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awards
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Feature length films
1st Award – 7.000€: Corporation
by Mark Achbar & Jennifer Abbott (Canada)
2nd Award – 5.000€: Mimi by
Claire Simon (France)
Jurie's comments
Best Feature Length Films Awards
The jury had a hard task to perform in
order to select the best films among movies,
which represent a wide range of film style.
After a long discussion and dialectic among the
members of the jury, we managed to achieve a
result and to survey a manifold material, trying
to find the best movies.
1st Prize
The jury has unanimously award the first
prize to a film that has panicked us: The
Corporation by Marc Achbar & Jannifer
Abbott. Assiduous research, carefully
selected material, excellent and often mined
interviews have reconstructed the dark phantasm
of the contemporary dynast of the multinational
corporations. The film, in the form of a
thriller, leads its audience from the minatory
present to the bare light at the end of the
tunnel. Thank God! The film will be distributed
in Greece and we still hope: ecologically!
2nd Prize
We have decided to give the second award to
Mimi by Claire Simon. A film which touches
the issue of ecology through the emotional
portrait of a woman’s personal journey towards
inner self and the true meaning of life which
she found in nature.
Special mention:
Marseilles, a Greek profile by
Mark Gastin, who chose to live in Greece and
come back to France filming the journey of the
Greeks of Marseilles who in their turn have left
the Dodecanese behind…
Special mention:
Heritance: A Fisherman's Story
by Peter Hegedus, because we appreciated
the Balaz's fight, the fight of an Hungarian
fisherman who asserts the rights of himself and
his community from a multinational company,
responsible for one of the biggest ecological
casualties in Europe. |
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Short length films
1st Award – 4.000€: The Travelling
Talesman
by Thiery Dory (Belgium)
2nd Award – 3.000€: Surplus by
Erik Gandini (Sweden)
Jurie's comments
Best Short Film Awards
The first prize
for the Best short film goes to the film:
The Travelling Talesman by Thierry
Dory. A wonderful film-deeply humanitarian.
It addresses a huge issue facing all of us
wherever we are in the world. Through the eyes
of PieTshibanda, the director Thierry Dory,
skillfully gives a human dimension to the
subject of international migration. Discretely
filmed and edited with concise economy,
The Traveling Talesman takes us through
every emotion. We laughed, we cried, and in the
end we were hugely uplifted. In a world where we
seem to understand each other less and less,
Pie’s spirit and this film left us with a
feeling of immense optimism. A great message to
take away from this festival.
The second prize
for Best Short film goes to Surplus
by Erik Gandini. In many ways, this is an
obvious choice. Surplus is a well made
provocative film, using sophisticated editing,
and clever juxtaposition of images and sound. It
boldly confronts major issues and targets global
consumerism in a wasteful world. It’s a polemic
film, which skillfully contrasts the differences
(and similarities) of two ideologies and their
own internal contradictions. Surplus
is made with wit and passion, and very
powerfully presents its ecological argument.
Special Mention
Human Resources exposes the
expendability of people when a system collapses.
The workforce is no more than a commodity to be
exploited. In this powerful film, we saw people
stripped of their dignity and reduced to the
banality of a game show in order to win a job.
Human Resources gets a
special mention, because it paints this
humiliating picture so well.
Special Mention
Biotope is a stylish modern
animation, which tackles the subject of urban
alienation. Cleverly set underground, during a
nightmare metro-journey, we are confronted with
the selfishness, aggression, and sheer cowardice
of some of the passengers. It is a powerful and
disturbing film, which hits its target square
on. |
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Greek films
By the Greek Film Centre
Best feature length film – 5.000€:
Marseilles, a Greek profile by Mark
Gastin
Mark has set off an "unknown" subject with
tenderness, consistency, and grace, showing at
the same time the most of it.
Best short length film – 4.000€: 64
Squares, 32 Wooden Sticks by Thodoris
Kalesis
Thodoros has proved that, in spite of the
lack of means, talent, sensitivity, and spirit
are enough sometimes to create something
remarkable. |
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Ramsar/MedWet Award
Best film - 4.000€: The Turtle People
by Surabhi Sharma (India)
Jurie's comments
Ladies and gentlemen, many of you will probably
have heard about the Ramsar Convention for the
first time this week, or even for the first time
tonight. This is partly because of this that the
Ramsar Convention decided, some months ago, to
participate in this new adventure for us.
