down. It's partially a pitch black comedy, partially a political scream and partially... well, it's a wholly challenging film. Yet at the end of our deliberations the mutual admiration was clear: it was the cinematic vision that made it to the screen with the most force and the least compromise. So that's where our top prize went.
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5 comments:
This Cargo 200 sounds promising. I see lots of B's and B+s in the sidebar, so I'm guessing IIFF was overall a happy experience.
I caught In Memory of Myself at last year's Melbourne festival. Certain passages drew me in, but as a whole, I found the film hollow.
Also, I never trust Audience Awards at festivals. For such an adventurous demographic, they always end up fawning over the middlebrow titles.
so true about audience awards. last year WAITRESS won. to quote JA "blurgh!"
Since you said "what he said"...
Nick's review is a far better-written, more rhetorically sound argument than anything I could dream up (he's such a great writer), but I do feel it glosses over the interpretation that In the City of Sylvia may in fact be quite critical of the voyeurism it (and so many other films) chooses to express; perhaps this is a case of wishing/projecting an interpretation onto a film that can't really hold it, but the signs of seem pretty conclusive to me.
I loved loved loved Lapsus at Sundance. Thanks for the youtube tip!
Hope to check out Cargo 200 if it comes my way sometime.
I found In Memory of Me so intriguing. Yes it's quite a pretentious film, but the camera shots - and yes, the choreography - was exquisite. Beautiful cinematography-wise - I was surprised to find out the DP, Mario Amura, is still a relative newbie and hasn't yet worked outside of Italy.
I don't get why they've changed the title from In Memory of Me to In Memory of Myself for the US release??... Is one grammatically incorrect?...
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