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  • Thessaloniki: International film jury looks at young directors

    International film jury looks at young directors

    Kathimerini, Greece
    Nov 25 2004

    Thessaloniki cinema festival gears up for last days of events and
    parties


    The 45th Thessaloniki International Film Festival runs to Sunday.
    By Christine Sturmey - Kathimerini English Edition

    THESSALONIKI - It is all starting to come together here as the
    Thessaloniki International Film Festival enters its second half and
    the bitter cold of the weekend gives way to the welcoming November
    sun.

    After a rather sluggish start, the beautifully renovated port complex
    that houses the festival's headquarters and where most of the films
    are screened is starting to buzz with cinema lovers and artists — now
    arriving in droves to attend the awards ceremonies — as well as
    special events and parties being organized for the last four days of
    the festival.

    Of the 186 films that have been shown in total at the Thessaloniki
    International Film Festival this year, there are 12 that cinema buffs
    are keeping a close eye on to see who will walk away with the
    festival's top prizes: The Golden Alexander, with a 37,000-euro
    purse, and the Silver Alexander, worth 22,000 euros — a substantial
    boost for directors in the International Competition, all of whom are
    presenting their first or second feature film.

    The decisions rest in the hands of a strong international jury, this
    year presided over by a formidable director, the groundbreaking
    Hungarian auteur Miklos Jancso, who tackled Monday's press conference
    with humor, reluctant to give out too many tips as to how he sees the
    competition.

    On the matter at hand, Jancso said, "We have the power to judge young
    directors, but we cannot. My young colleagues are very talented. I
    see all these films and scenarios and find that the young directors
    are really fantastic."

    Other members of the panel include the celebrated Italian painter
    Valerio Adami; internationally acclaimed Canadian-Armenian actress
    Arsinee Khanjian, who is best known for numerous collaborations with
    her husband; director Atom Egoyan; the esteemed Greek film critic
    Yiannis Bakoyiannopoulos; American film director Alexander Payne (his
    first feature film "Citizen Ruth" won Best Screenplay at the 37th
    Thessaloniki International Film Festival); producer Donald K.
    Ramvaud, whose credits include "Farewell My Concubine" and "City of
    God," and lastly, film critic, alternate director of the cinema club
    of New York's Lincoln Center and editor-at-large at Film Comment,
    Kent Jones.

    One of the main issues at the panel's press conference was that of a
    European cinema identity. Jones argues: "It would be very difficult
    to talk about European cinema as a whole, because there are many
    different trends. But in opposition to American cinema, which has
    flooded the world, I am always thankful that there are films being
    made in a different way without an emphasis on the technology, the
    financial machine you see in the United States."

    Expanding on the subject of the global domination of American films,
    Payne, an American himself, provided a different point of view. "You
    have to remember one thing: In America, we don't really have films
    about Americans, American films. We also suffer from not having films
    truly about people. I think that one thing that is kept alive in
    European cinema is that which is about human beings."

    Septuagenarian painter Adami explained the hold cinema exercises over
    people, especially the early generations of cinema-goers, and also
    addressed the issue of a European cinema identity. "My generation was
    bred on the cinema. It was a generation that grew up during the war.
    It was a generation that learned everything from cinema. In my time,
    the cinema was dubious. If we brought a young lady to the cinema, she
    was compromised. Cinema was new, without memory, and at the time, we
    were looking for stories without memories. European cinema remains
    one that relies on the story of images, on allegory and metaphor."

    Khanjian, the only woman serving on the jury, commented on the
    "indisputable femininity of cinema," going on to discuss how films
    made by women are often referred to as "feminine cinema."

    "We make this distinction. It is a very generous effort to put it
    that way, but still, the fact that we do talk about it that way, as
    if it is altogether another activity, remains very strange to me."

    The issue of American studio domination over international film
    production and distribution, effectively a form of cultural hegemony,
    however, is where events such as the Thessaloniki International Film
    Festival step in. Their role is an educational one, as they bring
    films that rarely see domestic distribution to audiences and organize
    events and activities to help the public understand art cinema
    better. On the other hand, the festival acts as a mediator, boosting
    art-house filmmakers so that they may one day insinuate themselves,
    and their ideas and style, onto the international arena of cinema.

    "If you look at the catalogs of the festival's history, the films
    that went through the competition stage, new films, by young people,
    you will notice that many of the directors are today established
    internationally and the awards they got here represented their first
    steps along that course," said Greek critic Bakoyiannopoulos.

    On an optimistic note for Greek cinema, producer Ramvaud said that
    the Thessaloniki International Film Festival and the Greek Film
    center are helping Greek films to develop an international
    reputation.

    --Boundary_(ID_7/JyVFBV8zUXlU0cjUDovA)--
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