Venice, Italy - The Chinese movie "Still Life," about the China's gigantic
Three Gorges Dam project and its impact on ordinary people, on Saturday won this
year's Golden Lion, the top award at the Venice Film Festival. Helen Mirren and
Ben Affleck took the top acting awards.
 Director Jia Zhang-ke poses with the Golden
Lion at the Cinema Palace in Venice September 9, 2006. Zhangke's movie
'Still Life' won Venice Film Festival's Golden Lion top prize on Saturday.
[Reuters] |
Mirren was named best actress for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II in
Stephen Frears' "The Queen." Affleck won best actor for his role in Allen
Coulter's "Hollywoodland," which dramatizes an investigation into the death of
George Reeves, star of the 1950s TV show "Adventures of Superman."
"The Queen" also took the prize for best script.
Chinese director Jia Zhang-ke's "Still Life" or "Sanxia Haoren" was a
surprise entry late in the festival, and trumped candidates like Emilio Estevez'
"Bobby," about the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and "The Queen," about the
week that followed Princess Diana's death.
"Still Life" was shot in the old village of Fengjie, which has been destroyed
by the building of the Three Gorges Dam, and tells of people who go back there.
"We were told there would be a surprise film at the end of this festival, and
we didn't have a lot of discussion," French actress Catherine Deneuve, who
headed the jury that awarded the top prize, told reporters after the ceremony.
"The beauty of the cinematography and the quality of the story, without
getting political, the characters, we were very touched and we were very moved,"
Deneuve added. "We know it's a very special film."
The Silver Lion for directing went to Alain Resnais for his film "Private
Fears in Public Places." Resnais returned to the Venice Film Festival 45 years
after his film "Last year at Marienbad" won the Golden Lion.
Resnais' new film is an adaptation of British playwright Alan Ayckbourn's
play of the same name, and tells the overlapping stories of six people's search
for identity, spun around alcohol, sex and religion.
The movie "Nuovomondo" ("Golden Door") won the Silver Lion for revelation, an
award that the jury does not have to hand out. The movie follows the voyage of a
Sicilian family in the early 1990s from their homeland to
America.