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"Victim" Rules Rome Film Fest

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  • "Victim" Rules Rome Film Fest

    'VICTIM' RULES ROME FILM FEST
    By Nick Vivarelli

    Daily Variety
    October 23, 2006 Monday

    Film buffs bestow nods at frosh fest

    ROME - "Playing the Victim," a black comedy by Russian
    helmer-playwright Kirill Serebrennikov, took the top prize at the
    first RomeFilmFest, which ended Saturday with organizers pleased,
    though event's debut was far from flawless.

    Comic "Hamlet" adaptation, in which a young man learns the truth
    about his dead father while working for the police as a crime victim
    impersonator, scooped fest's rich E200,000 ($252,000) pic nod, voted
    by a jury of regular Roman film buffs.

    "Victim" won Moscow's Sochi fest in June and has been a minor hit
    in Russia.

    The Special Jury Award went to "This Is England," the racially charged
    skinhead dramedy by Blighty's Shane Meadows that preemed in Toronto.

    Headed by Italo helmer Ettore Scola, the 50-member jury included a
    traffic cop, a housewife and a shrink.

    French thesp Ariane Ascaride scooped the actress nod for her role
    as a gun-toting cardiologist in Robert Guediguian's "The Journey
    to Armenia."

    Male thesp prize went to Italy's Giorgio Colangeli, who plays a
    convicted murderer in Italo first-timer Alessandro Angelini's incisive
    prison drama "Salty Air," a festival fave.

    Nine-day event drew a copious crowd, with 102,000 tickets issued:
    56,000 of those were sold to the public, while 46,000 went to fest
    sponsors or the 5,500 accredited fest attendees.

    "It's our first year, (and) I think we can be pretty happy, though
    there certainly are some kinks to smooth out," said fest prexy
    Goffredo Bettini.

    Among areas Bettini admitted fest needs to work on are overall subpar
    seat occupancy, as well as overflowing press screenings and snail-paced
    press conferences due to clunky interpreting.

    But Robert De Niro provided the event with a grand finale when he
    attended a public interview and screened footage of his CIA thriller
    "The Good Shepherd" Saturday.

    Dazzling, if a bit outre, 10-minute trailer of De Niro's depiction
    of the CIA's origins included a scene in which protag Matt Damon is
    urinated upon as he squirms in mud as part of an initiation rite into
    what appears to be Yale U.'s Skull & Bones secret society, from which
    early CIA agents allegedly were recruited.

    "It's kind of ambitious," De Niro told the more than 1,500 fans packed
    into Rome's Parco Della Musica Auditorium.

    Budgeted at a reported $110 million, "The Good Shepherd" goes out
    Stateside via Universal Dec. 22. Medusa is releasing in Italy.

    De Niro earlier in the day was handed an Italian passport by Rome
    Mayor Walter Veltroni. While the honorary Italo citizenship had long
    been in the works, process hit a snag in 2004, after a U.S.-based
    Italian-American advocacy group complained that the thesp's mobster
    roles gave the country a bad name.

    De Niro's visit to the Eternal City also cemented the partnership
    between the RomeFilmFest and the Tribeca fest he co-founded.

    He was just one of the many stars who helped the fest secure a spot
    on the international map --- along with Sean Connery, Nicole Kidman,
    Leonardo DiCaprio, Richard Gere, Monica Bellucci and Harrison Ford.

    With its mix of crowd-pleasing pics like "The Departed" and more
    eclectic fare, the RomeFilmFest now constitutes concrete competition
    to the venerable Venice fest a month earlier.

    Responding to calls for a Rome date change from some Italo
    industryites, Bettini said fest will be holding talks with top local
    industry reps to "examine the dates situation." But it's clear Rome
    will fight tooth and nail not to relinquish its October slot, which
    is ideal for its Business Street market, as it comes on the heels
    of Mipcom.

    Mostly geared to European product, mart was attended by some 300
    international buyers and sellers. Consensus was it could shape up
    into a significant biz booster for them.

    Veteran Italo sales agent Adriana Chiesa sold Giuseppe Tornatore's
    noirish "The Unknown" to seven territories right after its Rome
    world preem. Having screened in Rome, the Tornatore pic will not be
    unspooling at AFM, she said.

    "We now have a world-class film event," enthused Rome's film buff
    Mayor Veltroni, who has already secured Sofia Loren to be feted at
    next year's edition.

    RomeFilmFest first edition winners: COMPETITION Film "Playing the
    Victim," Kirill Serebrennikov, Russia Actress Ariane Ascaride,
    "Voyage to Armenia," France Actor Giorgio Colangeli, "Salty Air,"
    Italy Special Jury Award: "This Is England," Shane Meadows, U.K.

    ALICE IN THE CITY (CHILDREN'S SIDEBAR) K-12 Section "Liscio," Claudio
    Antonini, Italy Young Audiences Section "Just Like the Son," Morgan
    J. Freeman, U.S.

    NON OFFICIAL PRIZES Blockbuster Premiere Award "The Unknown," Giuseppe
    Tornatore, Italy Cult Network Award for Documentary "Deep Water,"
    Louise Osmond and Jerry Rothwell, U.K.

    L.A.R.A award for Italian Performer Ninetto Davoli, "Uno su Due," Italy
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