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Spanish tale of threatened family farm ‘Alcarras’ wins Berlinale’s Golden Bear

Jury president M Night Shyamalan praised director Carla Simon’s skill



Carla Simon receives the Golden Bear for best film for her movie 'Alcarras' during the awarding ceremony at the International Film Festival Berlin 'Berlinale', in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2022.
Image Credit: AP

Spanish director Carla Simon’s film “Alcarras,” which explores the divisions ripped into a close-knit family of Catalan farmers when they face eviction from their ancestral plot, won the Berlin Film Festival’s top prize on Wednesday.

Simon herself grew up on a peach farm in the village of Alcarras, and her film was made using amateur actors from that area whom she recruited at village fairs and coached into playing several generations of a family of smallholders.

Announcing the best film award, the festival’s first since returning to in-person screenings after last year’s coronavirus-enforced break, jury president M Night Shyamalan praised her skill in marshalling powerful performances from a cast that ranged from child actors to people in their 80s.

Director Carla Simon and producers Maria Zamora, Giovanni Pompili, Stefan Schmitz and Tono Folguera pose with the Golden Bear.
Image Credit: Reuters

“This is really amazing because it is a small story about farmers and my family of farmers and a small village, and it’s so local so it feels so well that it will travel,” Simon said afterwards on the red carpet, celebrating the global attention she hopes her film will receive thanks to the prize.

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She described her film as a study of intergenerational tensions and how they and other fissures can be deepened by the trauma of seeing the death of a way of life once thought eternal.

During an emotional ceremony in which several winners dedicated awards to friends who had died of COVID-19, the best documentary award went to ‘Myanmar Diaries,’ a documentary shot by 10 anonymous filmmakers whose footage was smuggled out and stitched into a portrait of life in Myanmar since last year’s coup.

The best short film was awarded to recent graduate Anastasia Veber’s ‘Trap’, a 20-minute portrait of the lives of young adults in Russia who party the nights away, chasing hedonism and trying to evade police checks.

‘Rabiye Kurnaz vs George W. Bush,’ an account of Kurnaz’s struggle to get her son returned to Germany from the US prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, won awards for best screenplay and best lead performance, which went to German-Turkish comedian Meltem Kaptan for her portrayal of the mother who bends the world to her will through the sheer power of love.

Berlinale 2022 International Jury President and US filmmaker M Night Shyamalan and Spanish director and screenwriter Carla Simon.

Spanish director and screenwriter Carla Simon.

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