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2014 Slamdance Award Winners

Copenhagen

Yesterday, Slamdance announced its jury, audience and special award winners for its 20th anniversary festival. The jury award for Best Narrative Feature went to Rezeta, the story of a Kosovan model’s trip to Mexico City, while Elliot, which follows the eponymous Elliot “White Lightning” Scott, intent on becoming Canada’s first action hero, scooped up the Best Documentary Feature prize. The winners, perhaps suggestively, received $5,000 in film from Kodak, in addition to $3,500 in legal services. The audience awards went to Copenhagen for Narrative Feature, and Kidnapped for Christ for Documentary Feature. See the full list of winners below.

AUDIENCE AWARDS

Audience Award for Documentary FeatureKidnapped for Christ, dir. by Kate S. Logan. American teenagers are taken from their homes in the middle of the night and shipped to an Evangelical reform school in The Dominican Republic. The school psychologically disorients them through culture shock and isolation, to re-build them into ideal Christian adults. One such student is David, who gets forcibly enrolled in the program after coming out to his parents. The struggles David’s community face to secure his freedom reveal how far the school will go to prevent its students from leaving.

Audience Award for Narrative FeatureCopenhagen, dir. by Mark Raso. After weeks of traveling through Europe, the immature William finds himself in Copenhagen, the place of his father’s birth. He befriends the youthful Effy, who works in William’s hotel as part of an internship program, and they set off to find William’s last living relative. Effy’s mix of youthful exuberance and wisdom challenges William unlike any woman ever has. As the attraction builds, he must come to grips with destabilizing elements of his family’s sordid past.

JURY AWARDS – NARRATIVE

This year’s Slamdance Narrative Jury Prizes were selected by the esteemed panel of industry members Tom Hall, Katie Mustard, and Matt Harrison.

Jury Award for Narrative FeatureRezeta, dir. by Fernando Frias De La Parra. Rezeta, a 21-year-old model born in Kosovo, arrives in Mexico City after living off of her beauty in many different countries. Soon she meets Alex, the guy in charge of cleaning her trailer during her first commercial gig in Mexico. Their friendship unfolds naturally, but after two failed attempts at dating stereotypical Mexican males Rezeta becomes romantically interested in Alex. This is the story of their complicated love.

The award winner was granted $3,500 in legal services from Pierce Law Group, and $5,000 in film from Kodak.

Jury Special Mention for Original VisionI Play with the Phrase Each Other, dir. by Jay Alvarez. The first feature film composed entirely of cell phone calls. Jake, a young neurotic, is persuaded to leave his small home town and move to the city to live with Sean, a fanatical poet who survives by swindling inexperienced Craigslist customers. When Jake arrives, Sean has disappeared, and as he struggles to secure a job and a place to stay, Jake discovers a nocturnal world of neon poverty in which his friend is thriving.

JURY AWARDS – DOCUMENTARY

This year’s Slamdance Documentary Jury Prizes were selected by the esteemed panel of industry members Tim League, Monteith McCollum, and Herb Stratford.

Jury Award for Documentary FeatureElliot, dir. by Matthew Bauckman and Jaret Belliveau. The bizarre story of Elliot “White Lightning” Scott, who plans on becoming Canada’s first action hero with his low-budget karate epic, Blood Fight.This surreal documentary captures two years in the lives of a passionate amateur filmmaker, his supportive partner Linda Lum, and their cast and crew of outrageous dreamers – all striving to achieve success.

The award winner was granted $3,500 in legal services from Pierce Law Group, and $5,000 in film from Kodak.

Jury Special Mention for Most Compelling Personal JourneyHuntington’s Dance, dir. by Chris Furbee. The story of one man’s reckoning with his family’s brutal, hereditary disease: Huntington’s Disease. This first person account brings the viewer intimately into their lives. We see his denial, his mother’s death, his grappling with being tested and his eventual diagnosis. His path from caretaker, to victim to activist is tracked in a unique diary fashion over the course of 18 years.

Jury Award for Documentary ShortGlass Eyes of Locust Bayou, dir. by Simon Mercer. Arkansas-based film-maker Phil Chambliss documents rural life through a blurred and tangled haze; his films straddle fact and fiction, good and evil, documenting a dark and strange version of Americana.

Jury Special Mention for Cinematography in a Documentary ShortWhite Earth, dir. by J. Christian Jensen. Thousand of desperate souls flock to America’s Northern Plains seeking work in the oil fields. A tale of three children and an immigrant mother who brave a cruel winter and explore themes of innocence, home and the American Dream.

JURY AWARDS – SHORT FILMS

The below Short Film Jury Prizes were selected by the esteemed panel of industry members Andrew Edison, Lise Raven, and David Greenspan.

Jury Award for Narrative ShortDaybreak, dir. by Ian Lagarde. Growing tension in a group of friends leads to quiet violence and destruction as the children enter adolescence.

Jury Special Mention for Narrative ShortThe Way, dir. by Max Ksjonda. A neglected teenager makes a bet with his friends that leads him on a dangerous trip to another city.

Jury Award for Animation ShortThe Path of Wind, dir. by Kim Ju-im. A human office chair unravels its legs and goes on a wildly imaginative psychedelic vision quest filled with both terror and beauty, leading to transformation into a musical instrument of liberation.

The below Short Film Jury Prizes were selected by the esteemed panel of industry members Skizz Cyzyk, Jacques Thelemaque, and Kendall & Joey Shanks.

Jury Award for Experimental ShortReal Ethereal, dir. by Evan Mann. An otherworldly journey through a fantastical metaphysical realm saturated with mystery and transition.

Jury Award for Anarchy ShortWawd Ahp, dir. by Steve Girard. A man raps, cuts his head off, and has sex with it. There is also a cartoon.

SPECIAL AWARDS

Spirit of Slamdance AwardThe Greggs, dir. by Bruce Bundy, Nigel DeFriez, Rob Malone, Kira Pearson, Alex Mechanik, Jessie Levandov, Jonathan Rosenblit. The esoteric and secluded group responsible for the creation of the world’s standardized tests must find a way to adapt when their way of life is threatened by dissent within their ranks.

The award winner was granted a MovieMagic Software Bundle from Entertainment Partners.

Blackmagic Design Cinematography AwardSometimes I Dream I’m Flying, dir. by Aneta Popiel-Machnicka. Weronika is a young, outstandingly talented dancer. Since she was ten years old ballet has been her entire life, day in day out, striving for excellence. Weronika’s private life, pain, loneliness and exhaustion remain somewhere in the background, brushed aside, until she suffers a serious injury just two days before a performance that is vital to her career, at the Berlin Opera.

The award winner was granted a Blackmagic Cinema Camera from Blackmagic Design, and a 4-week accessory rental package from Abelcine.

Slamdance Trailer Competition Grand Prize, presented by MixBitLove Steaks, dir. by Jakob Lass. A luxury hotel. Steaks frizzle, muffintops getting massaged. Clemens (rare) joins the wellness area as a rookie. Lara (well-done) needs to assert herself in the kitchen pack. The elevator brings the two of them together. Hanging in dependence. They encounter each other, until they clash. He – a masseur. She – a cook. A couple of punches.

 

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