Danish director Thomas Vinterberg is among
the contenders for the 2013 Nordic Council Film Prize, complete with
$62,000 (DKK 350,000).
Vinterberg, who last won the prize in 2010 with Submarino, will be among five nominated directors.
The line-up includes:
“´The
human face´, the individual facing the group or society, and respect
and dignity are common themes that run like a thread through all these
films,” said managing director Hanne Palmquist, of the Nordisk Film
& TV Fond, which administers the prize.
“A Nordic reality sets
the framework where daily life and its dilemmas are portrayed by
eminent actors with empathy, humour and credibility. The nominated films
are of high international quality, have a personal voice and something
genuine at heart,” she added.
Vinterberg´s The Hunt
won three prizes at Cannes, including Best Actor for Mads Mikkelsen in
the lead as a kindergarten teacher who struggles for his reputation
after being falsely accused of child abuse. Also taking the European
Film Award for Best Screenwriters (Vinterberg, Tobias Lindholm), the
film was released in Norway six months after the Cannes premiere and has
so far reached 675,000 admissions.
Flying the Finnish colours, Open Up to Me is Halinen´s first feature since 2001´s Cyclomania;
a psychological drama about sexual identities - “and a main character
(Leea Klemola) who is not even capable of lying to herself,” according
to the director - it explores modern relationships where nothing can be
taken for granted. “We have to draw the lines and, sometimes, when our
hearts tell us to, cross them.”
Awarded 11 Eddas - Iceland´s national film prize - including Best Film, Kormákur´s The Deep
depicts the Westman incident, the true story that begins on a cold
night in March 1984 when a fishing boat sank with its entire crew a few
miles off the South Coast of Iceland. But one man (played by Ólafur
Darri Ólafsson) miraculously survived to become a national hero as well
as an inexplicable scientific phenomenon due to his superhuman
accomplishment.
Named Best Norwegian Film 2012 by the Norwegian
Critics Association, Haugerud´s feature debut - “a tragicomedy about the
human factor” went on to win four Amandas (the national film prize)
including Best Film, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay.
I Belong
follows three women who all have a small soft spot in their
personalities, and who are hit hard when their idiosyncrasies meet the
light of the day.
The Swedish nominee, Pichler´s first feature was
launched at last year´s Venice International Film Festival to win the
Audience Award in the Critics´ Week.
Also taking four national Guldbagga
prizes, comprising Best Film, Best Director and Best Script, it
portrays a 20-year-old jobless girl in a small village, who wants her
life to be more than eat sleep die, while trying to meet state demands that unemployed look for work in the whole country.
The winner of the Nordic Council Film Prize will be announced at a ceremony on Oct 30 at the Oslo Opera House.
Previous
recipients include Danish directors Thomas Vinterberg, Lars von Trier,
Peter Schønau Fog, Per Fly; Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki; and Swedish
directors Ruben Østlund, Pernilla August, Roy Andersson and Josef
Fares.