The film Emma's Bliss by German director Sven Toddicken won the US$30,000 Grand Prize at the 2007 Taipei Film Festival last Friday.
A representative from the German Cultural Center received the award on behalf of Toddicken as the director could not attend the award-presenting ceremony.
"I was working on my film scripts when I was told I had won the prize. Though I cannot go to Taipei, I will celebrate it with some friends in a Berlin bar. I hope the Taiwan audience like my film," Toddicken told the film festival's organizer by phone.
PHOTO: AP
Emma's Bliss is about the loneliness of a pig farmer, Emma, in Mexico. The jury lauded the film for portraying Emma's character and bringing the audience into Emma's inner world.
Pure Hearts by Denmark's director Kenneth Kainz and Don't Look Back by South Korean director Kim Young-nam won the Audience's Choice Prize and Jury' Prize.
The 9th Taipei Film Festival opened on June 22. Nearly 200 films from around the world were screened during the festival and a dozen were nominated for the New Talent Award section, which was open to foreign films.
Far from opening old wounds, Nanking (南京), a film documenting accounts of war-time atrocities by Japanese troops in China, should help the frosty Asian neighbors overcome historical differences, the filmmakers say.
"Predominantly, this is an anti-war movie, not an anti-Japanese movie," the movie's producer and AOL vice-chairman Ted Leonsis said in an interview on Wednesday, a day after the film's Beijing premiere.
"My ultimate goal was to make a film that activated a lot of discussion ... that these activities happened 70 years ago - that two great countries and two great people - they should acknowledge what happened and they should move on together in friendship," Leonsis said at a press conference.
US-made Nanking is one of a clutch of movies about the Nanjing Massacre to be released this year in the lead-up to the 70th anniversary of the fall of China's war-time capital to invading Japanese troops on Dec. 13, 1937.
Described as a Schindler's List-style movie about Westerners setting up a safe zone for refugees in the war-torn city, the film weaves grainy images of stacked bodies of infants with tearful accounts of rape and torture committed by Japanese soldiers from Chinese witnesses.
Hollywood actors, including Woody Harrelson and Mariel Hemingway, do staged readings of diary entries kept by the Westerners in the safe zone, and retired Japanese troops confess to participating in mass killings.
China says Japanese troops slaughtered 300,000 civilians in Nanjing. An Allied tribunal after World War II put the death toll at about 142,000. Some Japanese historians say the numbers are exaggerated, estimating as few as 20,000 soldiers and civilians were killed.
Other testy neighborly relations have put paid to Oliver Stone's planned documentary on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
The Middle Eastern leader has rejected a proposal by American the Oscar winning movie director to make a film about him because Stone is part the "Great Satan'' cultural establishment, a semiofficial news agency reported.
"I sent a negative answer by Ahmadinejad to Oliver Stone,'' the Fars agency quoted Mehdi Kalhor, media adviser to the president, as saying Sunday. "It is right that this person is considered part of the opposition in the US, but opposition in the US is a part of the Great Satan.'' The term the "Great Satan'' dates back to Iran's late supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who first called the US the Great Satan after 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Iran and the US have not had diplomatic relations since Washington cut its ties with Tehran after Iranian militant students stormed the US embassy in Tehran in 1979.
Stone was not the only major Hollywood director to be rejected this week.
Tom Cruise, still smarting from a rejection by the German Defence Ministry, has now had his film crew barred from an ornate red-brick Berlin police station, capital-city police confirmed Monday.
While German politicians have said that Cruise, 44, is unwelcome because of his promotion of Scientology beliefs, the police said it was purely concerned that a film crew on the pre-war site would hamper police coming and going.
Cruise's German film team applied to film on location at the police station and yard for Precinct 52 in the city's Kreuzberg neighborhood, but police said this would obstruct the various departments working on the site.
Cruise is directing a movie, Valkyrie, about a true plot to blow up Adolf Hitler in 1944. The time-bomb exploded but a table deflected the blast and Hitler was only injured.
Cruise will play Count Claus Schenk von Stauffenberg, an aristocratic German officer who led the plot, was instantly executed and hailed later as a hero.
May 6 to May 12 Those who follow the Chinese-language news may have noticed the usage of the term zhuge (豬哥, literally ‘pig brother,’ a male pig raised for breeding purposes) in reports concerning the ongoing #Metoo scandal in the entertainment industry. The term’s modern connotations can range from womanizer or lecher to sexual predator, but it once referred to an important rural trade. Until the 1970s, it was a common sight to see a breeder herding a single “zhuge” down a rustic path with a bamboo whip, often traveling large distances over rugged terrain to service local families. Not only
By far the most jarring of the new appointments for the incoming administration is that of Tseng Wen-tsan (鄭文燦) to head the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF). That is a huge demotion for one of the most powerful figures in the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). Tseng has one of the most impressive resumes in the party. He was very active during the Wild Lily Movement and his generation is now the one taking power. He has served in many of the requisite government, party and elected positions to build out a solid political profile. Elected as mayor of Taoyuan as part of the
Moritz Mieg, 22, lay face down in the rubble, the ground shaking violently beneath him. Boulders crashed down around him, some stones hitting his back. “I just hoped that it would be one big hit and over, because I did not want to be hit nearly to death and then have to slowly die,” the student from Germany tells Taipei Times. MORNING WALK Early on April 3, Mieg set out on a scenic hike through Taroko Gorge in Hualien County (花蓮). It was a fine day for it. Little did he know that the complex intersection of tectonic plates Taiwan sits
The last time Mrs Hsieh came to Cihu Park in Taoyuan was almost 50 years ago, on a school trip to the grave of Taiwan’s recently deceased dictator. Busloads of children were brought in to pay their respects to Chiang Kai-shek (蔣中正), known as Generalissimo, who had died at 87, after decades ruling Taiwan under brutal martial law. “There were a lot of buses, and there was a long queue,” Hsieh recalled. “It was a school rule. We had to bow, and then we went home.” Chiang’s body is still there, under guard in a mausoleum at the end of a path