Posts Tagged ‘winners’

Virtuoso pieces – Franz Liszt Shorts

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Winners of the Franz Liszt Short Film Competition

Franz Liszt was born 200 years ago – The Ministry of National Resources launched a Short Film Competition in March 2011. In total, 41 admissions arrived from Hungary and all over the world: children and adults, amateurs and professionals, primary schools and filmmaking companies alike entered their films – there even was one entry sent from a prison. The main prize of two million forints was awarded to Máté Szabó’s animation Hungarian Rhapsody (Magyar rapszódia). Péter Gábor Farkas’s film etude, The Package (A küldemény) won the second prize of one million forints, whilst Iván Tamás was awarded the third prize of 500.000 forints for his animation work La Campanella.

The prizewinning shortfilms are available to watch online exclusively on Daazo.com, the European short film sharing site: daazo.com/liszt

Austrian Film with Oscar Chance Won the Main Prize of Jameson Cinefest

Monday, September 26th, 2011

14 feature films in competition, all Hungarian premieres, 6 feature films out of competition, 9 classical movies in the PORT.hu CineClassics section, 19 short films, 10 documentaries, 15 animated movies, 3 exhibitions, 3 workshops, conferences, several professional meetings – issues of the 8th Miskolc International Film Festival which ended on 25 September. Due to the achievements of the last 8 years, Jameson CineFest has become the best film festival in Hungary.

Jameson CineFest’s main prize, named after the Miskolc born Oscar winner director-screenwriter Emeric Pressburger, was awarded to Karl Markovics’s movie Atmen (Breathing), and the award was received by Thomas Schubert, the film’s leading actor. It is Markovics’s, one of Austria’s most famous and most popular actors’ first work as a director, and it is the official Austrian Oscar nominee. Austria received the jury’s grand prix either: the film Michael arrived to Hungary straight from Cannes, and it is the first direction of Markus Schleinzer, Michael Hanekes casting director.

Emeric Pressburger Prize: Atmen

Max Zahle’s Raju proved to be the best short film and its award was offered by Daazo.com. The best documentary was Viktor Oszkár Nagy’s Két világ között (Caught Between Two Worlds). The best animated film’s award, which is wearing the name of Attila Dargay for the honouring of the animation artist with Miskolc origins, was offered by KEDD Animation Studio and it went to A Lost And Found Box of Human Sensation. FICC, the International Federation of Film Societies favoured Christian Schwochow’s Die Unsichtbare (Cracks In The Shell) and honoured this production with the Don Quijote Award. Film New Europe’s award went to Adrian Sitaru’s Best Intentions as the best (Hungarian-Romanian) coproduction, and the award was received by Emőke Vágási co-producer.

Best Short Film – Daazo.com Prize:  Raju

This year, in Miskolc International Film Festival, international ecumenical jury awarded the films for the first time, and it is a very important step in enhancing the festival’s international reputation. They also awarded Atmen, a film which due to receiving the film critics’ award, either, could bag three awards at once.

Grand Prix Spécial: Michael

The ever improving PORT.hu CineClassics film historical program series, with the patronage of legendary director István Szabó, screened a complete István Szőts retrospective. In the Miskolc Galery, an exhibition and conference commemorated the great director of the Emberek a havason (People in the Alps) which was shot 70 years ago. The audience could visit a large-scale Krzysztof Kieslowski and Tamás Major exhibition; furthermore, there was a film forum held on the transformation of film industry’s  support system, and roma workshop and a three-day cinema conference were also organized. And, of course, several concerts and parties were hosted by the festival – staying faithful to the Jameson CineFest traditions.

Animation for Everyone

Monday, June 20th, 2011

A final hint of the 10th Kecskemét Animation Film Festival

After spending a couple of days watching animation I kind of have the feeling that reality is jut not good enough. I could dive into those colorful worlds and watch them on and on forever. Though it has to stop sometime, and here it comes the report of the very last day of KAFF.

We started with the selection of Cartoon d’Or Nominees 2010 and we immediately fell in love with a couple of pieces. Angry Man by Anita Killi is a tough story told by fascinating pictures that takes the hardboiled events to a fairy tale land and that makes it really good. It’s a film about secrets that shouldn’t be secret. When the mommy-fish dies, Boj has had enough, and gets power from his own fantasy to go further. We also enjoyed the idea of Francois Alaux’s Logorama that takes place in a version of Los Angeles comprised entirely of corporate logos. For the chasing story of an armed criminal Alaux won the 2010 Oscar for Best Animated Short Film. The Tale of Little Puppetboy by Johannes Nyholm was quite funny. Puppetboy is sweating floods of clay, preparing for a lady’s visit. He becomes even more nervous when she arrives. It’s a claymation drama in four episodes.

