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Hurray
for Hollywood -- and the Rest of the World...
Although
the American Film Institute's Film Festival takes place in the heart
of Hollywood (screening in theatres across town), the program features
cinema from around the world, not just Tinseltown. This year's AFI
festival screens documentary, shorts, and full-length features,
beginning with O
Brother, Where Art Thou from Joel and Ethan Coen, the opening
film on October 19.
The
festival is divided into several sections, including: an International
Competition, a New Directions section (sponsored by the Producers
Guild of America), a documentary series, a shorts series, plus sidebars
from Europe, Asia and Latin America. Among the films competing in
the international competition are Blackboards,
Bread
and Tulips, and The
Widow of St. Pierre. The European Film Section will feature
the Cannes hit Harry,
He's Here to Help, from French filmmaker Dominik Moll, while
Amores
Perros (aka Love's a Bitch, which won the Edinburgh
fest) will headline the Latino Films Section. The Asian Cinema series
will feature 6ixty9,
which screened at Toronto and Taboo
(Gohatto), which screened at Cannes.
Films
in Official Competition will be eligible for the following prizes:
the Grand Jury Prize (awarded to the Best Feature Film in Official
Competition), the European Film Prize (awarded to the Best Feature
Film in the European Showcase) the New Directions Prize (a $2,500
cash prize sponsored by the Producers Guild of America), the Best
New Director (a $2,500 cash prize, sponsored by the Directors Guild
of America), the Best New Writer (the $2,500 cash prize sponsored
by the Writers Guild of America), the Best Actor (a $1,250 cash
prize sponsored by the Screen Actors Guild) and the Best Actress
Award (a $1,250 cash prize sponsored by the Screen Actors Guild).
The Discovery Communications, Inc. is sponsoring the Documentary
Film Award, while Slingshot/Trakker Technologies + partners is sponsoring
the Best Film Editing Award. The festival will also bestow the Virtual
Venue Audience Award (a $2,500 cash prize) for Best Short Film,
to be determined by online tabulation from the "Virtual Venue."
Last but certainly not least, Audience Awards to be decided are:
Best Feature, Best Documentary, and Best Short
Last
year's Grand Jury Prize was awarded to Italian filmmaker Giuseppe
Piccioni for Not of This World while the best European film
was named Mifune
from Danish director Soren Kragh-Jacobsen. The Best Feature
Film in the New Directions section (worth $2,500 and sponsored by
the Producers Guild of America) went to Bobby
G. Can't Swim. Kipp Marcus won the best first-time screenwriter
prize for Snow Days. The Best Actor was Michael Hayden from
Charming Billy and the Best Actress was Ellen Muth from The
Young Girl and the Monsoon. Each actor received a $1,250 cash
prize sponsored by the Screen Actors Guild.
The
American Film Institute was founded by President Johnson in 1965
as part of the National Endowment of the Arts. It was the first
governmental non-profit organization dedicated solely to preserving
the heritage of film and television. Today, the group boasts an
acting conservatory, a series of workshops for directors and screenwriters,
and a campus in Washington, DC.
AFI
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