Some 33 years ago now, an international
agreement was signed on the shore of the Caspian
sea, in Ramsar, Iran. Already 33 years ago, some
enlightened people realized that Humanity
wouldn’t be able to live without one basic
element: water. At that time, diplomatic
limitations made the countries think about water
for birds and biodiversity, but at time went by,
the Ramsar Convention for the conservation of
wetlands as important habitats for waterfowl, as
it was called in the beginning, became a
powerful international tool for the conservation
of water not only for birds, but also for
people. This shift has been increasingly
important in the last few years, as the water
issue has become more and more significant on
the international level.
But despite all the efforts, water is still one
of the main issues in the 21st
century. During this week, you will have seen
many films showing and explaining some
water-related issue. These films are the
artistic expression of a more than justified
concern, and this is the other reason why we
wanted to create this special prize for water
and wetlands related films, here, in the
EcoCinema Festival. MedWet, the Mediterranean
Initiative for the implementation of the
Convention in this region was the link between
Ramsar and Ecocinema. Because we believe that
you, artists, creators, film makers, have the
right sensibility to showcase, explain and raise
awareness on the water crisis affecting our
planet. The Ramsar/MedWet award is aimed to
encourage your creativity in order to find the
right message to that everybody will know no
life is possible on Earth without water, but
also that the problems we are facing are not
insolvable and solutions exist and are found
around the world to manage water resources in a
better way, to find the right equilibrium
between human development and the conservation
of the environment, to recreate the forgotten
link between people and nature, in other words,
to spread the basic philosophy of the Ramsar
Convention: the wise use principle.
This year is the first year for this Ramsar/MedWet
award. We were encouraged by the enthusiastic
reaction of film makers and the public in order
to pursue this adventure. This is why I want to
announce here officially, Lucia and Ilias, that
the Ramsar Convention will continue to support
the EcoCinema festival next year.
But the important thing now is to tell you which
film was chosen by the jury as the winner of the
first Ramsar/MedWet award for the best film on
wetlands and water. After some difficult
deliberations, the jury decided unanimously……..
and I can now say this sentence I always wanted
to say: and the winner is…. SURABHI SHARMA,
for the film: THE TURTLE PEOPLE.
The jury selected this film on the grounds that
it is a film
- that address the conservation issue
on an optimistic way
- that focuses on the inextricable
relation between livelihood and nature
- a very well balanced film as regards
music, image and editing
- is fully within the scope of the
Ramsar Convention and addressing one of its
utmost concerns: the coastal and marine
ecosystems.
I just wanted to thank the members of the jury
who had the difficult task of choosing a winner:
Spyros Kouvelis, Coordinator of the MedWet
Initiative, Marc van Fucht, Producer and
Director, and Sebastia Semene Guitart, Special
Assistant for Media, Outreach and Culture at the
Ramsar Secretariat.
I also want to thank the organizers of the
EcoCinema Festival, in the name of the jury, and
in my own name, for achieving such a great and
enjoyable event.
Thank you very much. |
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Map Unep Award
Best film – 5.000€: Summer Lighting by
Nikos Ligouris (Greece)
The Jury highly appreciated:
-The combination of spiritual approach of the
environment and human nature with socio-economic
transformation as well as the psychological
dimension.
-The proper restitution of the Mediterranean
atmosphere
-The capacity of the director to keep the
intensity and the attractivity as well as the
involvement of the public.
2ND PRIZE: Xaravgi by
Giannis Katsamboulas.
The Jury appreciated:
-The intensity and density of the direction
which successfully managed to include many
dimensions, social, environmental realities as
well as sociological and psychological
-The aesthetics, beauty, and metaphysical of the
picture. |
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Audience award
As film club and common viewer we have decide to
award two films with equal merit.
Corporation by Marc Achbar &
Jennifer Abbott (Canada) for its complete
and accurate representation of how multinational
corporations affect global problems today.
Pyla – Living together separately
by Elias Demetriou for its objective and
humorous portrayal of the harmonious coexistence
of Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots in one
village, despite the contradictions that exist.
The film shows that there is hope for a common
future between the two communities.
Special mentions
From the rest of the films, with the
freedom we have as non-members of the awarding
committee, we would like to single out the
following films:
· The Blossom Time of Spring
by Elahe Golmohammadi
· Motherland by
Archie Baron
· Surplus by Eric
Gadini
· Athinas 12:00 by
Maria Giannouli |
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festival has also announced the results of the
first Documentary
Programme – Ecocinema within the
framework of collaboration of the Greek Film
Centre and the Hellenic Broadcast Company
(ERT). The script with the title Sunrise
– Sunset by Agelos Kovotsos
(production company Periplus) was awarded
65.000€. |
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