Jacques Audiard’s Emilia Perez triumphed at this year’s European Film Awards, taking home five prizes including best film at tonight’s (December
Jacques Audiard’s Emilia Perez triumphed at this year’s European Film Awards, taking home five prizes including best film at tonight’s (December 7) ceremony in Lucerne.
The Mexico-set musical drama, about a feared drug lord who undergoes gender-affirming surgery, clinched the best film, director, screenwriter and actress prizes, in addition to its previously announced editing prize.
Receiving the first prize of the evening, for European director, Audiard said he had prepared no fewer than three speeches. “I was being very optimistic,” he joked. Accepting the best director award he quoted British paediatrician and psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott’s renowned phrase: “It is a joy to be hidden, and disaster not to be found,” and thanked the Academy for recognising him. Later in the evening, receiving the screenwriting prize, Audiard dedicated it to French-Danish actor Niels Arestrup, who he directed in The Beat That My Heart Skipped and A Prophet, and who died last week.
Additionally, Emilia Perez’s breakout star Karla Sofía Gascón won the best actress prize. “Thank you to the best European director for making the best European actress – thank you Jacques,” said Gascón.
One of the massive surprises of the evening was newcomer Abou Sangare’s best actor win for his part in Souleymane’s Story in a category that also included hotly tipped names such as Ralph Fiennes for Conclave and Daniel Craig for Queer. Sangare plays a Guinean asylum seeker who tries to work the gig economy on the streets of Paris in the drama which premiered in Cannes’ Certain Regard, winning the jury prize and earning Sangare a best actor award.
Political ceremony
A politically charged awards ceremony began with an introduction by Oscar winning actress Juliette Binoche, the fresh president of the European Film Academy. She said that film is a way to enlighten each other and open up to differences. “The European Film Academy is a great symbol to that dream. Our artistic reunion includes Palestine, Israel, Ukraine, Russia, Turkey, Georgia and many other countries. We are here to share our work with care and respect.”
The documentary prize was won by No Other Land, about the Israeli demolition of villages in Masafer Yatta in the West Bank. It is the latest in a string of wins for Berlinale premiere No Other Land, which in the past weeks has also won documentary prizes at the New York Film Critics Circle and the Gothams.
Two of its co-directors – Israeli journalist Yuval Abraham and Palestinian activist Basel Adra – accepted the reward remotely by video feed. Adra said it was very tough to celebrate the award at a time when “the occupation is committing a genocide against my people,” while Abraham said ethnic cleansing was being carried out against the Palestinian people in Gaza. Addressing European governments, Abraham said: “It’s not enough to demand a ceasefire. A ceasefire needs to be imposed.” As they finished their acceptance speech, a shout of “Free Palestine” rang out in the auditorium.
There was an added political dimension to the documentary prize category, which was presented by Belarusian filmmaker and activist Andrei Gnyot. The European Film Academy campaigned this year to prevent him being extradited back to Belarus. “Due to open letters from European film community I was freed. You cannot imagine my gratitude…you have to understand that you saved my life, that is why I am here now.”
The animation prize was won by director Gints Zilbalodis’s Flow. It is the latest prize for the Latvian film, which is building real awards momentum. Earlier this week it also won best animation at the New York Film Critics Circle. Flow debuted in Cannes’ Un Certain Regard and went on to screen at Annecy, where it won four prizes including the competition jury and audience award.
During the ceremony, Italian actress and filmmaker Isabella Rossellini received the European Achievement In World Cinema award, while German filmmaker Wim Wenders was awarded the European Lifetime Achievement prize, and Macedonian producer Labina Mitovska was honoured with the Eurimages International Co-Production award.
Kôji Yakusho, who starred as a public toilet cleaner in Wenders’ recent hit film Perfect Days, appeared in a video tribute to the director. Branding a toilet brush, he joked that he would tidy Wenders’ toilet to celebrate his victory.
In his acceptance speech, Wenders urged the audience to serve the European film community. “Europe needs you, the film community, to produce to a more positive and emotional image of a continent that is a little bit lost in translation, because too many people think of it as an economic or financial community. But it is an emotional unity. It gives us strength and we should give it strength.”
This year’s ceremony took place at the KKL concert hall Lucerne, Switzerland and was hosted by Swiss voiceover actor Fernando Tiberini. Switzerland is a four-language country and Tiberini billed this year’s EFAs as multilingual awards show. He encouraged winners to speak in own language when accepting awards; their words were interpreted live in English. “Come up on stage and be yourselves,” he said.
