The Borneo Post

Japan’s ‘Shoplifter­s’ is Best Film at Asian Film Awards

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HONG KONG: Kore- eda Hirokazu’s ‘ Shoplifter­s’, a Japanese drama about a family surviving on shopliftin­g, was named Best Film at the Asian Film Awards.

The film had been the surprise Palme d’Or winner at the Cannes festival last year, but has since won wide acclaim and achieved record scores at the Japanese and Chinese box office. ‘Shoplifter­s’ also won best original music with Japanese music pioneer Hosono Haruomi’s score.

South Korean director Lee Chang-dong won the best director prize for the psychologi­cal drama ‘Burning’, which Lee also co-wrote as an adaptation of a Murakami Haruki short story. Going into the ceremony, ‘Burning’ was the favourite, having been nominated in eight categories. Lee was also presented with a lifetime achievemen­t award, to which Lee responded that he did not deserve the title, and that he was still very young.

Zhang Yimou’s highly stylised period epic ‘ Shadow’ was the numerical winner. It bagged four technical awards. But the major prizes went to Japanese and Korean filmmakers.

Japanese actor Yakusho Koji (‘ Babel’, ‘ Memoirs of a Geisha’) was the media’s darling at the event held at the TVB studios. Yakusho was mobbed by the media backstage after winning best actor for his role in crime thriller ‘The Blood of Wolves’ and a special prize for excellence in Asian Cinema. He said he was surprised by the big win and jokingly said he would use the two awards as dumbbells to train his arm muscles.

Tsukamoto Shinya won best editing for his drama ‘ Killing’. The Japanese actor- director paid tribute to his long-time creative partner, musician Ishikawa Chu, who passed away during the production of ‘Killing’.

The best actress prize went to Samal Yeslyamova for her role in drama ‘Ayka’, a film co-produced by five countries. Yeslyamova said shooting began just five days after giving birth to her child.

Hong Kong actress Kara Wai claimed the AFA’s best supporting actress for the second time — also her third AFA award — for her role in the transgende­r drama ‘ Tracey’. Wai plays the wife of a transgende­r woman.

Hong Kong’s Ma Kwong-wing won best production design for his breathtaki­ng aesthetics in ‘ Shadow’. These drew their inspiratio­n from classical Chinese ink paintings. The film’s costume designer Chen Minzheng was also a prize winner on Sunday. The best cinematogr­aphy award went to Zhang’s long-time collaborat­or Zhao Xiaoding, who makes his debut as a feature director later this year. Yang Jiang and Zhao Nan together won the best sound award.

Chinese auteur Jia Zhangke won best screenplay for ‘Ash is Purest White’. Zhang Yu, who plays a leukaemia patient in Chinese comedy ‘ Dying to Survive’, won best supporting actor after losing the title at Golden Horse in Taiwan.

Hong Kong writer- director Oliver Chan Siu- kuen won the hearts of the jury with ‘ Still Human’, a dramedy about a relationsh­ip between a Filipina maid and her disabled employer, played by Anthony Wong Chausang. Chan went home with the best new director award. The nine member jury was led by actressdir­ector Joan Chen and Japanese star Ken Watanabe.

 ??  ?? “Shoplifter­s’ had earlier triumphed at the Cannes Film festival.
“Shoplifter­s’ had earlier triumphed at the Cannes Film festival.
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