Short films from the Middle East, Europe, Australia and USA have taken out the top awards at this year’s Uni Shorts International Student Film Festival held by our Performing & Screen Arts (Creative Industries) on Saturday.
Auckland schools swept the New Zealand Secondary Schools section. Seventeen-year-old King’s College student Quinn Dacre took out the top prize for his animated short, Acceptance which he drew himself on 1000 post-it notes. Runner up was Intensive Care, a documentary about New Zealand’s health system from the point of view of a South Auckland-based doctor, directed by Western Springs College student Donald Mayo.
A film about a young boy looking for salvation in a European refugee camp took out the Best Fiction Postgraduate Award. Aamir was influenced by Tisch School of the Arts student Vika Evdokimenko’s own experience as an immigrant. Barclay commented that “the Middle Eastern/Arab experience in Europe seemed to reappear quite often” in this year’s entries. Runner up went to University of Auckland master’s graduate, Adam Thorogood’s film Mute, about a mute teenage girl struggling to fit in.
The Best Fiction Undergraduate Award was won by Tehran University of Dramatic Arts graduate Arian Vazirdaftari’s film Like a good kid, about a series of events which changes the lives of a babysitter and a young boy forever. “This film stood out for me – the director got a great performance from the kid, and the story was beautifully and harshly told,” Barclay explains.
Spanish film school ECAM had two films named co-runners up in this category; Cuarteto and No Odies Al Jugador.
The Best Documentary Award went to Israeli film Lido, about an abandoned restaurant by the Dead Sea, by Uri Smoly from The Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film School. Barclay adds: “Lido was a clear winner for me. It took me somewhere interesting and had a sense of scale.” ECAM entry Concerto Em F was runner up.
German film Walls took out the Best Experimental Film. Co-directed and produced by Dortmund University students Maik Schuster, Fatmir Dolci, Max Paschke, Walls deals with the energy generated through human confrontations with walls. Runner up was Lucid from The Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film School.
Australia’s Griffith Film School won the Best Animation Award for Fifty-Two, by honours graduate, Brodie Stephenson, about an employee bound by contract working in an underground station who attempts to find his freedom. Spanish entry Vssanta from Valencia’s Barreira Art and Design School was runner up.
All category winners received NZD$100 prize money and a FilmConvert Bundle license worth NZD$320 sponsored by FilmConvert – a Wellington-based company that makes software for filmmakers.
For more information on the winning entries go to the Uni Shorts Film Festival page.