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The festival's Cadillac People's Choice Award, voted on by
moviegoers, often is an indicator of Academy Award nominations.
Past recipients include best picture winners "American Beauty"
and "Chariots of Fire." "It's great that it's a Canadian film by one of our
monsters, somebody that we're really closely associated with,"
Piers Handling, the film festival's director said in an
interview after the awards presentation. "It couldn't be a
better finish for us." Cronenberg did not accept the award in person because he
was in New York promoting the film, which opened in select
cities this weekend. It stars "Lord of the Rings" actor Viggo Mortensen as a
ruthless Russian gangster in London who crosses paths with an
innocent midwife, played by Naomi Watts, holding secrets about
the mob family. It is the second time in three years Cronenberg and
Mortensen have teamed up. The two worked together in the 2005
Oscar-nominated "A History of Violence," another movie about
crime and how people respond to it. The festival, which screened 349 films from 55 countries
over 10 days, drew megastars such as Brad Pitt, George Clooney
and Cate Blanchett promoting their latest big-budget films. But
smaller projects also had a chance to shine. ADOPTION, WAR, RICH-POOR DIVIDE "Juno," a comedy about a pregnant teen-ager who decides to
put her baby up for private adoption, was the People's Choice
first runner-up. It was director Jason Reitman's follow-up
effort to "Thank You for Smoking," which was a hit at the 2005
festival. Second runner-up was "Body of War," a story of what happens
to the wounded veterans who return home as told through the
eyes of a paralyzed soldier injured in the Iraq war. The documentary, independently financed and co-directed by
former U.S. talk show host Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro, made
its world premiere on September 11 to multiple standing
ovations. "La Zona" took home the Fipresci prize, chosen by
international critics and awarded to a feature film by an
emerging filmmaker. Directed by Rodrigo Pla, it examines the
rich-poor divide in Mexico. The Diesel Discovery Award, voted on by the hundreds of
journalists at the festival, went to "Cochochi," by Israel
Cardenas and Laura Amelia Guzman in their directorial debuts. A
cultural innovation award went to "Encarnacion" by Argentine
director Anahi Berneri. Canadian film prizes went to "Continental, un film sans
fusil," "My Winnipeg" and the short film "Pool." For many, the main business of the festival was securing
distribution rights. "George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead,"
"The Visitor," and "Nothing is Private" were among the films to
seal deals. "Emotional Arithmetic" will be screened at the festival's
closing night gala later on Saturday. Starring Susan Sarandon and Christopher Plummer and
directed by Paolo Barzman, it tells the story of three
Holocaust survivors who reunite for a celebratory dinner 40
years after the end of World War Two. |