Bangkok Post

French-Lebanese film wins top award at Asia film festival

-

A French-Lebanese film depicting the secret passion of a migrant worker in Beirut won the top prize on Monday for one of Asia’s largest short film festivals.

Warsha by Lebanese-Canadian director Dania Bdeir received the George Lucas Award, also known as the Grand Prix award, at this year’s Short Shorts Film Festival & Asia, which concluded its two-week run of screenings at venues across Tokyo.

The roughly 16-minute short follows a crane operator working in Beirut who one day volunteers to take on one of the most dangerous cranes in Lebanon, during which he discovers a newfound sense of freedom.

In an online acceptance speech at the festival’s award ceremony, Bdeir said she felt “honoured” to receive the award, and “so happy this film is connecting and touching audiences all around the world”.

“I dedicate this award to Lebanon, to migrant workers everywhere, to anyone who is not able to live out their true self,” she added. This year’s festival themed on the metaverse, an all-encompassi­ng virtual world where people socialise and work, kicked off on June 7 in a hybrid format combining screenings at venues in Tokyo and online.

Held annually since it was founded by Japanese actor Tetsuya Bessho in 1999, it is the only internatio­nal short film festival in Asia that is eligible to nominate five films to compete in the following year’s Academy Awards.

The Limit Taxi Girl by Masaya Yoshida became another film eligible for nomination after winning in the Japan category of the official competitio­n, while the Bangladesh­i horror short Moshari by Nuhash Humayun took the prize in the Asia category.

Celebritie­s who graced the ceremony included Japanese filmmaker Naomi Kawase, winner of several Cannes awards and general director of the Tokyo Olympics’ official film.

The Side A of the two-parter, which focuses on athletes who took part in the games, was released earlier this month, while Side B, depicting the lives of the games’ staff and volunteers, will be out on Friday.

“It took three-and-a-half years for me to make the film, and I submitted it to the client about a week ago, so finally we can show it to the people,” Kawase said following a screening of the film’s trailer.

Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike was also in attendance to award the Cinematic Tokyo Competitio­n award, which recognises a work that depicts the allure of the Japanese capital, to Tokyo Rain.

The 12-minute black-and-white short by Swiss duo Michel Wild and Robert Schneider follows a salaryman who falls asleep while doing overtime at his office. Heavy rain has been hitting Tokyo, and when he awakes, he finds nothing is as it used to be.

Online screenings of the award winners, along with a selection of other films, are slated to last until June 30.

 ?? ?? Filmmaker Dania Bdeir.
Filmmaker Dania Bdeir.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand