IFFR Festival Director Vanja Kaludjercic congratulates the Pebbles film team with their IFFR 2021 Tiger Award
50th International Film Festival Rotterdam
1 – 7 February | 2 – 6 June 2021 Pebbles by Vinothraj P.S. wins IFFR 2021 Tiger Award
Special Jury Awards go to I Comete – A Corsican Summer by Pascal Tagnati and Looking for Venera by Norika Sefa International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) has announced the competition award winners for its expanded 50th anniversary edition. Southern India-set Pebbles by Vinothraj P.S won the Tiger Award, while I Comete – A Corsican Summer by French filmmaker Pascal Tagnati and Looking for Venera by Norika Sefa from Kosovo both won Special Jury Awards. The VPRO Big Screen Award went to El perro que no calla by Ana Katz from Argentina and Quo Vadis, Aida? by Bosnian filmmaker Jasmila Žbanić won the BankGiro Loterij Audience Award.
Festival director Vanja Kaludjercic: “In these most challenging of times, we are incredibly proud to have brought an outstanding selection of titles in our reimagined festival format. The expanded Tiger Competition included 16 films that reflect the plurality of voices and visions of talent that will continue to deliver great cinema for years to come. What we learned from this experience is that as resilient as the industry is, so are our audiences who fully embraced and celebrated the first chapter of this year’s festival.”
Clockwise: Sunsets, everyday, Terranova, Pebbles, Maat Means Land
The Ammodo Tiger Short Awards were given to Sunsets, everyday by Pakistani filmmaker Basir Mahmood, Terranova by Cubans Alejandro Pérez Serrano and Alejandro Alonso Estrella and Maat Means Land by California-based Native American artist and filmmaker Fox Maxy. IFFR additionally nominated Flowers blooming in our throats by Belgian filmmaker Eva Giolo to the short film category for the European Film Awards (EFA).
Left to right: The Edge of Daybreak, Manifesto, La Nuit des Rois
The FIPRESCI Prize was given to The Edge of Daybreak by Thai filmmaker Taiki Sakpisit. Norwegian director Ane Hjort Guttu won the KNF prize for her short film Manifesto. La nuit des rois by Philippe Lacôte from Côte d’Ivoire won the Youth Jury Award.
Clockwise: I Comete - A Corsican Summer, Looking for Venera, Quo Vadis Aida?, El Perro Que no Calla
Tiger Competition 2021 winners Pebbles, I Comete – A Corsican Summer and Looking for Venera will be made available to watch on IFFR.com for an extended period: from Sunday 6 February 18:00 (CET) to Tuesday 9 February 21:00 (CET), with streaming exclusively accessible in the Netherlands. The three Ammodo Tiger Short winners – Maat Means Land, Sunsets, everyday and Terranova – will also be made available in the form of a single compilation during the same time frame, as well as the Big Screen Competition 2021 winner El perro que no calla and BankGiro Loterij Audience Award Quo Vadis, Aida?.
The Awards Ceremony marks the closing of the February festival days. With events including Vive le cinéma! in collaboration with Eye Filmmuseum, IFFR Unleashed: 50/50, RTM, Curaçao IFFR and Animatie Variatie with Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, IFFR 2021 will continue over the coming months and will close with four festival days from 2 to 6 June 2021.
The Tiger Award celebrates the innovative and adventurous spirit of up-and-coming filmmakers from all over the world. IFFR’s most prestigious award includes a prize of €40,000 to be divided between filmmaker and producer, as well as two Special Jury Awards each worth €10,000.
Jury: Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, Orwa Nyrabia, Hala Elkoussy, Helena van der Meulen, Ilse Hughan
Winner of the Tiger Award: Pebbles by Vinothraj P.S.
Jury report: “In the midst of many admirable and ambitious works, the jury was blown away by a seemingly simple and humble film we fell in love with instantly. Creating a maximum impact with a minimum in means, the filmmaker reaches his goal with the same conviction and determination as his main characters. The result is a lesson in pure cinema, captivating us with its beauty and humour, in spite of its grim subject.”
Winner of the Special Jury Award: I Comete – A Corsican Summer by Pascal Tagnati
Jury report: “In this pleasant Mediterranean reverie about his home village, the director shows us in an observational approach the daily life which centres on friends, football, infidelity, fertility and family traditions. In the beginning the spectator is just a witness of these slices of life in the Corsican village but gradually you start to feel part of it and grow familiar with the villagers and their dreams, fears and their collective joie de vivre. I Comete – A Corsican Summer is a true love letter of humanity brought to us through a refreshing look on contemporary cinema.”
Winner of the Special Jury Award: Looking for Venera by Norika Sefa
Jury report: “With purposeful restraint and unassuming sincerity, camera work and sound come together to capture an intimate slice of life, where what has been hurriedly swept under the carpet is all but forgotten. In Looking for Venera the humdrum minutiae of the everyday are delicately imbued with the precarious, yet resilient quest to find one’s young self.”
The winner of the VPRO Big Screen Award is chosen by a jury of five dedicated audience members. The film wins a guaranteed theatrical release in Dutch theatres and will be broadcast on Dutch TV by VPRO and NPO. In addition, a €30,000 prize is awarded, equally shared between the filmmaker and the distributor who releases the film.
Jury: Mauro Corstiaans, Oriana Baloriano, Frits Bienfait, Magda van Vloten, Mirjam van den Brink
Winning film: El perro que no calla by Ana Katz
Jury report: “The movie we chose as the winner left a big impression on us all. The film sets a tone from the start with a brilliant opening scene and as the story unfolds, we are drawn into the daily life of a young man who tries to find his place in a world which, at a certain point, becomes uncannily familiar. However, it is a hopeful and optimistic story without toning down the challenges for especially younger people. The director could have addressed these issues in a more or less conventional social-realistic movie, but instead she made some radical choices regarding narrative, structure and cinematography. We strongly believe that this film earns a release in Dutch movie theatres and we hope that this award will contribute to that.”
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07.02.2021 | International Film Festival Rotterdam's blog
Cat. : AWARDS