Winners in bold
European Film
- Bye Bye Tiberias (Fr-Bel- Pal-Qatar) dir. Lina Soualem
- Dahomey (Fr-Senegal) dir: Mati Diop
- Emilia Pérez (Fr) dir: Jacques Audiard
- Flow (Lat-Fr- Belg) dir: Gints Zilbalodis
- In Limbo (Pol) dir: Alina Maksimenko
- Living Large (Cz-Fr-Slov) dir: Kristina Dufková
- No Other Land (Pal-Nor) dir: Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Basel Adra & Hamdan Ballal
- Savages (Switz-Fr-Bel) dir: Claude Barras
- Soundtrack To A Coup D’etat (Fr- Bel-Neth) dir: Johan Grimonprez
- Sultana’s Dream (Sp- Ger-India) dir: Isabel Herguera
- The Room Next Door (Sp) dir: Pedro Almodóvar
- The Seed Of The Sacred Fig (Ger-Fr) dir: Mohammad Rasoulof
- The Substance (UK-US- Fr) dir: Coralie Fargeat
- They Shot The Piano Player (Sp-Fr-Neth- Port-Peru) dir: Fernando Trueba, Javier Mariscal
- Vermiglio (It-Fr-Bel) dir: Maura Delpero
European Actress
- Renate Reinsve in Armand
- Karla Sofía Gascón in Emilia Pérez
- Trine Dyrholm in The Girl With The Needle
- Vic Carmen Sonne in The Girl With The Needle
- Tilda Swinton in The Room Next Door
European Actor
- Franz Rogowski in Bird
- Ralph Fiennes in Conclave
- Lars Eidinger in Dying
- Daniel Craig in Queer
- Abou Sangare in Souleymane’s Story
European Screenwriter
- Jacques Audiard for Emilia Pérez
- Magnus von Horn & Line Langebek for The Girl With The Needle
- Pedro Almodóvar for The Room Next Door
- Mohammad Rasoulof for The Seed Of The Sacred Fig
- Coralie Fargeat for The Substance
European Documentary
- Bye Bye Tiberias dir: Lina Soualem
- Dahomey dir: Mati Diop
- In Limbo dir: Alina Maksimenko
- No Other Land dir: Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Basel Adra & Hamdan Ballal
- Soundtrack To A Coup D’etat dir: Johan Grimonprez, produced by Daan Milius & Rémi Grellety
European Director
- Andrea Arnold for Bird
- Jacques Audiard for Emilia Pérez
- Pedro Almodóvar for The Room Next Door
- Mohammad Rasoulof for The Seed Of The Sacred Fig
- Maura Delpero for Vermiglio
European Animation
- Flow (Lat-Fr- Belg) dir: Gints Zilbalodis
- Savages (Switz-Fr-Bel) dir: Claude Barras
- Sultana’s Dream (Sp- Ger-India) dir: Isabel Herguera
- They Shot The Piano Player (Sp-Fr-Neth- Port-Peru) dir: Fernando Trueba, Javier Mariscal
- Living Large (Cz-Fr-Slov) dir: Kristina Dufková
European Discovery – Prix FIPRESCI
- Armand (Nor-Neth-Ger-Swe) dir: Halfdan Ullmann Tøndel
- Hoard (UK) dir: Luna Carmoon
- Kneecap (Ire-UK) dir: Rich Peppiatt
- Santosh (UK-Ger) dir: Sandhya Suri
- The New Year That Never Came (Anul Nou Care N-A Fost) (Rom-Ser) dir: Bogdan Mureșanu
- Toxic (Akiplėša) (Lith) dir: Saulė Bliuvaitė
European miniature film
- 2720 (Port-Swit) dir. Basil da Cunha
- Clamor (Fr) dir. Salomé Da Souza
- The Exploding Girl (Fr) dir. Caroline Poggi, Jonathan Vinel
- The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent (Croatia-Fr-Bulg-Slov) Dir. Nebojša Slijepčević
- Wander To Wonder (Neth- Fr-Bel-UK) dir Nina Gantz
European Young Audience Award
- Lars Is Lol (Nor-Den) dir: Eirik Sæter Stordahl
- The Remarkable Life Of Ibelin (Nor) dir: Benjamin Ree
- Winners (Ger) dir: Soleen Yusef
European Film Awards 2024 craft winners (already announced)
- Cinematography – Benjamin Kračun for The Substance
- Visual Effects Bryan – Jones, Pierre Procoudine-Gorsky, Chervin Shafaghi and Guillaume Le Gouez for The Substance
- Production Design – Jagna Dobesz for The Girl With The Needle
- Original Score – Frederikke Hoffmeier for The Girl With The Needle
- Editing – Juliette Welfling for Emilia Pérez
- Costume Design – Tanja Hausner for The Devil’s Bath
- Make-up & Hair – Evalotte Oosterop for When The Light Breaks
- Sound – Marc-Olivier Brullé, Pierre Bariaud, Charlotte Butrak, Samuel Aïchoun & Rodrigo Diaz for Souleymane’s Story.
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