Romanian director receives top prize at Berlin Film Fest

Romanian director receives top prize at Berlin Film Fest

BERLIN - Agence France-Presse
Romanian director receives top prize at Berlin Film Fest

Romanian director Calin Peter Netzer and producer Ada Solomon pose backstage with the Golden Bear award for the Best Film for "Pozitia Copilului" (Child's Pose) during the awards ceremony of the 63rd Berlinale Film Festival in Berlin on February 16, 2013. AFP PHOTO / THOMAS PETER

The 63rd Berlin film festival wrapped up Feb. 16, after awarding its Golden Bear top prize to “Child’s Pose,” a mother-son psychodrama set among post-communist Romania’s new ruling class.

Director Calin Peter Netzer, a member of Romania’s renowned new wave in cinema, tells the story of a wealthy and controlling mother who fights to get her son acquitted after he kills a poor teenager with his car.

“I want to thank the jury for this amazing prize, this wonderful prize,” Netzer told the panel led by Chinese director Wong Kar Wai, adding later at a press conference he was “shell-shocked” by the honor.

Turkish director Köken Ergun received an award in the German Foreign Academics Exchange Program Short-Length Film Category for his film “Aşure” (Noahs Pudding). The documentary film depicts preparations made for the feast day of Aşure.

The Berlinale, the first major European film festival of the year and typically its most politically minded, handed two prizes to the Bosnian docu-drama “An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker.”

Nazif Mujic, the real-life protagonist of the picture about a Roma couple denied life-saving medical treatment, was the surprise winner of the Silver Bear best actor prize.

The ultra-low-budget film also took the runner-up jury prize. Its director Danis Tanovic, who won an Oscar for his 2001 wartime black comedy “No Man’s Land,” said his anger after reading news reports about the couple led him to seek them out.

“I’m so happy for Nazif and his family because the whole point of this film was to try and change their lives and I hope it changes their lives,” he told reporters.

Silver Bear 

David Gordon Green picked up the Silver Bear best director award for his quirky U.S. buddy picture “Prince Avalanche,” a remake of the 2011 Icelandic film “Either Way.” The movie, the only comedy among the 19 contenders at the festival, stars Paul Rudd and Emile Hirsch as highway maintenance workers in Texas at crossroads in their lives.

Best Actress went to Chile’s Paulina Garcia for “Gloria,” a feel-good movie about a middle-aged divorcee who refuses to give up on a shot at happiness.

Best Screenplay went to “Closed Curtain” by Iranian dissident director Jafar Panahi and his longtime collaborator Kambuzia Partovi, a film made in secret in defiance of a ban by the authorities in Tehran.
“It is impossible to stop a thinker and a poet. Their thoughts bear fruit everywhere,” Partovi said, accepting the award because Panahi had not been granted permission to travel.

A debut feature from Kazakhstan, “Harmony Lessons”grabbed a Silver Bear for extraordinary artistic achievement for its cinematographer Aziz Zhambakiyev. A Canadian thriller about a lesbian couple trying to put their prison past behind them, Denis Cote’s “Vic and Flo Saw a Bear”, clinched a prize for “a work of particular innovation.”

‘Child’s Pose’ 

Winner “Child’s Pose” figured in a particularly strong year for films exposing new fissures and rampant corruption in the former communist bloc.

Lead actress Luminita Gheorghiu, best known for her the 2005 dark comedy “The Death of Mr. Lazarescu,” dazzled movie-goers as a manipulative mother who sees the fatal accident as a chance to reconnect with her estranged son. Netzer said the story of generational conflict was “universal.”

“This is about a relationship, a kind of pathological relationship between mother and son,” he said. “This is a kind of Oedipus complex. Clearly we are referring to Freud.” 

Producer Ada Solomon said the Golden Bear would give the film a much-needed boost. “I think Romanian politicians should pay much more attention to the ambassador that our cinema is around the world,” she said. “I want to thank those people who didn’t help us and didn’t support us and that made us more determined.”