Showing posts with label IndieLisboa'12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IndieLisboa'12. Show all posts

Sunday, May 6, 2012

IndieLisboa'12: winners and the big surprises


I didn't have the chance to watch as many films as I wanted and as I had planned. It's a difficult time of the year. L (2012), Le Skylab (2012), Take Shelter (2011) (would be my second screening of this great film), For Ellen (2012),  17 Daughters (2012), Rafa (2012), Into the Abyss (2011), Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003), Whore's Glory (2012), Meet the Fokkens (2012) and several shorts are amongst those I would have like to have seen. I'll be searching for them now. This was, however, the  most interesting edition of the festival I attended to which therefore raises the stakes for next year, having the opportunity to be even greater. 

The 9th edition brought us one of the best films of 2011 (not counting with Take Shelter) and the best Portuguese film in many years.


 Azazel Jacobs (director) and Patrick Dewitt (writer), with Terri (2011).


Filipa Reis and João Guerra Miller, writers/directors, with Cat Craddle (2012).




WINNERS


 Best Film
De jueves a domingo (Dominga Sotomayor)
 
Audience Award for Best Film
Whores' Glory
(Michael Glawogger)

Best Portuguese Film
Jesus por um Dia (Helena Inverno and Verónica Castro)

Best Short Film
Juku (Kiro Russ)
Hinorable Mention: The Great Rabbit (Atsushi Wada)
Honorable Mention: Praça Walt Disney (Renata Pinheiro and Sergio Oliveira)

Audience Award for Best Short Film
Retour à Mandima  (Robert-Jan Lacomb) 

Best Portuguese Short Film Award
Cama de Gato (Filipa Reis and João Miller Guerra)
Honorable Mention: Kali, o Pequeno Vampiro (Regina Pessoa)

IndieJúnior Audience Award
The Dog and the Key (Hee Jung Kim)

International Amnesty Award
From this day to where (Mathias Eriksen and Matias Rygh)
Honorable Mention: Bon  Voyage (Fabio Friedli)
Honorable Mention: Meet The Fokkens (Gabriëlle Provaas and Rob Schröder)

Árvore da Vida Award for Best Portuguese Film
Luz da Manhã (Cláudia Varejão)
Honorable Mention: Mupepy Munatim (Pedro Peralta)

TAP Award for Best Portuguese Documentary
A Vossa Casa (João Mário Grilo)

TAP Award for Best Portuguese Fiction Feature
Por Aqui Tudo Bem (Pocas Pascoal)
Prémio RTP Pulsar do Mundo
Meet the Fokkens de Gabriëlle Provaas e Rob Schröder

TV Cine Distribution Award

L'estate di Giacomo (Alessandro Comodin)

RTP2 Onda Curta Award
Chefu Party (Adrian Sitaru)
Fancy-Fair (Christophe Hermans)
Kali, o Pequeno Vampiro (Regina Pessoa)
Ovos de Dinossauro na Sala de Estar (Rafael Urban)

FNAC New Talent Award
Salomé Lamas
(w/ Encounters With Landscape)

Obviosom/Gripman/Restart Award
 João Salaviza (w/ Cerro Negro)




Thursday, May 3, 2012

IndieLisboa'12: "Alps" (2011)



I wrote here about my expectations about Alps (2011), the new film by the writing team Lanthimos/Filippou, the first also the director. That was the set for their prior brilliant Dogtooth (2010). Am I disappointed. The dispassionate, blocking, stern framing of the characters, mostly filmed backwards, that worked so well in his previous film, take a bigger weight and that annoyed me at some point. The inverted amorcée (the objects, rather than the character, were out of focus) isolated the characters from their world (their real world, from which they're constantly trying to break off) but it eventually detached me from what that world. There are some very good scenes, were the balance between the tragic comedy and the sexual and social bizarre create an intended disturbing metaphor for a human need of becoming something otherworldly. But you don't understand what's going on until 40 minutes into the film and overall the sequences seemed pasted only, I didn't get the meaning of too many of them, I was bored most of the time and couldn't connect to neither actions nor characters to get enveloped. I'd say, aesthetically coherent (I may have not liked but that doesn't stop it from having the potential to be considered a great work for many of you) but the writing was too all over the place for me.



Today, at the IndieLisboa'12 (3/5)


First and foremost, a few words about yesterday's Lisbon Talks, as I anticipated it here, about the current state of affairs of the Portuguese cinema. Contrarily to Monday, there was no room from discussion or debate, as most of the questions, all well handled by Pedro Mexia, were too personal. The origin of the passion, academic or empiric background, what it feels to be a filmmaker for each of them and talking a little about some of their films, were the basic shots. Jorge Jácome on a very serene attitude had more to say about the context and the paradigms, certainly due to the investigation he endorsed. Filipe Melo, the funniest guy in the room, talked about how he learned by watching, how he still does and how he ever will - the greatest example was when he said he had no clue what was Pasolini's free indirect discourse but had nonetheless used the effect as a director. It was also good to hear such a young artist affirming proudly that his biggest influences are more George Romero and John Landis than properly Bergman - I love the Swedish director, I just mean it was very sincere because the Portuguese filmmaker has the tendency of trying to embellish his references, and I don't know why. Filipa Reis, very determined, had interesting points about the making of Cat Craddle (2012) and how she perceives the seventh art. Gabriel Abrantes was sharp on trying (eventually succeeding, I am not making that judgment here) to intellectualize every single thing you could say about films.

Today, in the same stance, a discussion about narratives at the light of the new media, with Manuel José Damásio (director of the Film, Video and Communication course at Universidade Lusófona), Possidónio Cachapa (writer, director, professor), Patrícia Gouveia (professor), Lewis Klahr (director) and Till Nowak (director, Delivery (2005)). For starters, I am seeing too little writers here, if we're going to talk about narratives.


 However, the major highlight is Alps (2011), which premiered last year at the Venice Film Festival. This is the first film by Yorgos Lanthimos after his worldwide success Dogtooth (2010), a bizarre story about a couple who hides and locks their kids from the streets, the society, the meaning of words and the understanding of their own body - a brilliant disturbing allegory to Plato's cave. It won the Un Certain Regard award at Cannes, two awards at Stiges and was nominated for Best Foreign Film at the Academy Awards.This one is written by the same team, himself and Efthymis Filippou, and the synopsis promises the same approach to the world, the same tone: a company which service is impersonating recently deceased people and reproduce their existence for their family and friends. Last year, IndieLisboa had Attenberg (2011), produced and stared by Lanthimos, with a resembling atmosphere, although in a (even) more ambiguous and unconventional narrative approach; this year, there's also L (2012), written by Efthymis, of the same nature. A chance we will look back in a few years from now and realize the festival assisted to the birth of one of the greatest modern cinematographies of the 21st century.