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Russia's 'Playing The Victim' Voted Rome's First Best Film

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  • Russia's 'Playing The Victim' Voted Rome's First Best Film

    RUSSIA'S 'PLAYING THE VICTIM' VOTED ROME'S FIRST BEST FILM
    by Gina Doggett

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 21, 2006 Saturday 3:53 PM GMT

    RomeFilmFest, a cinema extravaganza that featured a string of
    high-wattage world premieres, wrapped up its first edition Saturday
    with awards for Russian, British, Italian and Franco-Armenian entries.

    "Playing the Victim," a dark comedy based on Shakespeare's "Hamlet"
    by Russian director Kiril Serebrennikov, was named Best Film.

    France's Ariane Ascaride was named best actress for her role in
    French-Armenian director Robert Guediguian's "Armenia," and Italy's
    Giorgio Colangeli was judged best actor in the film "L'Aria Salata"
    by Alessandro Angelini.

    A previously unannounced Special Jury Award went to "This Is England"
    by Shane Meadows, a powerful film focusing on Thatcher-era skinheads
    through the eyes of an impressionable boy.

    The popular jury of 50 moviegoers created the award on the spot because
    it was torn between the Russian and British entries, Georgio Gosetti,
    general director of RomeFilmFest, told AFP.

    "It's amusing that you have to change the rules of the game," he
    said. "In the end a large part of the jury fights for one title
    and the other fights for a second one. (Jury director Ettore Scola)
    tried to respect democracy. They had a very, very long discussion
    and part of the jury agreed only with the assurance of recognition
    of Shane Meadow's film."

    On accepting the award Meadows said: "I thank the jury because the
    subject matter of the film is not something easy to vote for. It's
    about racial hatred... I applaud them for being brave and voting
    for it."

    In "Playing the Victim", Yuri Chursin, as Valya, has the odd job of
    playing the victim in police reconstructions at crime scenes.

    Just as the morbidity and absurdity of it all starts to get to him,
    he has a vision in which his late father reveals to him that he was
    poisoned by his own wife and her lover.

    Colangeli, who played the father in "L'Aria Salata", about a prison
    social worker who comes across his estranged father behind bars,
    said his award for best actor was meant for the entire crew. "This
    award is shared with the director and all the cast. It's a good sign
    for new talent."

    Ascaride, for her part, said in halting Italian: "You can't imagine
    how happy I feel ... to have an award in Rome, in Italy, because my
    father's parents are Italian. It feels like coming home."

    "Armenia" relates the story of a voyage of initiation for Anna, a
    young woman from Marseille, France, who travels to the Caucasus in
    search of her ailing, elderly father who wanted to see his native
    Armenia before he died.

    "It's a role and a personality that I invented personally, since I
    wrote the script with (French writer) Marie Desplechin," Ascaride
    told AFP. "I had a very strong desire to talk about this country,
    Armenia, and I also wanted to confront this issue or roots ... that
    you haven't yet gone to look for."

    Rome's first film festival, a nine-day, 10-million-euro
    (12.5-million-dollar) event created by Mayor Walter Veltroni, had 16
    films in competition, several world premieres and dozens more films
    shown out of competition.

    "It is a great, great, great success to achieve in the first edition a
    real professional level and such a strong reaction from the audience,"
    Gosetti said. "It's a great success because of the general quality
    of the movies, according to the press in any case, especially the
    foreign press."

    Some 56,000 tickets were sold to the public and nearly as many were
    given out to journalists and other guests. The media corps consisted
    of about 1,700 reporters, including nearly 600 from the foreign press,
    and 200 photographers and camera crew. The total audience was estimated
    at 150,000, attending 650 screenings.

    Star power helped attract the crowds, with world premieres of Steven
    Shainberg's "Fur" starring Nicole Kidman, "The Departed" with Leonardo
    Di Caprio and Jack Nicholson, "The Namesake" by Indian director Mira
    Nair, "The Hoax" with Richard Gere and "Napoleon and Me" starring
    Monica Bellucci.

    Added glitter came with Scottish actor Sean Connery, who was honored
    with the inaugural Acting Award and US star Harrison Ford, who bestowed
    the PMQ award for actor's agent on Jim Berkus.

    Saturday US director and actor Robert de Niro was to present part of
    his film "The Good Shepherd" starring Matt Damon and Angelina Jolie,
    to underscore a partnership between the Tribeca Film Festival, of
    which he is a cofounder, and the RomeFilmFest.

    Veltroni, speaking after the award ceremony, again defended his
    brainchild against critics who say it competes with the venerable
    Mostra in Venice.

    "Italy will have two great moments of cinema, Venice and Rome,"
    he said. "There will always be so many films."

    For his part, Gosetti said: "I was born in Venice. If I thought that
    this kind of event could be dangerous for Venice, I don't think I
    could accept to be part of it."

    He added: "Our goal is to try to define and then impose a different way
    to promote films, and to celebrate directors, actors and actresses."
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