Jamaica Gleaner

‘In the Summers’, ‘Porcelain War’ top Sundance Film Festival

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IN THE Summers, an affecting, years-spanning drama about a complicate­d parent-children relationsh­ip, nabbed the Grand Jury prize at the 40th Sundance Film Festival, while the top honour for documentar­y went to Porcelain War, about a Ukrainian couple who craft fragile, intricatel­y painted ceramics while war rages around them.

Those two awards, announced Friday in Park City, Utah, both honoured directoria­l debuts.

In the Summers, written and directed by Alessandra Lacorazza, poetically follows an imperfect father and his daughters over nearly two decades. Lacorazza also won for directing.

“To the queers, to the Latin, to the immigrants, this is for you,” said Lacorazza, a Colombian American film-maker whose film is set in Las Cruces, New Mexico.

Porcelain War, which follows last year’s 20 Days in Mariupol as a Sundance documentar­y prize-winner that captures the war in Ukraine, was made by Brendan Bellomo and Slava Leontyev.

“This award is because of the bravery of the people of Ukraine,” said Bellomo. “And this award is for the beauty of the people of Ukraine.”

Sujo, about an orphaned boy trying to escape the grip of Mexican cartel violence, took the Grand Jury prize for world dramatic cinema. A New Kind of Wilderness, about a Norwegian family living off the grid, won the jury award for world documentar­y.

The Festival Award, voted on by Sundance audiences, went to Daughters, Natalie Rae and Angela Patton’s moving documentar­y following four girls as they prepare for a special daddy-daughter dance with their imprisoned fathers. Daughters also won the audience award for US documentar­y.

Sean Wang’s Dìdi, a comingof-age film about a 13-year-old Taiwanese American boy, took the audience award for US dramatic film. Dìdi also won a juried award for its ensemble.

Ibelin, which was acquired by Netflix out of Sundance, won the audience award for world cinema documentar­y and a juried award for Benjamin Ree’s direction. The film follows the story of Mats Steen, a Norwegian who died of a degenerati­ve muscular disease at the age of 25. Only after his death did his parents discover how widely known and celebrated Steen was online for his personal blog and via World of Warcraft.

Girls Will Be Girls, about a Himalayan boarding school, won the audience award for world cinema drama. The Darren Aronofsky-produced Little Death, starring David Schwimmer as a TV writer, won the NEXT Innovator award. The NEXT audience award winner was the Irish drama Kneecap, about a Belfast rap trio, co-starring Michael Fassbender.

Award winners are available to stream on the festival’s website through the close of Sundance on Sunday.

Sundance winners often go on to be some of the most acclaimed films of the year. Last year’s festival produced Celine Song’s Past Lives, nominated for best picture and best screenplay on Tuesday by the Academy Awards. Other Sundance titles to reach the Oscars include 2022 best picture-winner CODA, Summer Of Soul (... Or, When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised) and Minari.

The 40th edition brought high-profile films, including Jesse Eisenberg’s well-received A Real Pain, starring himself and Kieran Culkin; the Will Ferrell, Harper Steele road trip Will & Harper; and the emotional documentar­y Super/Man: The Christophe­r Reeve Story.

This year, A Real Pain, which also picked up a screenwrit­ing award for Eisenberg, was among the top sales, selling for US$10 million to Searchligh­t Pictures. Neon acquired Steven Soderbergh’s ghost story

Presence. And the buzzy horror thriller It’s What’s Inside sold to Netflix for US$17 million.

 ?? AP ?? This image released by the Sundance Institute shows Residente (right), in a scene from ‘In The Summers’ by Alessandra Lacorazza Samudio, an official selection of the US Dramatic Competitio­n at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival.
AP This image released by the Sundance Institute shows Residente (right), in a scene from ‘In The Summers’ by Alessandra Lacorazza Samudio, an official selection of the US Dramatic Competitio­n at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival.

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