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Edition 2021

Films

Tributes and Retrospectives - Jane Campion

Festivals and Awards:

Venice Festival – Special Jury Grand Prix
TIFF – International Critics Award Valladolid Festival – Best Actress Award (Kerry Fox)
Independent Spirit Awards – Best Foreign Film
Chicago Critics Association Awards – Best Foreign Language Film

Crew:

Screenplay: Laura Jones (a partir das autobiografias de Janet Frame)
Cinematography: Stuart Dryburgh
Producers: Bridget Ikin, John Maynard

An Angel at My Table

A film by Jane Campion

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Similar to what happened with David Lynch's Mulholland Drive, Jane Campion initially conceived the adaptation of the New Zealand novelist and poetess' three autobiographical volumes – To the Island, An Angel at My Table and The Envoy from Mirror City – as a television miniseries , but after production had already begun, the New Zealand Film Commission proposed to turn it into a biopic with theatrical distribution, apparently because they believed that it was a genre that would work well in cinema. The film tells, in a logic of small, interconnected and impressionist live paintings, the story of Janet (Kerry Fox), a writer who, at age 23, was wrongly diagnosed with schizophrenia and who went through a long ordeal of psychiatric treatments, having even been about to undergo a lobotomy at the time she released her first book (a collection of short stories), which was only avoided when it became known that she had won the Hubert Church Memorial Prize, one of the most important literary distinctions in her country.
  • Cast:

    Kerry Fox, Alexia Keogh, Kevin J. Wilson
  • Original Title:

    An Angel at My Table
  • Country:

    Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom
  • Year:

    1990
  • 158’ Subtitles: PT

Festivals and Awards:

Venice Festival – Special Jury Grand Prix
TIFF – International Critics Award Valladolid Festival – Best Actress Award (Kerry Fox)
Independent Spirit Awards – Best Foreign Film
Chicago Critics Association Awards – Best Foreign Language Film

Crew:

Screenplay: Laura Jones (a partir das autobiografias de Janet Frame)
Cinematography: Stuart Dryburgh
Producers: Bridget Ikin, John Maynard

Director

Jane Campion

Jane Campion is a New Zealand filmmaker and screenwriter whose films often portray female characters who live on the fringes of society. She is the second of five women nominated for the Oscar for Best Director and the first – the second was Julia Ducournau, in this year's edition – woman to receive the Palm d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Some of her notable works include The Piano (1993), In the Cut (2003) and Bright Star (2009). At this year’s Venice Film Festival, Campion won the Silver Lion for Best Director with The Power of the Dog (2021), her most recent project, which will be shown in LEFFEST as part of the retrospective dedicated to her filmography.

Although her parents were involved in the New Zealand theater scene, Campion initially rejected a career in the performing arts. She graduated with a degree in Anthropology from Victoria University of Wellington (1975), and later completed a Masters in Visual Arts (Painting) at the University of Sydney (1981). However, she decided to take up cinema and enrolled in the Australian Film Television and Radio School (1984). During this period, she directed several short films, including Peel (1982), which won the Palme d'Or in the Short Film category at the Cannes Film Festival in 1986. Her first feature film, Sweetie (1989), was showcased at Cannes and won some international awards. An Angel at My Table (1990), a biopic about the life of New Zealand writer Janet Frame, brought her more recognition. With The Piano (1993), she won the Palm d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1993 and an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. The film was also nominated for an Oscar for Best Picture, and Campion for an Oscar for Best Director. Her subsequent films include: The Portrait of a Lady (1996), an adaptation of the Henry James novel starring Nicole Kidman and John Malkovich, Holy Smoke! (1999) with Kate Winslet and Harvey Keitel, and the thriller In the Cut (2003), with Meg Ryan, Mark Ruffalo and Jennifer Jason Leigh. More recently, she co-wrote and co-directed the critically acclaimed and commercially successful television series Top of the Lake (2013, 2017).
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