This year’s Sundance Film Festival was not just inclusive in its selections, but in its awards as well. Female filmmakers cleaned up, claiming top prizes in the festival’s US dramatic and documentary and world dramatic competitions, as well as several other key awards throughout the Saturday evening ceremony.
Of the 28 prizes awarded to 23 films – comprising the work of 27 filmmakers – 13 (56.5 percent) were directed by one or more women and eight (34.8 percent) were directed by one or more people of colour.
In accepting a special jury prize for “vision and craft” in the festival’s US Dramatic competition section, Honey Boy director Alma Ha’rel made it clear that female filmmakers deserve a shot beyond the festival circuit. “The hustle is real,” she said. “We can do this, let us work.”
The top prize in that section went to the death row drama Clemency, starring Alfre Woodard and directed by emerging filmmaker Chinonye Chukwu. The bleak but well-received film had yet to find a distributor as of the awards ceremony.
In an emotional and impassioned acceptance speech, Chukwu noted the difficulty in getting financing for the film: “You, Sundance, and the people who have seen this film have proven that there is an audience for this film.”
Top honours in the corresponding documentary section went to Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang’s harrowing One Child Nation, which explores the lingering effect of China’s “one child” policy.
Rachel Lears’ Knock Down the House – which followed a handful of women running for the House of Representatives in 2018, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez – won the US documentary competition audience award.
In accepting the award, Lears noted, “This film is about ... making the politically impossible possible. ... We really hope it can be part of a huge groundswell of movement and conversation around changing the face of representation in our democracy.”
Steven Bognar and Julia Reichert’s American Factory, about a Chinese-run glass factory in Ohio, took the US documentary directing prize.
The US dramatic audience award went to Paul Downs Colaizzo’s crowd-pleasing comedy Brittany Runs a Marathon, starring Jillian Bell as an overweight woman who undergoes an exterior and interior transformation. It sold to Amazon in one of the festival’s several high-profile acquisitions.
The high school drama Share, which A24 sold to HBO during the festival, nabbed the Waldo Salt screenwriting award for Pippa Bianco and a special jury prize for leading lady Rhianne Barreto.
A24’s buzzy The Last Black Man in San Francisco took the directing prize for Joe Talbot and a special “creative collaboration” prize for its artistic team.
The world cinema dramatic grand jury prize was unanimously awarded to British helmer Joanna Hogg’s The Souvenir, another A24 title, which juror Jane Campion noted was selected for its “poetic sophistication and absolute honesty.” Hogg sent in a video acceptance which was shot by the film’s star, Honor Swinton-Byrne (daughter of Tilda Swinton).
Another female filmmaker, Lucia Garibaldi, won the world cinema narrative directing prize for the Spanish-language coming-of-age romance The Sharks. And the female-helmed Queen of Hearts from Danish director May El-Toukhy, about the romance between a middle-aged woman and her teenage stepson, won the audience award.
Special jury awards went to actress Krystyna Janda, the leading lady of immigrant romance Dolce Fine Giornata, Japan’s We Are Little Zombies by Makoto Nagahisa for its “originality,” and Alejandro Landes’ hostage drama Monos for its “vision.”
Macedonian environmental documentary Honeyland, directed by Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov, won a trio of prizes in the world cinema doc section including the grand jury prize, a special jury award for “impact for change” and a special jury prize for cinematographers Fejmi Daut and Samir Ljuma.
The section’s audience award went to Richard Ladkani’s Sea of Shadows about the nearly extinct vaquita whale, and directing award to Mads Brugger for Cold Case Hammarskjold, an investigation into the death of a UN secretary-general. An additional special jury award for “no borders” went to Midnight Traveler, in which director Hassan Fazili chronicles his own experience as an Afghan refugee.
The Infiltrators, a drama about and starring a group of Dreamers, directed by Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra, won both the audience and jury prize in the Next section, which spotlights up-and-coming filmmakers.— Los Angeles Times/ TNS
WINNER: Writer and director Chinonye Chukwu, fourth from left, and actors, from left to right, Wendell Pierce, Alfre Woodard, Richard Gunn, Michael O’Neill, Richard Schiff, Danielle Brookes and Aldis Hodge attend the Clemency premiere during the 2019 Sundance Film Festival.