A Childhood

  • ‘A Childhood’ ‘Volta à Terra’ ‘Underground Fragrance’ Win Gold Hugos at 51st Chicago International Film Festival

    A Childhood directed by Philippe Claudel The French film A Childhood directed by Philippe Claudel won the Gold Hugo for Best Film at the 51st Chicago International Film Festival. In this tender, keenly observed look at growing up in poverty in small town France, 13-year-old Jimmy dreams of a bourgeois life with family vacations and games of tennis. Trapped in an unstable household with a drug-addicted mother and her criminal boyfriend, Jimmy is forced to grow up too quickly. Over the course of a sweltering summer, Jimmy must find moments of hope in a world full of strife. The Gold Hugo for Best Documentary went to Volta à Terra, directed by João Pedro Plácido, and in the New Directors Competition, the Gold Hugo went to Underground Fragrance directed by Pengfei Song. The 51st Chicago International Film Festival also presented Director Michael Moore with the Founder’s Award for his film “Where To Invade Next.” “Chicago is the Capital of the Midwest and I just won the Founder’s Award here,” said Michael Moore. The winners of the 2015 Chicago International Film Festival International Film Competition Gold Hugo, Best Film: A Childhood Country: France Director: Philippe Claudel Silver Hugo, Special Jury Prize: Paulina Country: Argentina, Brazil Director: Santiago Mitre Silver Hugo, Best Director: The Club Country: Chile Director: Pablo Larrain Silver Hugo, Best Male Actor: Alexi Mathieu, Jules Gauzelin (A Childhood) Country: France Director: Philippe Claudel Silver Hugo, Best Female Actor: Lizzie Brochere (Full Contact) Country: Netherlands, Croatia Director: David Verbeek Silver Plaque, Best Ensemble: The Club Country: Chile Director: Pablo Larrain Silver Plaque, Best Cinematography: Frank Van den Eeden (Full Contact) Country: Netherlands, Croatia Director: David Verbeek Silver Plaque for Best Screenplay: Writers Guillermo Calderon, Daniel Villalobos, Pablo Larrain (The Club) Country: Chile Director: Pablo Larrain Silver Plaque for Best Art Direction: Toma Baqueni (My Golden Days) Country: France Director: Arnaud Desplechin New Directors Competition Underground Fragrance directed by Pengfei Song Gold Hugo: Underground Fragrance Country: China Director: Pengfei Song Silver Hugo: Sparrows Country: Iceland Director: Runar Runarsson Roger Ebert Award: The Roger Ebert Award will be presented annually to an emerging filmmaker whose film presents a fresh and uncompromising vision. Films competing in the Festival’s New Directors Competition are eligible for this award. Nahid directed by Ida Panahandeh Nahid Country: Iran Director: Ida Panahandeh Documentary Competition This selection of international documentaries competing for the Gold Hugo go beyond the headlines in telling those true stories that surprise, entertain and challenge us. Volta à Terra, directed by João Pedro Plácido Gold Hugo: Volta à Terra Country: Portugal, Switzerland Director: João Pedro Plácido Silver Hugo: In The Underground Country: China Director: Song Zhantao Gold Plaque Special Mention: Time Suspended Country: Mexico, Argentina Director: Natalia Bruschtein Q Hugo Award Chosen from the Festival’s OUT-Look program, the winners of this award exhibit new artistic perspectives on sexuality and identity. CAROL Starring Cate Blanchett Gold Q Hugo: Carol Country: USA Director: Todd Haynes Silver Q Hugo: Henry Gamble’s Birthday Party Country: USA Director: Stephen Cone Short Film Awards Leidi directed by Simón Mesa Soto Gold Hugo, Live Action: Leidi Country: Colombia, UK Director: Simón Mesa Soto Silver Hugo, Live Action: The Exquisite Corpus Country: Austria Director: Peter Tscherkassky Gold Plaque, Live Action: One-minded Country: South Korea Director: Sébastien Simon and Forest Ian Estler Silver Plaque, Live Action: over Country: UK Director: Jörn Threlfall Silver Plaque, Live Action: Ramona Country: Romania Director: Andrei Cretulescu Silver Hugo, Documentary: Santa Cruz del Islote Country: US, Colombia Director: Luke Lorentzen Gold Plaque, Documentary: A Tale of Love, Madness and Death Country: Chile Director: Mijael Bustos Gutiérrez Silver Hugo, Animated: Sunday Lunch Country: France Director: Céline Devaux Gold Plaque, Animated: The Same River Twice Country: USA Director: Weijia Ma Silver Plaque, Animated: Waves ’98 Country: Lebanon, Qatar Director: Ely Dagher Chicago Award Chicago Plaque Radical Grace Country: USA Director: Rebecca Parrish INTERCOM One of the longest-running international competitions of its kind, INTERCOM honors a wide range of corporate-sponsored, educational and branded films. Gold Hugo, Business – Communications Patrick Frost Company/Entrant: Seed Audio-Visual Communications Silver Hugo, Sales & Marketing Black Ink Company/Entrant: Kemper Kommunikation GmbH Gold Plaque, Public Relations Porsche at Le Mans 2015 Company/Entrant: Kemper Kommunikation GmbH Gold Plaque, Business – Communications Argyle Pink Diamonds, Beyond Rare Company/Entrant: Bengar Films Silver Plaque, Business – Promotion Soapbox Race 2015 Company/Entrant: Strange Loop Studios Silver Plaque, Business – Communications Australia Post, Privacy and You Company/Entrant: Bengar Films Silver Plaque, Educational – Youth Audience Summiteers Company/Entrant: Seed Audio-Visual Communications Certificate of Merit, Sports & Recreation Spa 2015 Company/Entrant: Kemper Kommunikation GmbH Certificate of Merit, Science/Research/Technology Antarctic Edge: 70 Degrees South Company/Entrant: Rutgers Film Bureau

