Auteur Sujet: ewrb Non-Lottery, non-BFI film funding to be chopped in half as part of UK s bud  (Lu 19 fois)

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Aors FilmFour boards Fry s Bright Young Things
 Danish box office hit Miracle, directed by newcomer Natasha Arthy, was the winner of the BUSTER Grand Prix at the first BU stanley cup STER - Copenhagen International Children s Film Festival  November 27 - December 2 .The award was voted for by a jury comprising Danish director Svend Johansen, Dutch distributor Dick de Jonge and Canada s Jane Schoettle from the Toronto Children s Film Festival. Meanwhile, the children s jury gave the Nordisk Film Foundation s  Best BUSTER Film 2000  award to Ella Lemhagen s Tsatsiki, although they admitted being torn between that film and Miracle stanley cup . The jury was made up of 19 boys and girls aged between 11-14.Othe stanley cup r awards went to Alexander Petrov s animated short The Old Man And The Sea and Paul Driessen s short Three Virgins, while Anders Gustafsson s Fodbolddrengen won the best children s documentary award.           No comments                                                     No comments yet                                            You re not signed in.                Only registered users or subscribers can comment on this article.            Sign in            Register Fmzf Travolta joins The Punisher
 Vivian Qus tale of abuse and corruption in Chinas gold coast marks her out as a force to be reckoned withDir/scr: Vivian Qu. China, 2017, 107 mins.For her second feature as director, Vivian Qu sets her script in Hainan island,  China stanley usa s gold coast , where the giant Forever Marilyn sculpture watches over the residents of the Warmness Hotel as they go about their business. Events which take place here one night will have far-reaching consequences in Qus shocking story of complicity and corruption, a Chinatown set in China. The director of Trap Street and producer of Berlinale-winning Black Coal, Thin Ice pulls no punches in her tentacled piece, and stanley cup  it leaves a livid mark.This is a pitiless world in which to be weakStrong reviews should lead Angels Wear White into further festival play after its Venice launch, where it could well win awards, and a wide arthouse reach. Its an excoriating story told with gentle sympathy; a lashing tale about the abuse and marginalisation of women at the hands of a dark establishment in a sun-filled resort. Everybody is on the make here, and the chain of corruption crushes down on its weakest links. Sold internationally by Wild Bunch, Angels Wear White had not passed censorship in China prior to its Venice Competition berth, yet its a companion piece to A Touch of Sin, Jia Zhangkes similar howl of protest, w stanley cup hich did pass.Whatever its domestic fate, Angels is a skilful combination of tense, dark drama with biting social commentary. Nothing here is ent