The New York Times | 25 May 2013
CANNES, France — An autobiographical French-Cambodian film, "The Missing
Picture," which explores the bloody history of Pol Pot's dictatorship
in late 1970s Cambodia, has won the "Un Certain Regard" prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
To rousing applause, director Rithy Panh collected the award at a
ceremony Saturday night, expressing his gratitude to be able "to have
the freedom to do the films I want to do."
Panh's film, based on his nightmarish memoir "The Elimination,"
documents his own family's experience under the heavy-handed Communist
Party's Khmer Rouge, which resulted in the death of his parents and
sisters.
The "Un Certain Regard" accolade, presented one day before the Palme
d'Or and decided by a jury of cinema insiders, rewards works from
up-and-coming filmmakers or those that transmit original messages and
aesthetics.
The premise of the "missing picture" in the film is that because of
censorship within Cambodia, no photo exists that documents the
atrocities committed against Panh's his family and relatives during Pol
Pot's four-year reign of terror from 1975 to 1979.
The tale is told using old documentary footage, or whatever footage
remained from the time, which was mainly of propaganda by the
dictatorship. To represent his deceased relatives, Panh used hundreds of
carefully carved clay figures.
He praised all of the 18 works, which, as well as including several
directorial debuts, were made up of a handful from well-known filmmakers
such as Sofia Coppola, who opened the category with "The Bling Ring."
"This selection was ferociously non-sentimental but poetic nonetheless.
It was political, highly original, sometimes disturbing, varied, but
above all unforgettable," Vinterberg said.
"Clay figurines, extreme beauty, violence... systematic humiliation of
human nature... are images that will follow us for a long time...
Moments that remain in our collective memory, a mirror of our
existence," he added.
The "Jury Prize," the category's secondary award, was awarded to the Palestinian film "Omar," a war-torn love story, directed by Hany Abu-Assad.
Vinterberg was one of a five-strong jury that included French actress
Ludivine Sagnier and Chinese starlet Zhang Ziyi, who came to the stage
wearing a sparkling white couture gown.

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