    Read more


  • 16 Films in International Feature Competition at 51st Chicago International Film Festival

    A Very Ordinary Citizen, Majid Barzegar The 51st Chicago International Film Festival announced the sixteen films selected for its International Feature Competition. Films include the world premiere of Majid Barzegar’s A Very Ordinary Citizen (co-written by Jafar Panahi) (pictured above); the critically acclaimed relationship drama 45 Years, starring Tom Courtenay and Charlotte Rampling; Chronic, the latest film by Mexican filmmaker Michel Franco who previously won the Festival’s 2012 Silver Hugo Special Jury Prize for After Lucia; and Naomi Kawase’s delightfully poetic film about life and sweet pastries, Sweet Bean. “It has been a great year for movies, so far. The sixteen films competing for the Gold Hugo are strong and diverse,” said Chicago International Film Festival Founder & Artistic Director Michael Kutza. “This year’s competition includes some of the most anticipated films of the season as well as new discoveries from around the world and we can’t wait to share them with Chicago.” The 51st Chicago International Film Festival runs October 15-29, 2015 at the AMC River East. INTERNATIONAL FEATURES COMPETITION 45 Years Country: UK Director: Andrew Haigh Synopsis: On the eve of their 45th anniversary, a couple’s marital equilibrium is threatened when the husband’s past resurfaces in an unexpected way. Long-frozen secrets begin to thaw in this slow-burning domestic drama. Stars Tom Courtenay and Charlotte Rampling both won top honors at the Berlin Film Festival for their gripping performances. Body (Cialo) USA PREMIERE Country: Poland Director: Malgorzata Szumowska Synopsis: Balancing bleakness and mirth in equal measure, Body chronicles three haunted souls in Warsaw: an icy coroner who suspects his dead wife may be trying to contact him; his anorexic, suicidal daughter; and her hospital therapist, who moonlights as a medium. Playing unexplained phenomena for dry laughs, like a hanged man who miraculously regains consciousness, the film is a morbidly funny guide to the Great Beyond. A Childhood (Une Enfance) USA PREMIERE Country: France Director: Philippe Claudel Synopsis: In this tender, keenly observed look at growing up in poverty in small town France, 13-year-old Jimmy dreams of a bourgeois life with family vacations and games of tennis. Trapped in an unstable household with a drug-addicted mother and her criminal boyfriend, Jimmy is forced to grow up too quickly. Over the course of a sweltering summer, Jimmy must find moments of hope in a world full of strife. Chronic USA PREMIERE Country: Mexico, France Director: Michel Franco A hospice nurse (Tim Roth) has a deeper connection to his patients than their own family members, but his above-and-beyond approach to emotional baggage shields his true problems from the outside world. Carrying traces of Amour, with stripped-down camerawork and naturalist performances, Michel Franco’s restrained medical drama peers into the darkness and wonders about the last person to hold our hands as we step through. The Club (El Club) USA PREMERE Country: Chile Director: Pablo Larrain Synopsis: Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the Berlin Film Festival, this unsettling drama from director Pablo Larraín (No) centers on a group of disgraced Catholic priests sequestered in a beach house. The tranquility of their anonymous daily routine is disturbed when a young man materializes with charges of abuse. The priests’ reaction to this unwanted interloper carries echoes of their institution’s shocking past. Full Contact USA PREMIERE Country: Netherlands, Croatia Director: David Verbeek Synopsis: Working from an Air Force base in the Nevada desert, halfway across the world from his targets, an emotionally reserved drone operator (Grégoire Colin) grapples with the psychological ramifications of a missile attack gone awry. But then events take an unexpected and surreal turn. This bold, arresting thriller from visionary Dutch filmmaker David Verbeek is a piercing portrait of dehumanization in the age of modern warfare. Looking For Grace USA PREMIERE Country: Australia Director: Sue Brooks Synopsis: Grace, a rebellious teenager from a rich family, leaves home to attend a concert several days away. Everyone – from Grace’s mother (Radha Mitchell) to the detective they hire to help track her – has secrets, fissures in seemingly perfect lifestyles. With a perspective-shifting script and gorgeous shots of rural Australia, the film is a surprising mystery about the wealthy