CIDF
2003 AWARDS

THE
DAMNED AND THE SACRED
and
director Jos de Putter
snare
Chicago Doc Grand Prix,
including
a statuette and $10,000 USD
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE - APRIL 2, 2003
This
past weekend, THE DAMNED AND THE SACRED (aka DANS, GROZNY
DANS aka DANCE, GROZNY, DANCE) and director Jos de Putter
picked up the Chicago Doc Grand Prix at the First Chicago
International Doc Film Festival. The award includes a statuette
and $10,000.
A
jury selected THE DAMNED AND THE SACRED from a field of 23
competition films. The jury was composed of Tod Lending (Chicago-based,
Academy AwardŽ-nominated documentary director), Andréa Picard
(Cinematheque Ontario and the Toronto International Film Festival
Group), and Karel Och (documentary programmer at the Karlovy
Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic).
The
first Chicago International Doc Film Festival screened 119
films from over two-dozen countries at five venues over ten
days (March 21-30, 2003).
A
breathtaking portrait of a civilian population in wartime,
THE DAMNED AND THE SACRED presents the current Chechen war
through the perspective of a traditional youth dance troupe,
its coach, and others in its circle. As they witness bombings
and cope with checkpoints and unfamiliar soldiers, the troupe
members stubbornly prepare a tour of western Europe. One of
the tour's goals is to show that Chechens are just ordinary
people. This film, however, reveals people who are anything
but ordinary: talented, dedicated, and shockingly professional
given both their ages and the conditions surrounding them.
Featuring exciting and often thrilling dances, THE DAMNED
AND THE SACRED presents a group of people struggling in the
most modest and non-confrontational way to declare and maintain
their cultural independence.
In
his acceptance speech, Jos de Putter dedicated the award to
the Chechen people.
THE
DAMNED AND THE SACRED has upcoming screenings at the Tribeca
Film Festival, the Hot Docs! Festival in Toronto, and elsewhere.
The
festival board, with the recommendation of the jury, granted
additional awards. Cinematographer Markku Lehmuskallio won
the $2,000 cinematography award for his work on MOTHERS
OF LIFE. Jose Padilha of BUS
174 and Travis Wilkerson of AN
INJURY TO ONE shared, ex aequo, the $2,000 innovation
award. The $1,000 audience award was given, ex aequo, to directors
Dierdre Lynch for PHOTOS
TO SEND and Robb Moss for THE
SAME RIVER TWICE.
Says
Executive Director Christopher Kamyszew: "We set out
to bring a world class documentary festival to Chicago. We
succeeded. Next year, we look forward to another successful
year, building on what we have learned this year."
The
festival featured dozens of international guests, from countries
including Argentina, Brazil, Canada, the Czech Republic, Japan,
Poland, Sweden, the United States, and beyond.
The
festival received excellent press. Television and radio coverage
appeared on NBC, CNN, WTTW Channel 11, and WBEZ radio. Print
coverage appeared in the CHICAGO TRIBUNE, THE DAILY SOUTHTOWN,
and other area papers. The CHICAGO READER called the festival
"ambitious and bountiful," and remarked that the
festival forces audiences to reexamine assumptions about the
state of cinema.
The
Chicago International Doc Film Festival is produced by the
Society for Arts, a Chicago-based 501(c)3 organization with
a fifteen-year tradition of presenting film and fine art across
North America, including the annual Polish
Film Festival in America, and ongoing exhibitions at the
1112 Gallery at 1112 North Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago.
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