Angry Man by Anita Killi

The section was followed up by the Best of Annecy 2009 programme. It was quite various in quality, though we liked a couple of them. The Man in Blue Gordini by Jean-Christophe Lie takes place at the end of the 70’s in an imaginary suburb, where the custom is to wear neither underwear nor trousers, only orange tops. With the help of a masked rebel driving a blue R8 Gordini, Mister R and his wife plot a radical clothing revolution and the assault of monochromic orange totalitarianism. Log Jam is a brilliant series by Alexei Alexeev about a bear, a rabbit and a wolf jamming in the forest. For Sock’s Sake by Carlo Vogele is also a cutie about a sock that falls from the clothesline and goes clubbing.


Log Jam by Alexei Alexeev

The last block we attended was Music and Animation / Films selected by Normand Roger composer. Normand Roger is a Canadian composer, sound editor and sound designer. He is particularly known for his work as a composer of soundtracks for animated films, having composed more than 200 such works since 1970. Thirteen of his works have been nominated for Academy Awards, of which six have won. He has chosen a couple of nice pieces for this collection Lost in Snow by Vladimir Leschiov and Village of Idiots by Eugene Fedorenko and Rose Newlove.


Village of Idiots by Eugene Fedorenko and Rose Newlove

The 10th Kecskemét Animation Film Festival ended with a huge ceremony where the awards were given to the following artist. A part of KAFF is the 7th Festival of European Animated Feature Films and TV-specials. The main prize of Kecskemét went to Jirí Barta for In the Attic. The winner of Best Feature Film was Dominque Monféry for Eleonora’s Secret. The Best TV-special became Esterházy by Izabella Plucinska. The Student Jury’s prize was given to Chico and Rita.


Zenit by Éva M. Tóth

The European programme was followed by the Hungarian prize-list. The Jury’s Prize were given to István Illés for track32. The Best Short Film award went to Éva M. Tóth for Zenit.

For more information and the complete list of the winners visit: http://www.kaff.hu/news/read/88/

Short Films that Made the Impossible Possible

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

Winners of the Impossible Film Contest

The Impossible Film Contest 2011 organised by Daazo.com for the participants of the Festival de Cannes’ Short Film Corner has finished. More than 60 short films competed to get more visibility and for the valuable prizes: GoPro HD cameras. These cameras are unbreakable, waterproof and can be used under any extreme circumstances, meaning that there won’t be any more impossible situations while making your film.

A GoPro HD camera is given to the winner of the Daazo Award chosen by Daazo.com editors. In addition the film that collected the most “likes” on Daazo.com wins the Audience Award and consequently a GoPro HD Camera.

Here are the winners of the Impossible Film Contest 2011.

The winner of the Daazo Award is Anton du Preez for his short titled Rocket Man. The film is about Michael, an ex-human cannonball. Michael’s wife has sadly passed away and his daughter has booked him into a nursing home. We follow Michael through his last day of freedom as he prepares for his last show as Rocket Man. The film was chosen to be the winner of the competition because of its interesting choice of topic, the personal touch surrounding the whole short and its bizarre and truly surprising ending.

Daazo.com founders also give Special Mentions for three competing short films. Blink of an Eye by Martin Bargiel receives a Special Mention for its captivating way of telling the story. Régine Boichat’s La Belle Hélène also gets a Special Mention for its professional execution and bizarre choice of topic. The third Special Mention goes to Skin by Ivana Mladenovic because its a nice example of the Romanian new wave.

The winner of the Audience Award is Nightfall of Eden by Daina Papadaki. The short is an experimental portrayal of the peace and war in the Garden of Eden. The only question is that during this downfall will all the good things humanity is capable of be overshadowed by darkness… or can we stop our destruction?

Congratulations to the winners and to all participants!

The winning short films and all the entries can be watched on www.daazo.com/impossiblecannes

Michel Gondry Unveiled the Winning Shorts at the 64th Cannes Fim Festival

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

The Short Film Competition and Cinéfondation jury headed by Michel Gondry has announced the winners of the 64th Festival de Cannes. The winner of the Short Film Competition and consequently the Short Film Palme d’Or is Cross by Maryna Vroda. The film is a French-Ukrainian co-production and is based on the author’s childhood memories of lessons at an open-air school. Cross takes place in the middle of a forest and presents a strange, surrealistic version of an educational institution in a no name country of the former USSR. With its strong atmosphere Cross deserved the prize. Congratulations!