and the damned. Mountains May Depart Country: China Director: Jia Zhangke Synopsis: In this penetrating dissection of modern China from award-winning filmmaker Jia Zhangke (A Touch of Sin), a young woman chooses to marry a wealthy capitalist over a coal miner and names her firstborn son “Dollar.” Across two continents, three chapters, and 25 years reaching into the near future, we watch one scattered family chase a vision of success that remains heartbreakingly out of reach. My Golden Days (Trois souvenirs de ma jeunesse) Country: France Director: Amaud Desplechin Synopsis: Returning from Tajikistan, Paul faces an interrogation that leads him to retrace three seminal moments from his past: his childhood, an eventful trip to the Soviet Union, and – most significantly – his love affair with the nymph-like Esther. This poetic Cannes award winner from French auteur Arnaud Desplechin unfolds as an intoxicating ode to romance. Neon Bull (Boi Neon) USA PREMIERE Country: Brazil, Uruguay, Netherlands Director: Gabriel Mascaro Synopsis: In the rodeos of northeast Brazil, two cowboys try to corral a bull by the tail in a whirlwind of gallops and dust. But behind the scenes, ranch hand Iremar lives a quiet, lonely life, accompanying the bulls from town to town and dreaming of becoming a clothing designer. With a unique blend of lived-in social realism, impressionist imagery, and sweltering eroticism, Neon Bull – filmed almost entirely in static long takes – is a wildly unconventional look at Latin American machismo. Paulina (La Patota) USA PREMIERE Country: Argentina, Brazil, France Director: Santiago Mitre Synopsis: Paulina, a young, idealistic lawyer, leaves her cushy job in the city to teach at a rural high school. Her deep-seated beliefs are shaken when some students commit a horrific crime and she is forced to take a stance. Anchored by a complex, nuanced performance from Dolores Fonzi, this blistering drama reconsiders the line between wealth and poverty, chaos and order, victim and survivor. Winner of the best film award in Critics’ Week at Cannes. Schneider vs. Bax USA PREMIERE Country: The Netherlands Director: Alex Van Warmerdam Synopsis: In this hilariously deadpan cat-and-mouse game, hitman Schneider tries to finish an assignment in time to celebrate his birthday with his family. But the target, drug-addicted writer Bax (writer-director Alex Van Warmerdam), is packing too. An endless parade of unexpected visitors at Bax’s swamp cabin turns this showdown into an entertaining, intricate puzzle – and, for Schneider, one heck of a headache. Sweet Bean (An) USA PREMIERE Country: Japan Director: Naomi Kawase Synopsis: Red bean paste is the filling in this poignant tale of life, compassion, and sweet endings. An uninspired red bean pancake chef is re-energized when a plucky septuagenarian’s irresistible homemade recipe makes his snacks a local hit. Both characters use their creations, photographed in mouth-watering close-up, to rebuild from traumatic pasts. The latest from poetic Japanese auteur Naomi Kawase is a delectable philosophical dish. Tikkun Country: Israel Director: Avishai Sivan Synopsis: A young Israeli ultra-Orthodox man experiences a crisis of faith in this formally daring black-and-white drama that employs bravura, often shocking imagery. Following a near-death experience, the formerly devout Yeshiva student begins wandering Jerusalem’s empty streets at night without purpose, while his father-a Kosher butcher-experiences terrifying nightmares as retribution for saving his son. The Treasure (Comoara) Country: Romania Director: Comeliu Porumboiu Synopsis: Armed with a metal detector and boundless determination, two neighbors go on the hunt for rumored buried bounty. Relentless in their search, they refuse to let general ineptitude, petty arguments or bureaucratic red tape stand in their way. Acclaimed Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu’s sharp, deadpan comedy sends up the value of wealth and stature in the new Europe. A Very Ordinary Citizen (Yek Shahrvand-e Kamelan Maamouli) WORLD PREMIERE Country: Iran Director: Majid Barzegar Synopsis: Mr. Safari, an 80-year-old pensioner, lives alone and without direction. When his son, living abroad, tries to arrange for his elderly father to visit him, Mr. Safari becomes dangerously obsessed with a local female travel agent who is hired to help. Co-written by acclaimed filmmaker Jafar Panahi (Crimson Gold, Taxi), this provocative story delivers a quietly powerful statement about loneliness and those who get left behind in contemporary Tehran.

    Read more