A special jury prize was given to "Sympathy for Delicious," Mark Ruffalo's directing debut, in which he co-stars with friend and screenwriter Christopher Thornton, who plays a paralyzed deejay with the power to heal others but not himself.
Director David Michod's Australian teen drama "Animal Kingdom" earned the dramatic jury prize for world cinema, while the world documentary award went to Danish filmmaker Mads Brugger's "The Red Chapel," chronicling a regime-challenging trip to North Korea.
Javier Fuentes-Leon's Peruvian ghost story "Undertow" won the world-cinema audience honor for dramas, and Lucy Walker's British-Brazilian production "Waste Land," about an art project at a massive landfill, received the documentary audience prize for world cinema.
Other winners:
• U.S. drama directing award: Eric Mendelsohn, "3 Backyards."
• U.S. documentary directing award: Leon Gast, "Smash His Camera."
• World cinema drama directing award and world cinema screenwriting award: Juan Carlos Valdivia, "Southern District."
• World cinema documentary directing award: Christian Frei, "Space Tourists."
• U.S. documentary editing award: Penelope Falk, "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work."
• World cinema documentary editing award: Joelle Alexis, "A Film Unfinished."
• U.S. drama cinematography award: Zak Mulligan, "Obselidia."
• U.S. documentary cinematography award: Kirsten Johnson and Laura Poitras, "The Oath."
• World cinema drama cinematography award: Mariano Cohn and Gaston Duprat, "The Man Next Door."
• World cinema documentary cinematography award: Kate McCullough and Michael Lavelle, "His & Hers."