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Motovun 2006The Atmosphere of a Fine Film Festival
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Before Dawn |
Most of the main program had been selected from the major festivals, ignoring the blockbusters and many of the top names. From Cannes Summer Place (Yihe Yuan) by Ye Lou; A Chronicle of An Escape (Cronica de una fuga) by Israel Adrian Caetano; from Venice A Little Lieutenant (Le petit lieutenant) by Xavier Beauvois; from Berlin The Road to Guantanamo by Michael Winterbottom; The Free Will (Der freie Wille) by Matthias Glasner; Slumming by Michael Glawogger; from Locarno Buffalo Boy (Mua Len Trau) by Ming Nguyen-Vo; from Sundance Fifteenth Birthday (Quinceanera) by Richard Glatzer; The Wristcutters: A Love Story by Goran Dukic; Son of Man by Mark Dornford-May… Local audiences want to see what is supposed to be the best (you know) so the new selectors, Jurica Pavicic and Rajko Grilic, have been proved right by not trying to bring in world premieres – which often means titles rejected by the A-list festivals – but to concentrate on a more modest but more effective goal.
Still, there are so many films made every year that, even if you have been attending a lot of festivals, there is always plenty to discover, even things you didn't have the faintest idea they were on the map. One single example, the incredibly beautiful Hungarian short Before Dawn (Pred Zoru) by Balint Kenyeres. Have you seen it? Maybe yes, probably no. Have you even heard about it? Maybe yes, possibly no. It was competing at Cannes 2005, won a prize in Tampere and a mention in Sundance and was among the nominees for the European Film Awards, but you just can't remember them all. In Motovun, one thousand people have seen it, just because it was shown at the right time in the right place. That's why festivals like Motovun are precious.
Tributes have been paid for their fifty years in cinema to the actors Vanja Drach and Semka Sokolovic-Bertok, the latter also being an incredible chess player who defeated fourteen opponents in simultaneous games in front of the audience. Just one of these afternoons where you have time to indulge a drink and feel the atmosphere between two movies.
Jean Roy has been the chief critic for the daily L'Humanité (France) during the past twenty-two years.
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Motovun 2006
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