
Congratulations!
The end of the Berlinale is award-winning time. Today, Sunday, 22 February
at 14.00, the winners of the Golden and Silver Bears will be announced.
Some of the additional awards were already announced last night. Among
them:
* The Award of the Ecumenical Jury to Central do Brasil by Walter Salles.
Special Prize to the Short Film Cinema Alcazar by Florence.
* The Pierrot Prize For Young European Cinema 1998 (best director's
debut) to Petits desordres amoureux by Olivier Peray.
* The CICAE Award, given by the jury of the International Confederation
of Art Cinemas to Le Gone du chaaba by Christophe Ruggia.Prize of the CIAE
Forum-Jury to Sergej Eisenstein: Mexikanskaja Fantasija by Oleg Kowalow.
* The Award of the Jury of the Guild of German Art Cinemas goes to
Left Luggage by Jeroen Krabbe.
* The FIPRESCI Awards, given by the International Film Critics Association
to Sada by Nobuhiko Obyashi (Competition), to Sue by Amos Kollek (Panorama)
and to Shivrei Tmunot Jerushalaim by Ron Havilio.
* The TEDDY AWARD 1998 goes to The Man in Her Life by Carlos Siguion-Reyna
(Jury Prize); Hold You Tight by Stanley Kwan (best film); Peppermills by
Isabel Hegner (best short); The Brandon Teena Story by Susan Muska, Greta
Olafsdottir (best documentary). Special mention to Uncut by John Greyson.
* The Wolfgang Staudte Award, given by the Society for Safeguarding
Film and Television Rights (GWFF) to Xiao Wu by Jia Zhang Ke.
* The Caligari Award, given by the German Federal Association of Communal
Film Work, to Kasaba by Nuri Bilge Ceylan.
* Readers Jury of Siegessaeule to The Brandon Teena Story by Susan
Muska, Greta Olafsdottir.
* Peace Film Prize 1998 to Lidija Bobrowa for her film W toj stranj.
* Don Quixote Prize of the international umbrella organisation for
film societies (FICC) to Thirteen by David Williams. Special mentions to
W toj stranje by Lidija Bobrowa and Radio no jikan by Koki Mitani.
* The NETPAC-Prize goes to Jia Zhang Ke for Xiao Wu.
SHOWING TODAY
Francis Ford Coppola's The Rainmaker (which
closes the Berlinale tonight) is the tale of Rudy Baylor (Matt Damon),
a lawyer who learns to hate corporate America after he falls in love with
a battered married woman. "It was an interesting world I didn't know much
about," says Coppola. "The world of the law profession in Memphis, the
seedy side of it, the ambulance chasers. The underbelly of the law business."
GM
Doggone it
Scenes of chaos at the Wag the Dog press conference, as 800 hacks scrambled
to see Robert De Niro.Meanwhile, De Niro was dishing out verbal gems. "It
didn't really compare to anything I'd ever experienced on film," he growled
of his recent fracas in the Paris courtroom. "I thought you were supposed
to be innocent until proven guilty. The judge appeared to think he was
in a film himself."
EXTRA
Gwyneth Paltrow wowed the Great Expectations press conference, posing
for pics and signing autographs. She also put paid to any suggestion that
she was out to establish a sexier image in the film, admitting that in
several scenes she had a body double. "Obviously I prefer to be clothed
as a general rule," she blushed, "and the nude scenes were a little uncomfortable."
HB
UPDATE
* Late Panorama entry Pearls & Swine by Oskar Jonasson (in the
presence of the director) will be shown at the Filmpalast today at 18.30.
* Fernando Lara, the festival's delegate from Spain has expressed his concern at the lack of Spanish translations at competition screenings. The translations were stopped a couple of years ago for financial reasons. According to the festival the same financial constraints mean that the translations will not be reinstituted.
* Last-night nerves? End-of-festival blues? Feeling a bit homesick?
It always gets a bit edgy towards the end of a long and arduous festival
- but that's no reason for one isolated incident to spoil the whole shooting
match. Que? Apparently a camera crew was involved in a small scuffle with
security the other day, but a camera-crew boycott of the closing night,
as rumoured, will harm
the media as much as the festival. Take a chill pill, guys.
