Virgin Mountain was awarded the top prize at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival, taking home the Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature.
The Icelandic-Danish film from writer director Dagur Kári, tells the story of a 43-year-old virgin who joins a dance class. Tribeca Film Festival founders Robert De Niro and Jane Rosenthal presented Kári with the award on Thursday at the prize ceremony. Whoopi Goldberg and Dylan McDermott were just a few members of the World Narrative Competition Jury that determined the winner.
“With its mixture of humor and pathos, this film captured our hearts. Beyond the relatively small frame of a mismatched love story, the film deals with the issues of bigotry, loneliness, bullying, mental illness, and ultimately the triumph of the human spirit and the meaning of love,” said the Jury in a statement.
Virgin Mountain also took home awards for Best Screenplay and Best Actor in a Narrative Film for lead, Gunnar Jónsson.
Fellow Danish film, Bridgend took home awards for Best Cinematography, Best Narrative Editing and Best Actress in a Narrative Feature Film. Democrats, yet another Danish film, won the prize for Best Documentary Feature.
Young American filmmaker Zachary Treitz won the award for Best New Narrative Director for his feature Men Go To Battle. “Zachary Treitz presented us with a combination of approaches not all that easy to put together: a unique and sincere vision, alongside off-beat humor, alongside historical and emotional authenticity,” wrote the Jury.
The Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature: Virgin Mountain (Iceland, Denmark) – written and directed by Dagur Kári
Best Actor in a Narrative Feature Film: Virgin Mountain – Gunnar Jónsson
Best Actress in a Narrative Feature Film: Hannah Murray in Bridgend (Denmark)
Best Cinematography: Magnus Jønck for Bridgend
Best Screenplay: Dagur Kári for Virgin Mountain
Best Narrative Editing: Oliver Bugge Coutté for Bridgend
Best Documentary Feature: Democrats (Denmark) – directed by Camilla Nielsson
Special Jury Mention: In Transit (USA) – directed by Albert Maysles, Nelson Walker, Lynn True, David Usui and Ben Wu
Best Documentary Editing: Valerio Bonelli for Palio (UK, Italy)
Best New Narrative Director: Zachary Treitz for Men Go To Battle (USA)
Special Jury Mention: Stephen Fingleton for The Survivalist (Northern Ireland, UK)
Albert Maysles New Documentary Director Award: Ewan McNicol and Anna Sandilands for Uncertain (USA)
Special Jury Mention: Erik Shirai for The Birth of Saké (USA)
Best Narrative Short: Listen (Finland, Denmark) – directed by Hamy Ramezan and Rungano Nyoni
Special Jury Mention Narrative Short: Statistical Analysis of Your Failing Relationship – directed by Miles Jay
Best Documentary Short: Body Team 12 (Liberia) – directed by David Darg
Special Jury Mention Documentary Short: We Live This – directed by James Burns (USA)
Student Visionary Award: Catwalk (Sweden) – directed by Ninja Thyberg
Special Jury Mention Student Visionary Award: Kingdom of Garbage (Iraq, UK) – directed by Yasir Kareem
BOMBAY SAPPHIRE STORYSCAPES AWARD: Door Into the Dark created by Amy Rose and May Abdalla at Anagram (UK)
THE NORA EPHRON PRIZE: Sworn Virgin – directed by Laura Bispuri and written by Francesca Manieri and Bispuri (Albania, Germany, Italy, Kosovo, Switzerland)
Special Jury Mention Nora Ephron Prize: Being 14 – written and directed by Hélène Zimmer (France)
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