Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

‘The Shape of Water’ by Mexico’s Guillermo Del Toro wins Venice Golden Lion

-

"The Shape of Water," a dazzling sci-fi romance by Mexican director Guillermo Del Toro, won the coveted Golden Lion at the Venice film festival on Saturday.

"If you remain pure and stay with your faith, with what you believe in -- in my case, monsters -- you can do anything," Del Toro told the festival, the world's oldest, as he dedicated the award to young Latin American directors.

The quirky, other-worldly tale set in the Cold War era sees a mute cleaner (Britain's Sally Hawkins) in a high-security government laboratory stumble across a classified experiment that leads to an unlikely -- and rather slimy -- love affair.

Del Toro, the director behind such Gothic horrors as "The Devil's Backbone" (2001) and "Pan's Labyrinth" (2006), had described the flick as "an antidote to cynicism" and enchanted reviewers hailed it as his greatest work yet.

Bear hug: Del Toro was welcomed on stage by actress and president of the jury Annette Bening
Bear hug: Del Toro was welcomed on stage by actress and president of the jury Annette Bening
Filippo MONTEFORTE, AFP

"I'm 52 years old, I weigh over 110 kilograms (242 pounds) and I've done more than 10 movies," he said as he held up his Lion.

Even so, he said, this had not stopped him from "doing something different".

"As a Mexican, I dedicate this award to all those Mexicans and Latin American directors dreaming of doing something as a parable, who are told it can't be done. It can be done."

"I believe in life, in love and in cinema," he added at the close of a ceremony heavy with emotion.

- Tears and cocktails -

For French director Xavier Legrand  a double winner at Venice  it was all too much
For French director Xavier Legrand, a double winner at Venice, it was all too much
Tiziana FABI, AFP

French director Xavier Legrand snapped up two prizes, breaking down and sobbing openly as he was awarded the Silver Lion for best director hot on the tail of picking up the Lion of the Future for best debut film.

He said his divorce tale "Custody", in which a child is held hostage to the escalating conflict between his parents, had been "a tale that urgently needed to be told" and a fierce denunciation of violence against women.

Best screenplay went to British-Irish Martin McDonagh for "Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri", a dark comedy about a grieving mother who takes on the town's police chief when he fails to solve her daughter's murder.

"We've had a beautiful time (here in Venice), some beautiful pasta, some beautiful Negronis (cocktails), but this is the best part," said McDonagh, who directed "In Bruges" (2008) and "Seven Psychopaths" (2012).

Britain's Charlotte Rampling won best actress for her role in Andrea Pallaoro's "Hannah", and said it was a "huge honour" because Italy, where she did her first film in 1982, "is the source of absolutely all of my inspiration".

Best actor went to Kamel El Basha in Ziad Doueiri's Lebanese film "The Insult", a tale of a spat which escalates and lands a Lebanese Christian and Palestinian refugee in court.

And Samuel Maoz's "Foxtrot", a surreal, off-balance family tragedy in three acts described by the Israeli director as "a dance of a man with his fate", snapped up the Grand Jury prize.

For the first time, the festival included virtual reality films in the competition.

The best VR award went to American Eugene YK Chung, with "Arden's Wake Expanded".

“The Shape of Water,” a dazzling sci-fi romance by Mexican director Guillermo Del Toro, won the coveted Golden Lion at the Venice film festival on Saturday.

“If you remain pure and stay with your faith, with what you believe in — in my case, monsters — you can do anything,” Del Toro told the festival, the world’s oldest, as he dedicated the award to young Latin American directors.

The quirky, other-worldly tale set in the Cold War era sees a mute cleaner (Britain’s Sally Hawkins) in a high-security government laboratory stumble across a classified experiment that leads to an unlikely — and rather slimy — love affair.

Del Toro, the director behind such Gothic horrors as “The Devil’s Backbone” (2001) and “Pan’s Labyrinth” (2006), had described the flick as “an antidote to cynicism” and enchanted reviewers hailed it as his greatest work yet.

Bear hug: Del Toro was welcomed on stage by actress and president of the jury Annette Bening

Bear hug: Del Toro was welcomed on stage by actress and president of the jury Annette Bening
Filippo MONTEFORTE, AFP

“I’m 52 years old, I weigh over 110 kilograms (242 pounds) and I’ve done more than 10 movies,” he said as he held up his Lion.

Even so, he said, this had not stopped him from “doing something different”.

“As a Mexican, I dedicate this award to all those Mexicans and Latin American directors dreaming of doing something as a parable, who are told it can’t be done. It can be done.”

“I believe in life, in love and in cinema,” he added at the close of a ceremony heavy with emotion.

– Tears and cocktails –

For French director Xavier Legrand  a double winner at Venice  it was all too much

For French director Xavier Legrand, a double winner at Venice, it was all too much
Tiziana FABI, AFP

French director Xavier Legrand snapped up two prizes, breaking down and sobbing openly as he was awarded the Silver Lion for best director hot on the tail of picking up the Lion of the Future for best debut film.

He said his divorce tale “Custody”, in which a child is held hostage to the escalating conflict between his parents, had been “a tale that urgently needed to be told” and a fierce denunciation of violence against women.

Best screenplay went to British-Irish Martin McDonagh for “Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri”, a dark comedy about a grieving mother who takes on the town’s police chief when he fails to solve her daughter’s murder.

“We’ve had a beautiful time (here in Venice), some beautiful pasta, some beautiful Negronis (cocktails), but this is the best part,” said McDonagh, who directed “In Bruges” (2008) and “Seven Psychopaths” (2012).

Britain’s Charlotte Rampling won best actress for her role in Andrea Pallaoro’s “Hannah”, and said it was a “huge honour” because Italy, where she did her first film in 1982, “is the source of absolutely all of my inspiration”.

Best actor went to Kamel El Basha in Ziad Doueiri’s Lebanese film “The Insult”, a tale of a spat which escalates and lands a Lebanese Christian and Palestinian refugee in court.

And Samuel Maoz’s “Foxtrot”, a surreal, off-balance family tragedy in three acts described by the Israeli director as “a dance of a man with his fate”, snapped up the Grand Jury prize.

For the first time, the festival included virtual reality films in the competition.

The best VR award went to American Eugene YK Chung, with “Arden’s Wake Expanded”.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

With video cameras in the ambulances, medical scientists can make today's stroke care even better for more patients. The same neurological assessment that the...

Business

AI alone won’t fix your marketing — the case for smarter team structures

Entertainment

On Sunday, "Broadway Goes Bossa," created by Jorden Amir and Juliette Ojeda, took place at The Green Room 42 in New York City, for...