e-magazine
The Hot Zone
China's newly announced air defense identification zone over the East China Sea aims to shore up national security
Current Issue
· Table of Contents
· Editor's Desk
· Previous Issues
· Subscribe to Mag
Subscribe Now >>
Weekly Watch
Expert's View
World
Nation
Business
Finance
Market Watch
Legal-Ease
North American Report
Forum
Government Documents
Expat's Eye
Health
Science/Technology
Lifestyle
Books
Movies
Backgrounders
Special
Photo Gallery
Blogs
Reader's Service
Learning with
'Beijing Review'
E-mail us
RSS Feeds
PDF Edition
Web-magazine
Reader's Letters
Make Beijing Review your homepage
Hot Links

cheap eyeglasses
Market Avenue
eBeijing

Movies
Movies
UPDATED: September 13, 2010
U.S. Director Wins Top Prize at Venice Film Festival
Share

Sofia Coppola, director of the film Somewhere, poses with the Golden Lion award for Best Film during the awards ceremony of the 67th Venice film festival in Venice, Italy, on September 11 (XINHUA)

American director Sofia Coppola's Somewhere, her exploration of the relationship between a father and his young daughter under the flashbulbs of movie celebrity, won the top prize at the Venice Film Festival on Saturday.

The 39-year-old Coppola, daughter of famed director Francis Ford Coppola, added the coveted Golden Prize to a trophy shelf that already includes a Best Screenplay Oscar for her 2003 film Lost in Translation, which, like Somewhere, was set mostly in hotel rooms. Both films premiered on Venice's Lido Island where the festival was held.

Announced during a gala ceremony in the Palazzo del Cinema, the Silver Lion prize for Best Director went to Alex de la Iglesia for his Spanish civil war drama A Sad Trumpet Ballad. Jerzy Skolimowski's Essential Killing, about an Afghan prisoner who escapes in Europe, won the festival's special jury prize.

Vincent Gallo, the protagonist in Essential Killing, won the Coppa Volpi for Best Actor, while Attenberg star Ariane Labed won the Coppa Volpi for Best Actress.

Mikhail Krichman won the Best Photography prize for his work in Aleksei Fedorchenko's Silent Souls, about a man's moving effort to return his dead wife to the area where she grew up, while de la Iglesia took home his second prize, for Best Screenplay.

In other prizes announced on Saturday, Mila Kunis, who starred in Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan, was given the Mastroianni Prize for the best emerging actor in a film that screened on the Lido. Kunis and Natalie Portman played rival ballet dancers in this opening night film at Venice.

Majority, from 35-year-old Turkish director Seren Yuce, won the Venice Days Lion of the Future award, and 20 Cigarettes, which screened in the Italian sidebar Controcampo Italiano, was given the prize from Italian Film Journalists. The film is the first work from writer and director Aureliano Amadei.

(Xinhua News Agency September 12, 2010)



 
Top Story
-Protecting Ocean Rights
-Partners in Defense
-Fighting HIV+'s Stigma
-HIV: Privacy VS. Protection
-Setting the Tone
Most Popular
 
About BEIJINGREVIEW | About beijingreview.com | Rss Feeds | Contact us | Advertising | Subscribe & Service | Make Beijing Review your homepage
Copyright Beijing Review All right reserved