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Cast members Viggo Mortensen (L), Naomi
Watts and Vincent Cassel (R) pose with director David Cronenberg (2nd R)
at the premiere for their film "Eastern Promises" during the 32nd Toronto
International Film Festival, Sept. 8, 2007. (Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
OTTAWA,
Sept. 15 (Xinhua) -- Eastern Promises, a thriller by Canadian director David
Cronenberg, won the Cadillac People's Choice Award at the Toronto International
Film Festival which closed Saturday after screening 349 films over ten days.
Since Cronenberg is busy doing promotion for the film
in New York, the award, voted by the festival audiences, was accepted by his
long-time distributor and colleague, Victor Loewy, at a Awards Reception held in
the Fairmont Royal York hotel.
The London-set film follows the mysterious and
ruthless Nikolai(starred by Viggo Mortensen), a Russian gangster tied to one of
London's most notorious organized crime families. His carefully maintained
existence is shaken when he crosses paths with Anna (starred by Naomi Watts), an
innocent midwife who accidentally uncovers potential evidence against the
family.
The Prize of the International Critics Association
(FIPRESCI Prize) went to Rodrigo Pla's LA ZONA, a revenge drama set around a
gated community in Mexico City. This award is annually bestowed upon a feature
film directed by an emerging filmmaker, and making its world premiere at the
festival.
The Diesel Discovery Award, voted on by the 1,000
members of the international media attending the festival, was awarded to
Cochochi, from directors Israel Cardenas and Laura Amelia Guzman. The film is
about two brothers who become separated when attempting to deliver a package to
a faraway community.
The Artistic Innovation award went to another
Spanish-language film, Anahi Berneri's Encarnacion, an Argentinean film about an
aging actress who returns to her hometown, which was cited by the jury for its
for its "critique of mainstream cinema" and issues around the "fetishization of
the female body."
The Toronto International Film Festival, now in its
32nd year, is widely recognized as the most important film festival after Cannes
and the most successful public film festival in the
world.