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CANNES:
At Directors' Fortnight, Control by Dutch filmmaker
Anton Corbijn received the Prix Regards Jeunes (Young Eyes
Prize), awarded to a first or second feature-length film,
as well as the Label Europa Cinéma Prize, intended
for the best European film of the fortnight.
Garage
by Ireland's Lenny Abrahamson was the winner of the Prix
Art et Essai, which gave honorable mention to the aforementioned
Control and to Gegenüber (Counterparts)
by Jan Bonny, of Germany. Note that the SACD Prize for Best
Short Film in French was awarded to Même pas Mort
by Claudine Natkin.
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The International Critics' Week Grand Prize, intended as a
groundbreaking prize whereby the film press rewards rising
new talents, was awarded to XXY by Lucia Puenzo of
Argentina. The SACD French Society of Dramatic Authors and
Composers, a collective managing authors' rights, bestowed
its honors upon Meduzot by Israeli filmmakers Etgar
Keret and Shira Geffen. The Canal + Grand Prize for the Best
Short Film went to Madame Tutli-Putli by Canadians
Chris Lavis and Maciek Sczerbowski.
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The Jury of the Fipresci (International Federation of Film
Critics) awarded the International Critics Prize to 4 Months,
3 Weeks, and 2 Days by Romanian Cristian Mungiu, presented
in the Official Competition. Honorable mention was awarded
to The Band's Visit by Eran Kolirin, from the Un Certain
Regard section. Lastly, in the sidebar programs Critics' Week
and Directors' Fortnight, the Fipresci singled out Elle
s'appelle Sabine, the first film directed by French actress
Sandrine Bonnaire, about her autistic sister.
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The 26th Youth Prize was awarded to The Band's Visit by
Eran Kolirin, presented in Un Certain Regard. This reward,
created in 1982 by the French Ministry of Youth, Sports, and
Community Organizations, enables a jury of young film-lovers
to give their verdict about the films presented in Competition
and in the Un Certain Regard section.
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The French National Education Administration Prize, which
singles out films for their usefulness as learning resources,
was awarded to 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days by Romanian
filmmaker Cristian Mungiu. The jurors are teachers and other
members of the community of educators, as well as people from
the film world. Actress Bernadette Laffont was the president
of this year's jury. The winning film will be issued as a
teaching DVD which will facilitate approach to it and elicit
analysis and debate in the classroom.
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The Prix France-Culture is awarded yearly by French national
public radio during the Cannes Festival to a filmmaker for
career achievement. The 2007 prize went to Cambodian Rithy
Panh "for the intensity of his work and his commitment
to the presentation of Cambodia's cinematographic memory."
Charlotte Rampling was president of the jury.
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