Not exact matches
Accepting the
World Cinema
documentary directing
prize, «Winnie» helmer Pascale Lamche pointedly said her film was «for those who know that history is not made by great men» — a sentiment echoed by one of the U.S. doc winners, «Step» director Amanda Lipitz, when she said, «These girls show that nothing is impossible when you surround yourself with a group of powerful women.»
Winner of the 2015 Grand Jury
Documentary prize at Sundance this past January, this film — produced and edited by women, and with a mostly - female crew — tells the story of the six young Angulo brothers, who were raised in New York City with little to no contact with the outside
world.
The fantastic political
documentary «Weiner» took the prestigious U.S. Documentary prize and «Sonita» earned the World Cinema Documen
documentary «Weiner» took the prestigious U.S.
Documentary prize and «Sonita» earned the World Cinema Documen
Documentary prize and «Sonita» earned the
World Cinema
DocumentaryDocumentary honor.
Aside from trying to get the public WiFi to work, my second biggest hobby at Sundance this year was babbling to fellow fest - goers about «Shirkers,» a
World Cinema
Documentary entry that rightfully won a special Directing
prize this past Saturday.
The four top jury
prizes at Sundance 2010 were awarded Saturday night to Debra Granik's «Winter's Bone» for best U. S. drama, Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington's «Restrepo» for U. S.
documentary, David Michôd's «Animal Kingdom» for
world drama, and Mads Brügger's «The Red Chapel» for
world documentary.
Notably, the top films in both the narrative and
documentary categories differ from the ones that took home the grand jury
prizes, which singled out «I don't feel at home in this
world anymore» and «Dina» in the American categories.
Of the
documentaries (in recent years, Searching for Sugar Man and Twenty Feet From Stardom began their journeys at the festival before going on to Oscar glory), the frontrunner out of the new batch is Weiner, winner of the US
documentary grand jury
prize, which tracks Anthony Weiner's disastrous mayoral bid in 2014, followed closely by Life, Animated, an incredibly moving film that explores how films helped an autistic person communicate with the outside
world.
«The Square,» Ruben Östlund's outrageous satire centered on the
world of modern art, was named Best Foreign Film; Pixar's «Coco» won the
prize for Animated Feature; and «Jane,» Brett Morgen's film focusing on the life and work of primatology scientist Jane Goodall, won the Best
Documentary award.
Tomorrow is too late,» said Fedor Alexandrovich, the subject of The Russian Woodpecker, winner of the
World Cinema
Documentary grand jury
prize.
Editor Jim Scott picked up best editing honours in the
World Cinema
Documentary category for his work on the Greenpeace doc How to Change the
World, and The Witch, a Canada - US co-production about a family dealing with an eerie force in 1630s New England won U.S - based Robert Eggers the
prize for best direction in the domestic dramatic category.
The film won the «best
documentary»
prize in 2012 at the San Antonio Independent Film Festival, a Christian - oriented movie showcase, and is sold on the Web site of Alex Jones, a conspiracy theorist who, the report says, views public schools as» «part of a wicked plan» by «sick deviants» to enslave humanity under a satanic New
World Order» that worships Lucifer.
Indeed it received third
prize in the Discovery Channel's 2005
documentary «
World's Best Beaches».
At 83, having had an extraordinary life in which he became an innovative fashion photographer at US Vogue, a
documentary film - maker, a fine artist working in mixed - media and having had solo exhibitions and won
prizes all over the
world, William Klein lives in Paris with his wife and collaborator Janine, whom he met and married after being discharged from the US army there in 1948.
This is the third in a
prize - winning series of short
documentaries on sustainable use of the
world's living resources created by Pace University students in a course I co-teach with Prof. Maria Luskay.
«The cow is the worst environmental problem in the Amazon, and in the
world,» says Greenpeace's Paulo Adario, speaking out in a new
documentary which this April won the One Hour
prize at the Film Research and Sustainable Development Festival -LRB-(FReDD) earlier this month.