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FIPRESCI honors The White Ribbon, Amreeka and Police, Adjective

Posted by Eric Lavallee on May 27, 2009
Source: IONCINEMA.com

In an age where media consolidation is stamping out several voices, where Rotten Tomato meters seem to be a key point of reference and where Les Cahiers du Cinema is potentially a couple of issues away from its last issue, FIPRESCI's mission of citing noteworthy films and filmmakers becomes that much more important. While they didn't have their usual special screening in the Critic's Week sidebar, the group were evidently on hand to scope out the Cannes film festival and this year they have seconded the jury votes. FIPRESCI awarded Cannes Critics Prizes to: (Main Competition) a b&w picture where it isn't the kids, but the adults who are lacking in moral fiber, (Un Certain Regard) the most undramatic police film in the history of cinema, and (Directors' Fortnight or Critics' Week) the challenge of starting over in a time where tension of the Iraq war actually breaks out in rural Illinois.

The jury comprised of president Mike Goodridge (U.S), Nguyen Trong BINH (France), Janusz Wróblewski (Poland), Mike Naafs (The Netherlands), Dominique Widemann (France), Amir Emary (Egypt), Alin Tasciyan (Turkey), Ahmed Muztaba Zamal (Bangladesh), and Emma Gray Munthe (Sweden) awarded Michael Haneke's "The White Ribbon", Corneliu Porumboiu's "Police, Adjective" (Politist, Adjectiv) and Cherien Dabis' Sundance preemed "Amreeka".



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Zeina Durra

Zeina Durra

My casting director suggested her and I went to Paris to meet her. She loved the script and she's an amazing actress so of course I wanted to work with her. Playing an artist is very hard as it can come of as super fake, but Elodie is an artist in real life and that translated. Who doesn't like Dream Life of Angels?!

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Reviews

Review: Police, Adjective

Patterned with minimalist surroundings, low-key performances and long takes that are filmed in real time, the almost mute Police, Adjective cleverly details how Romanian society has not entirely deposed of, or moved away from its past with this anti-thesis of a Michael Mann film.


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I never wanted to make a biopic about Tolstoy. The film I saw was about the tragic comedy about marriage, about the difficulty living with love and impossibility of living without love.


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2010 Berlin Int. Film Festival (60th)

Up to 400 films are shown every year as part of the Berlinale's public programme, the vast majority of which are world or European premieres. Films of every genre, length and format can be submitted for consideration. The Berlinale is divided into different sections, each with its own unique profile: big international movies in the Competition, independent and art-house productions in Panorama, movies specially for a young audience in the Generation section, the most exciting German cinema productions in Perspektive Deutsches Kino, an in-depth look at films from “distant” countries and experimental forms in the Forum, as well as an investigation of diverse cinematic possibilities in the Berlinale Shorts. The programme is rounded off by a thematic Retrospective and a Homage, which focuses on the lifework of a great cinema personality. Both of these sections, which are curated by the Berlin Film Museum, aim to place contemporary cinema within a historical context.


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