June
16, 2004
For
Immediate Release, Please
TENTH ANNUAL
LOS ANGELES FILM FESTIVAL AWARD WINNERS ANNOUNCED
Ferenc Toth's "Unknown Soldier"
Winner of the Target Filmmaker Award (for Best Narrative Feature)
-- The award carries with it an unrestricted cash prize of $50,000 funded
by Target Stores -
The largest cash prize bestowed by a major U.S. film festival.
Jonathan Caouette's
"Tarnation"
Winner of the Target Documentary Award (for Best Documentary Feature)
-- The award carries with it an unrestricted cash prize of $25,000 funded
by Target Stores --
Joshua Marston's
"Maria Full of Grace"
Winner of the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature
Mike Wranovics'
"Up for Grabs"
Winner of the Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature
Audience Award for
Best International Feature
Winner: "Dear Frankie," directed by Shona Auerbach
Audience Award for
Best Short Film
Winner: "Parents of the Year," by James D. Scurlock
Best Narrative Short
Film
Winner: "Bread and Milk," by Shinyun Won
Best Documentary
Short Film
Winner: "Say You Love Me," by Adam Feinstein
Best Animated Short
Film
Winner: "Hello," by Jonathan Dix
Short Film Special
Mention for Excellent Filmmaking
Winner: "Fragile," by Sikander Goldau
Short Film Special
Mention for Inventiveness and Visual Style
Winner: "Dad's Dead," by Chris Shepherd
* * * *
LOS ANGELES (June
26, 2004) - Dawn Hudson, Executive Director of IFP/Los Angeles, announced
today the winners for the Tenth Annual Los Angeles Film Festival including
the winner of the Target Filmmaker Award (for Best Narrative Feature),
which went to Ferenc Toth for "Unknown Soldier." The winner
of the Target Documentary Award (for Best Documentary Feature) went
to Jonathan Caouette for "Tarnation."
The Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature went to HBO Films' "Maria
Full of Grace," which is being released by Fine Line Features later
this summer. Mike Wranovics' "Up for Grabs" won the Audience
Award for Best Documentary Feature.
Jeanette Brox of
"Wilderness Survival for Girls," won for Outstanding Performance
in the Narrative Competition. Given to an actor from an official selection
in the Narrative Competition, this is the first year the award has been
given out at the festival.
A total of 195 films including 83 features representing 31 countries
screened at the festival. This year the festival received more than
2,800 submissions from filmmakers around the world with the final selections
representing several premieres.
The festival kicked-off
on Thursday, June 17 with the Opening Night Gala selection, Fox Searchlight's
"Garden State," written/directed by Zach Braff. Richard Linklater's
"Before Sunset," had its Los Angeles Premiere as the Centerpiece
Premiere at the festival. The Closing Night Gala selection was Fox Searchlight's
"The Clearing," directed by Pieter Jan Brugge from a screenplay
by Justin Haythe. Premier Sponsors In Style, Target Stores, and LA Weekly
sponsored the Opening Night Gala, Closing Night Gala, and Centerpiece
Premiere respectively.
Ferenc Toth's "Unknown Soldier" follows Ellison, an ordinary
18-year-old fighting for his life in a war no one notices. Alone on
the streets of Harlem, his options dwindle, but he refuses to give up
on himself.
"Ferenc Toth's portrait of an upstanding young man in a tough New
York City neighborhood who suddenly finds himself without a roof to
sleep under is rendered with a remarkably subtlety that stands in stark
contrast to the protagonist's harrowing slide into homelessness,"
said the jury of the Target Filmmaker Award winner, "Unknown Soldier."
The jury consisted of Sandra Hebron (Artistic Director of the London
Film Festival), Dave Karger (senior writer for Entertainment Weekly
and a regular conributor to the "Today Show" on NBC), and
Denver Post film critic Lisa Kennedy.
The Narrative Feature jury also awarded the inaugural Outstanding Performance
in the Narrative Competition to Jeanette Brox of "Wilderness Survival
for Girl." "As the seemingly naïve Ruthie in 'Wildnerness
Survival for Girls,' Jeanette Brox brings a mix of passivity and power
to a credible teenage character who evolves in one eventful evening
from doormat to decisive leader."
In "Tarnation," Jonathan Caouette uses an extraordinary blend
of docudrama, autobiography, and psychedelia assembled with Apple's
iMovie program to create a complex, viscerally powerful portrayal of
his troubled family legacy of insanity, drugs, and abuse.
"The jury was impressed by Jonathan Caouette's audacious demonstration
of craft. 'Tarnation' is a film that achieves the nearly impossible;
it's raw and personal, aesthetically distinct, and operatic in scale.
We welcome this exciting new voice in documentary filmmaking,"
said the jury of the Target Documentary Award winner. The jury was comprised
of Arthur Dong (Academy Award-nominated producer of independent social-issue
documentaries), Susan Gerhard (Senior Editor of the San Francisco Bay
Guardian), and Lisa Leeman (Emmy-nominated filmmaker and Past President
of the International Documentary Association).
The Short Competition
Jury consisted of producer Alison Dickey ("Piggie," "Skipped
Parts," "How to Make the Cruelest Month"), Screen International's
U.S. Editor Mike Goodridge, and Catherine Park (COO of Giant Robot,
a magazine documenting and promoting Asian and Asian-American pop culture).
Honorary Co-Chairs
for the festival were Halle Berry, who served as Co-Chair for the Closing
Night festivities, and Samuel L Jackson, who hosted the Awards Presentation
and Filmmaker Reception.
Over the past ten
years, the Los Angeles Film Festival has evolved into a world-class
event, uniting emerging filmmakers with film critics, scholars, masters
and the
film-going public. IFP/Los Angeles took over the festival in 2001 and
expanded the festival to include international films and a variety of
special events and screenings throughout Los Angeles. Richard Raddon
serves as the Festival Director. Rachel Rosen is the Director of Programming.
The festival has grown to more than 40,000 attendees, unveiling such
films as
"The Cooler," "Mayor of the Sunset Strip," "Kissing
Jessica Stein," "George Washington," "The Cruise,"
and "Dead Man," and hosting talents such as Jennifer
Aniston, Alec Baldwin, Alfonso Cuarón, Benicio Del Toro, Jodie
Foster, Heather Graham, Jake Gyllenhaal, Daryl Hannah, Holly Hunter,
Catherine Keener, William H. Macy, Ewan McGregor, Sidney Poitier, John
C. Reilly, Mark Ruffalo, Bryan Singer, and Forest Whitaker. Last year
a total of 206 films including 72 features representing 32 countries
screened at the festival.
IFP/Los Angeles, a nonprofit membership organization, champions the
cause of independent film and supports a community of artists who embody
diversity, innovation, and uniqueness of vision. IFP/LA provides its
members with professional advice, educational programs, affordable camera
and equipment rentals, and discounts to hundreds of industry-related
businesses. IFP/LA's Filmmaker Labs offer writers, directors, and producers
the opportunity to develop their projects. IFP/LA's mentorship and job
placement program Project:Involve, pairs filmmakers from culturally
diverse communities with film industry professionals. IFP/Los Angeles
also produces the IFP Independent Spirit Awards and the Los Angeles
Film Festival, celebrating the best of American and international independent
cinema. With more than 6,000 members, IFP/Los Angeles is Southern California's
largest non-profit organization for independent filmmakers.
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