‘Two Women’ triumphs at Hanoi film fest

The Russian film 'Two Women' won the best feature film award at the third Hanoi International Film (HANIFF) that closed in the capital city on November 27.

Dap Canh Giua Khong Trung (Flapping from the Middle of Nowhere) wins the special jury prize for best feature-length film.
Dap Canh Giua Khong Trung (Flapping from the Middle of Nowhere) wins the special jury prize for best feature-length film.

Directed by Vera Glagoleva, the film is based on a play by Russian writer Ivan Turgenev. Set in the Russian countryside at the end of the 19th century, it tells the story of the wife of a rich landowner who falls in love with her son's tutor.

The film has garnered high praise for its humanistic and artistic values, winning several awards at film festivals across Russia.

The Best Short Film was won by the 10-minute Indonesian film Waiting Colours.

The film festival marked a new successes for Vietnamese cinema.

The 99-minute-film Dap Canh Giua Khong Trung (Flapping from the Middle of Nowhere), a dark and sensual drama on the intricate emotional consequences of sexual intimacy, directed by Nguyen Hoang Diep, won the special jury prize for best feature-length film. The corresponding award for short films went to the 14-minute entry, Ngoai Kia Co Gi (What's Out There), directed by Nguyen Diep Thuy Anh.

Allen Dizon of the Philippines won the best leading actor title for his performance in the film The Coffin Maker, and Anna Astrakhntseva of Russia was chosen as best leading actress for her role in Two Women.

Director Shahram Mokri of Iran was named best director for his feature film Fish and Cat, while Ruslan Akun of Kyrgyzstan walked away with the best young director award for his short film Herding.

This year, 52 films in different categories from the Asia-Pacific region were shown at the festival. Twelve films from the region competed for the best feature film award, including two Vietnamese films Dap Canh Giua Khong Trung and Nhung Dua Con Cua Lang (The Children of the Village).

Themed ‘Cinema: Integration and Sustainable Development’, the festival, the biggest cinematic event of the year, aimed to honour works of excellence, said Hoang Tuan Anh, Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

The five-day event has served as a platform for bringing together renowned directors, producers and actors from many countries, and to highlight young film talents in the Asia-Pacific region, he added.

Over the last five days, the festival screened 130 feature films, documentaries and short films from 32 countries and territories at five cinema complexes in Hanoi.

The fourth festival is expected to be held in 2016.

Il Shin of the Republic of Korea and Nguyen Thi My Trang and Nguyen Minh Tien of Vietnam received prizes at the Talent Campus of the HANIFF.

The young student winners were adjudged the best in training courses on scriptwriting, photography directing and film directing.

Shin attended the campus for the first time and won over the tutors with three scenes that she directed after taking the film directing course.

Trang won best scriptwriter for What's with Coffee Today while Tien was recognised for his efforts at the training.

The winners each received a cash prize worth US$300. The Goethe Institute in Hanoi will sponsor Trang at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 2015.

“The HANIFF Campus has contributed to the youth for the festival. We believe that this is the place to discover and cultivate talents,” said Ngo Phuong Lan, General Director of the Cinema Department, a permanent member of the Steering Committee and director of this year’s HANIFF.