* A last-minute sponsor for the Blue Angel Award has come to the rescue of this prize for the Best European Film at the festival in the shape of AGICOA, who have stumped up DM50,000 for the privilege. Merci AGICOA!
* Festival director Moritz de Hadeln met yesterday with the Russian delegation led by Sergey V Lazaruk, deputy chairman of the State Committee of the Russian Federation for Cinematography, and stressed the traditional ties between the festival and the Russian film industry. He also expressed his happiness that Russian cinema is undergoing something of a resurgence following several years in the doldrums.
*Yesterday, festival director, Moritz de Hadeln met with Venice director Felice Laudadio and their discussions had one common theme - the films are the stars of the festival and the stars are welcome.
* Moritz de Hadeln made his annual appearance at the Teddys. His speech reinforced his support for this event.
* On Friday international delegates of the Berlinale and the selection commitee met in the festival club. Moritz de Hadeln thanked all present for their work and stated that a gathering like this at the end of the festival was the appropiate setting for evaluating the festival.
* Yoram Golan is back in Berlin organising the Israeli stand - but only
just! Before the festival the Minister of Industry Mr Sharansky pulled
most of the funds from his department for the film industry and caused
the cancellation of the stand at the European market and practically the
whole of the Israeli presence.
After much lobbying of the government by the festival and various international
friends of Israeli cinema, some of the funds were reinstated and Golan
arranged a presence. Berlin without the Israeli delegation would not be
the same.
Bad Boy Wenham
"I'd be put in the loony asylum if I thought it was going to earn 200
million dollars," quips Australian actor David Wenham of competition film
The Boys, "but the buzz in Berlin for the film is good. I actually think
it's the best film I've done."
The affable and not remotely loony Australian actor, nursing a hangover
in the Interconti yesterday and limping through a full day of interviews,
is being hailed as 'the new Russell Crowe' by enthusiastic hacks. Wenham
laughs.
"I feel sorry for poor Russell," he opines. "If I'm the new Russell
Crowe, does that make Russell the old Russell Crowe? You know, I think
he'd like to be Russell by himself." Hero Brown
Double identity
Is Berlin in February really so inhospitable that it's only worth a
star's visit if they're in more than one film? Ask Lambert Wilson (On connait
la chanon, Trop (peu) d'amour), Rachel Weisz (I Want You, Land Girls) and
Robert De Niro (Jackie Brown, Great Expectations, Wag The Dog).
Past winners of the 'two films at the same time' award include Robert
Downey Jr (1996 for Home For The Holidays, Richard III and Restoration),
Danny DeVito (1993 for Hoffa and Jack the Bear) Anthony Hopkins (1994 for
Remains Of The Day and Shadowlands) and Emma Thompson that same year (Remains
Of The Day, In The Name of The Father). Harvey Keitel has only managed
the companion pieces Smoke and Blue In The Face in 1995, which doesn't
count. Natalie Gravenor
Correction to 'Nova signs with Sony' from 15 February:
Nova has an agreement solely with Phoenix Pictures and not Sony or
any division thereof. Not all of Phoenix's films must be placed through
the Sony distribution pipeline.
And the winner is...
Berlin 98 has been given the thumbs up from Nik Powell, Chairman of
the European Film Academy (EFA). "This year's competition reel is one of
the strongest I've seen in any festival for a long time," he says. Powell,
who's been in Berlin on EFA business, wouldn't be drawn on his top tip.
HB
WHAT THE PAPERS SAY
The Berlinale takes a look at how the German and international media
view the festival.
"The film was great. But everything smelled unbearably like sweet aftershave."
Impressed filmgoer after the Wag The Dog screening at the Zoo Palast
in taz
About the Gay Teddy Award:
"It used to be a stuffed animal. Panorama staff combed toy stores for
the cuddliest teddy and gave all the cuddle test. The '98 version is, for
the first time, a hard statue on a stone base, designed by cult comic artist
Ralf Koenig. Berliner Morgenpost
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