Maryna Vroda

The Jury Prize goes to Badpakje 46 by Wannes Destoop from Belgium. Badpakje 46 is about a teenage girl, who is having a hard time finding her way through life. Only in the local pool, where she is training intensively for an upcoming swimming competition, does she truly feel at home. But when she needs a new pair of goggles, things don’t go as smoothly as planned and she uses every means to get hold of them. Read our interview with the director here!

The Cinéfondation with its student films is also a part of the Official Selection and the jury awards a prize to the best three works. The 1st Prize of the Cinéfondation goes to Der Brief directed by Doroteya Droumeva. It focuses on Maja who discovers she is pregnant. The film explores the situation from her point of view, drawing us in as she tries to decipher what is happening.

Die Brief

The 2nd Prize is awarded to Kamal Lazraq’s Drari, a chronicle of a friendship between two young men coming from opposite social backgrounds in Casablanca. Check out Q&A with the director here!

The winner of the 3rd Prize of the Cinéfondation is Son Tae-gym for his film Ya-Gan-Bi-Hang (Fly By Night). The short is about a boy whose only family is his elder brother and is forced to have sex with a man for money. Caught short of cash, the man suggests they meet again the following day and asks for his number. But the boy’s cell phone has been confiscated by his brother who won’t give it back. You can read our interview with the director by clicking here.

Find more interviews with the competing directors and articles about the World of Shorts in our Cannes 2011 Special Edition!

The winners of the “City In My Mind – Regional Short Film Contest” are announced

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

The “City In My Mind – Regional Short Film Contest” organised by the Hungarofest Nonprofit Ltd. and held on Daazo.com has finished. The City in My Mind project focused on seven chosen cities, on the exact places that gave home to the “European Day” held on 8th May 2011. The film entries must have been connected to the cities mentioned before. Each of the seven cities counted as a different category, and the jury declares now a winner for each of them. The best films will be awarded with a Samsung Galaxy Tab  touch-screen tablet device provided by Daazo.com and Hungarofest. In addition, the most popular film, which collected the most votes on Daazo.com (including Daazo.com and Facebook “likes”) will be awarded with the Audience award. The contest was held in the frame of the Hungarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union.

The winning short films of the seven cities chosen by the jury are the following:

Sepsiszentgyörgy (Sfântu Gheorghe):
- Timelessness (Időtlenség) by Sándor Nagy B.

Eszék (Osijek):
- What I’d Give for Osijek by John P. Meyers

Magyarkanizsa (Kaniža):
- Angelic Little Brides (Angyali kismenyasszonyok) by Attila Iván

Nagyszőlős (Vynohradiv):
- Nagyszőlős – My City (Nagyszőlős – Az én Városom) by Gábor Ember

Lendva (Lendava):
- Lendva by Gábor Miho

Párkány (Štúrovo):
- Experiences … shared by Tamás Rétlaki, Balázs Sasvári

Alsóőr-Felsőőr (Unterwart-Oberwart):
- One Sleepy Sunday Evening (Egy álmos vasárnap este) by Ádám Kecskés

The winner of the Audience award:
- The Dream City – Sepsiszentgyörgy (A megálmodott város) by Levente Mihály Ürmösi

Congratulations to the winners and to all participants!

The winning short films and all the entries can be watched
on http://www.daazo.com/cityinmymind.

And the Oscar goes to…

Monday, February 28th, 2011

The Academy Award Winner Short Films of 2011

The 83rd Academy Awards came to an end. The winners of the three categories where short films compete are the following. In the category of live action Luke Matheny won the Oscar for God of Love. The best animated short film was The Lost Thing by Andrew Ruhemann and Shaun Tan. The documentary award was given to Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon for Strangers No More. Congratulations to the winners!

Live Action
God of Love by Luke Matheny (New York University). A love-struck, dart throwing lounge singer finds his prayers answered when he receives a mysterious box.  See a short clip below!
A love triangle between two musicians and a young woman takes a surprising turn when one of them finds a collection of magical darts.

Animation
The Lost Thing by Andrew Ruhemann and Shaun Tan is about  a boy who finds a strange creature on a beach, and decides to find a home for it in a world where everyone believes there are far more important things to pay attention to.

