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Stephen Page’s Spear snags APSA accolade

Australian director Stephen Page has won an Asia Pacific Screen Award  Special Mention for feature film Spear at a ceremony in Brisbane.

Spear tells a contemporary Indigenous story through movement and Dance. 

The film follows young Indigenous man, Djali, as learns the ancient tradtions of becoming a man in a modern world.

Cemetery of Splendour, from Thai auteur Apichatpong Weerasethakul, won Best Feature Film.

Films from Thailand, Russian Federation, Turkey, People’s Republic of China, Japan, Palestine, Korea, Taiwan, Japan and Australia received accolades at the event.

The awards recognise and promote cinematic excellence and cultural diversity of the world’s fastest-growing film region: comprising 70 countries and areas, 4.5 billion people, and responsible for half of the world’s film output. In 2015, 39 films from 22 Asia Pacific countries and areas received APSA nominations.

The APSA UNESCO Award for outstanding contribution to the promotion and preservation of cultural diversity through film was awarded to Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad for The Idol (Ya Tayr El Tayer, Palestine, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Netherlands).

Assad, from the set of his new film, said "Thank you dear jury for this great honor, giving us the UNESCO Award is a courageous decision at this time. The world seems to lose hope in the future. The Idol is a film about hope and our job as an artist is to keep believing in a better future. Our main job is to let people believe in making the world better, and to believe yourself that you can make a difference," he said. 

Editor Eyas Salman, who also edited Abu-Assad’s 2013 APSA Best Feature Film winner Omar, accepted the award on the night. The Idol is inspired by the true story of 2013 Arab Idol winner Mohammed Assaf, whose rise to fame both gave hope to and united a people. Assaf has gone on to become the first Regional Youth Ambassador for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency in the six decades of the organisation’s history.

APSA Chairman Michael Hawkins said APSA was a vital platform that allowed the voices and images of film to be promoted and acclaimed. 

In 2015 more than 300 films from 41 countries came to APSA in Competition, evidence that Asia Pacific is alive with vibrant and fearless filmmakers.’

The 5 feature craft awards and three special mentions were determined by the six member International Jury, consisting of Jury President, APSA Patron and Korean film industry legend Kim Dong-Ho, celebrated Iranian actress Negar Javaherian, award-winning writer/director Mostofa Sarwar Farooki (Bangladesh), distinguished director/writer/curator/producer and Beijing Film Academy Professor, Zhang Xianmin (People’s Republic of China), leading figure of Malaysian new wave cinema, writer/director, U-Wei Bin HajiSaari and renowned Russian writer/director Alexei Popogrebsky, who represents APSA’s Academy alliance with the European Film Academy (EFA). 

The APSA for Achievement in Directing goes to Russian director Alexey German Jr for Under Electric Clouds (Pod elektricheskimi oblakami, Russian Federation, Ukraine, Poland). The award was accepted on the night by actress Victoria Korotkova.

Best Performance by an Actor went to Korean superstar Jung Jaeyoung for his role in Right Now, Wrong Then (Jigeumeun Matgo Geuttaeneun Teullida, Republic of Korea) by Korean auteur Hong Sang-soo. 

Best Performance by an Actress was awarded to Kirin Kiki, one of the most influential actresses in Japan, for An (Japan, France, Germany). Kiki is the first Japanese actress to win APSA Best Performance by the Actress in the nine-year history of the event.

The jury gave a Special Mention to iconic Iranian actress Fatemeh Motamed Arya for her performance in Avalanche (Bahman, Islamic Republic of Iran).

Cinematographer Mark Lee Ping-bing took out the award for Achievement in Cinematography for Hou Hsiao-hsien’s The Assassin (Nie Yinniang, Taiwan). 

Mark Lee Ping-bing has previously received two nominations in this category, in 2011 for Norwegian Wood and 2007 for The Sun Also Rises.

The Jury gave a Special Mention for Achievement in Cinematography to Lu Songye for Tharlo (People's Republic of China).

The APSA for Best Screenplay was awarded to writer/director Senem Tüzen for Motherland (Ana Yurdu, Turkey, Greece).

The APSA International Jury awarded two Jury Grand Prizes for 2015, to: Park Jungbum for writing/directing/acting in Alive (Sanda), 

(Republic of Korea) and Emin Alper for writing and directing Frenzy (Abluka).

Winners in three feature categories were determined by the APSA Youth, Animation and Documentary International Jury. 

The 2015 jury consisted of Jury Chairperson writer/director/producer Shawkat Amin Korki (Iraqi Kurdistan), winner of the 2015 APSA UNESCO Award for Memories on Stone, Yuka Sakano (Japan), head of international relations for the Kawakita Memorial Film Institute in Tokyo, and Sam Ho (Hong Kong, PRC), a curator, researcher, teacher, writer and critic specialising in Hong Kong cinema.

River (Gtsngbo, People’s Republic of China), produced by Sangye and Alexandra Sun, co-produced by Pema Tseden and Du Qingchun, won the Best Youth Feature Film. River, the touching story told from the perspective of a young Tibetan girl, is directed by APSA Academy member Sonthar Gyal who was a 2011 APSA Children’s Film Fund recipient for the project. The Jury awarded River as the winner ‘for realising a child’s special vision of humanity through an expression at once serene, spiritual and cinematic.’

Best Documentary Feature Film winner is The Chinese Mayor (Datong, People's Republic of China), produced by Zhao Qi. The jury called the film ‘A powerful and provocative representation of a country going through radical change at a rapid pace, with a multi-faceted but even-handed portrayal of cultural, economic and political forces.’

Winner of the APSA for Best Animated Feature Film is Miss Hokusai (Sarusuberi: Miss Hokusai, Japan), produced by Keiko Matsushita and Asako Nishikawa. 

The prestigious APSA FIAPF Award for Outstanding Achievement in Film in the Asia Pacific region was awarded to Egyptian screen icon Esaad Younis. Younis accepted the award on the night from Asia Pacific Screen Academy President Jack Thompson AM.

The APSA Academy NETPAC Development Prize was awarded to actor turned director Mirlan Abdykalykov for his debut feature film Heavenly Nomadic (Sutak) from Kyrgyzstan. 

All nominees, International Nominations Council and APSA International Jury members are inducted into the APSA Academy led over by President, Australian screen legend Jack Thompson. 

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