Mark Brown Arts correspondent 

‘Distressing and depressing’: stars bemoan Brexit at European film awards

Picking up honorary prize, Ralph Fiennes says ‘there is only the noise of division’
  
  

Actor Ralph Fiennes
Actor Ralph Fiennes collected a special award for European achievement in world cinema. Photograph: Cristina Quicler/AFP/Getty Images

Made by someone who is Scottish and Italian, filmed mostly in England, financed totally by the French and put through post-production in Belgium, The Death of Stalin is a particularly European film, its director, Armando Iannucci, noted as he picked up a European award.

“It just shows what a good idea it is for countries to co-operate together and work with the British in, let’s call it a European community, a European union. It worked very well, I’m going to take that idea back to the United Kingdom,” he said.

Iannucci was speaking at the annual European film awards, founded in Berlin in 1988 as a kind of arthouse alternative to the Oscars, where The Death of Stalin was named best comedy film of 2018.

The biggest winner at Saturday’s ceremony was Cold War, by Poland’s Paweł Pawlikowski, a love story set in the shadow of the iron curtain. Its five awards included best film, best screenplay and best director.

Apart from in a short comedy sketch by the presenters, the word Brexit was barely uttered at the ceremony in Seville. But, like the flamenco tapping throughout, it was there in the air.

A visibly moved Ralph Fiennes, accepting a special award for European achievement in world cinema, said it was “distressing and depressing” to witness the debate in his own country “about who we are in relation to Europe”.

“In England now there is only the noise of division,” he said.

Film provided some hope by celebrating “our differences of language, culture, custom, and our common humanity,” he said. “I believe film-makers are unifiers. Our work is by definition collaborative, it has to be to survive.”

He said the idea of being allowed to “breathe free” was being challenged in multiple ways. “Not only by populist sentiment but by the slow pressure of political correctness and the creeping manipulation of social media.”

Fiennes was accepting an honorary award for his stellar career spanning Schindler’s List and The English Patient to Coriolanus, Voldemort and James Bond’s M.

The comedy award that went to Iannucci’s Stalinist-era satire was voted on by more than 3,500 members of the European Film Academy. Iannucci joked that they were brave, given that his film was banned in Russia.

“You’re all now on the list. Don’t eat or touch anything, but apart from that have a good evening.”

The best actor award went to Italian Marcello Fonte for his lead role in Matteo Garrone’s Dogman, in which he plays a nerdy, likeable dog groomer with a darker side. Dogman won three awards on the night.

Joanna Kulig won the best actress award for Cold War. Being seven months pregnant, she could not fly from Los Angeles for the ceremony.

The best documentary award went to Jane Magnussen for Bergman – A Year in a Life, which focuses on 1957, the year Ingmar Bergman made Wild Strawberries and The Seventh Seal as well as important TV and theatre work.

Other awards included the discovery prize, given to Lukas Dhont for his trans film Girl, a Belgian contender for the foreign-language Oscar; and best animated feature film, presented to Raúl de la Fuente and Damian Nenow for Another Day of Life, which explores the 1975 Angola civil war.

The people’s choice award went to Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me By Your Name.

Other special awards went to the film-maker Costa-Gavras and the Spanish actor Carmen Maura. They were both given by the president of the EFA, Wim Wenders, who, perhaps conscious of how long the ceremony was dragging on, chose to wear a long overcoat and fedora hat for the second presentation.

 

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