Documentary
Strangers No More by Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon talks about an exceptional school in the heart of Tel Aviv where children from forty-eight different countries and diverse backgrounds come together to learn. Many of the students arrive at Bialik-Rogozin School fleeing poverty, political adversity and even genocide. Here, no child is a stranger.

FNE at Venice IFF 2010: Venice Festival Prize Winners

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski’s Essential Killing picked up the Special Jury Prize  of the main competition at the 67th Venice International Film Festival while the Turkish film Majority directed by Seren Yuce which screened in the Venice Days section won the Young Lion of Tomorrow award.

FNE will publish an exclusive interview with Skolimowski in Venice later this week.

For the complete list of winners check this.

The short film winners of Cannes competition

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

arenaThe portugese short film, Arena got the Palme d’Or for Best Short Film. João SALAVIZA’s film tells a story of Mauro, who  is under house arrest. Tattooing helps him while away the time. Three local kids taunt him through his window. Outside, the midday sun beats down.
sixdollar

A special distinction was gained by the short film “The Six Dollar Fifty Man” directed by Mark Albiston and Louis Sutherland. The film is set in a 1970s coastal town, it follows Andy, a gutsy 8 year-old boy who is forced to break out of his make-believe superhero world to deal with playground bullies.

Hungarian Palme d’Or Winners

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

canneslogokicsiAt Daazo.com, we seriously believe that digging out masterpieces from the past is just as important as finding new artworks. As our site is based in Hungary, we’ve looked into that past and selected all the short films of Hungarian film’s history to have won the revered Palme d’Or (Golden Palm) at Cannes International Film Festival. We now proudly present these films, with the hope that by making this collection available on-line we can fill a gap in Hungarian cultural heritage.

Even the most enthusiastic of Hungarian film lovers can be quite surprised to discover that there are five Golden Palm winning Hungarian shorts – with very few of them being able to name the films themselves. The aim of this special selection is to maneuver these hidden masterpieces into the spotlight.

János Vadász was the first winner of the award, with his experimental film, Overture, in 1965. This wonderfully photographed documentary tells a very natural and elementary story: the birth of a bird. However, the work is far from simple documentary, as Vadász used the camera in a particularly intimate way, in harmony with the music of Beethoven. Overture was also nominated for the Academy Award for the best short film in 1965.

Hungarian animation has always been in the forefront of the animation world – both technically and culturally. We’ve already presented Ferenc Rofusz’s Academy Award winning short, The Fly, and now have other masterpieces to show.

In the late 70’s, a new generation of animators began their careers – among them, Marcell Jankovics. The first recognition from the international film scene came in 1977, when Jankovics won the Palme d’Or with his exeptional film, Fight. There are but very few artworks from film history which are able to describe an abstract problem like the history of art, or the relationship between an artist and his artwork. Marcell Jankovics used very simple visual effects to draw, literally, a fight between a statue and a sculptor – the result being quite similar to the famous graphic work, Drawing Hands, by M. C. Escher.

Jankovics’ award can be seen as having launched the golden era of Hungarian animation. Ferenc Rofusz later won an Oscar in 1981, and Béla Vajda received the Palme d’Ore for his animation, Moto perpetuo – which takes usual situations from daily life in Hungary in the 80’s as its subject matter. This film is very different in style to Fight, however, the critical approach of both is quite similar. In 1981, it was a very brave work indeed, realized with perfect technical features. Today, it’s amazing to see that neither the topic nor the technique seems any less relevant. Though the political system may have changed, and there are gorgeous 3D animations being made with computers, Moto perpetuo remains very true and utterly enjoyable.

Marcell Iványi’s film, Wind, is definitely one of the classics of European short film culture: inspired by the Lucien Hervé photograph Three Women. Wind’s unique “one-take” technique stems back to the Hungarian Cinematographic style of the 70’s, which is probably one of the most well-known ages of this country’s cinema. However, the director managed to create his own atmosphere, in which the slow rhythm and strict camera movements of the film perfectly describe our human nature in inhuman times. Wind won the Palme d’Or in 1996.

The last film in the list so far is After Rain, which won the Palme d’Or in 2002. This four-minute-long work is clear proof that a short film can handle a serious topic in an effective way, with impact, whilst retaining a distance from its actual subject. The bicycle ride of Kati is probably one of the most powerful scenes ever to have featured in a short film.