European Film Award Winners

Stellan Skarsgard and Renate Reinsve took best actor and best actress honor at the European Film Awards Saturday night for playing father and daughter in Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value. Skarsgard won a Golden Globe for best supporting actor for the same role just last week. Both he and Reinsve are considered strong Oscar contenders.
Sentimental Value scored another EFA trophy, with Trier and Eskil Vogt winning the best screenplay honors.
The 38th EFAs made a shift from December to mid-January this year, in the hope of boosting buzz around European contenders for international honors.
It appears to be working.
All of this year’s EFA Best Film nominees are Oscar contenders: Joachim Trier‘s Norwegian melodrama Sentimental Value, Jafar Panahi‘s Palme d’Or winning Iranian/French moral thriller It Was Just an Accident, Olivier Laxe’s post-apocalyptic road movie Sirāt, Mascha Schilinski’s multi-generational German period film Sound of Falling, and Kaouther Ben Hania’s harrowing Gaza drama The Voice of Hind Rajab.
In the EFA’s director’s race, Panahi, Laxe, Trier and Schilinski are going up against Yorgos Lanthimos, nominated for the Emma Stone/Jessie Plemons starrer Bugonia.
Sirāt and Sound of Falling picked up some crafts wins early on. Sirāt won best production design, sound design, editing, and the inaugural best casting award. Sound of Falling took the trophy for European Costume Design. Best documentary went to Fiume o Morte!, Igor Bezinović’s darkly-comic reconstruction of an Italian protofaccist takeover of Bezinović’s home town of Rijeka, in what is now Croatia.
‘Sirat‘
Quim Vives
Another Oscar hopeful, Ugo Bienvenu’s hopeful animated fantasy Arco, won the top prize for European Animation Feature Film. Torsten Witte took the first-ever hair and make-up EFA honor for Bugonia.
But anyone expecting an Oscar-style awards ceremony on Saturday, or a “no politics please” event akin to the Golden Globes, were in for a surprise. Politics were front-and-center at the EFAs from the get-go.
Iranian director Panahi took the stage, to a standing ovation, ahead of the ceremony to read a statement about the dire situation in his home country. Decrying the violence of the regime in Tehran, and the massacre of anti-government protestors, he called on the world to speak out and take action.
“This is not just the pain of one country if the world does not respond to this blatant violence today. Not only Iran but the entire world is at risk,” he said. “Violence left unanswered becomes normalized and when it become normalized, it’s spread become contagious. When the truth is crushed in one place, freedom suffocates everywhere. Then no-one is safe. Anywhere in the world, not in Iran, not in Europe, not in America… that is precisely why today as filmmakers and artists more than ever, if we are disappointed with politicians, we must at least must refuse to remain silent because silence in a time of crime is not neutrality silence, silence is a participation in darkness.”
Jafar Panahi speaks onstage during the award ceremony of the 38th European Film Awards
Andreas Rentz/Getty Images
Panahi was speaking ten days into a brutal crackdown of nationwide protests by Iran’s hardline government. At least 3,000 protestors are believed to have been killed and another 18,000 arrested. In his speech, Panahi spoke of a reported 12,000 deaths.
Liv Ullmann, the two-time Oscar-nominated Norwegian actress and director, best known for such 1970s classics as Cries and Whispers, and Scenes From a Marriage, received the EFA’s lifetime achievement honor. She used the opportunity to take a sly jab at Trump, noting that Norway has a rule “that if you misuse the Nobel Prize, we take it away from you,” a reference to Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado’s decision, widely criticized, to give her Nobel peace prize medal to Trump. “Somebody in power in the United States may be disappointed. He will lose it.”
Alice Rohrwacher, the Italian director of La Chimera, Futura, and Happy as Lazzaro was honored with the European Achievement in World Cinema Award. She dedicated it to “my great love, my sister [actress] Alba”. She added a political coda, calling on the audience to remain “obstinate and contrary” in the face of those who call for “war, new weapons and extractivism — as if the world were a cash mine” to remind them “that we are many.”
Check out the full list of winners below.
EUROPEAN FILM
Afternoons of Solitude
Arco
Dog of God
Fiume o Morte!, dir. Igor Bezinović
It Was Just an Accident, dir. Jafar Panahi
Little Amelie, dir. Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han
Olivia and the Invisible Earthquake, dir. Irene Iborra Rizo
Riefenstahl, dir. Andres Veiel
Sentimental Value, dir. Joachim Trier
Sirāt, dir. Oliver Laxe
Songs of Slow Burning Earth, dir. Olha Zhurba
Sound of Falling, dir. Mascha Schilinski
Tales From the Magic Garden, dir. David Súkup, Patrik Pašš, Leon Vidmar and Jean-Claude Rozec
The Voice of Hind Rajab, dir. Kaouther Ben Hania
With Hasan in Gaza, dir. Kamal Aljafari
EUROPEAN DOCUMENTARY
Afternoons of Solitude, dir. Albert Serra
Fiume o Morte!, dir. Igor Bezinović (WINNER)
Riefenstahl, dir. Andres Veiel
Songs of Slow Burning Earth, dir. Olha Zhurba
With Hasan in Gaza, dir. Kamal Aljafari
EUROPEAN ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
Arco (WINNER)
Dog of God
Little Amelie
Olivia and the Invisible Earthquake
Tales From the Magic Garden
EUROPEAN DIRECTOR
Yorgos Lanthimos for Bugonia
Oliver Laxe for Sirāt
Jafar Panahi for It Was Just an Accident
Mascha Schilinski for Sound of Falling
Joachim Trier for Sentimental Value
EUROPEAN ACTRESS
Leonie Benesch for Late Shift
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi for Duse
Léa Drucker for Case 137
Vicky Krieps for Love Me Tender
Renate Reinsve for Sentimental Value (WINNER)
EUROPEAN ACTOR
Sergi López for Sirāt
Mads Mikkelsen for The Last Viking
Toni Servillo for La Grazia
Stellan Skarsgård for Sentimental Value (WINNER)
Idan Weiss for Franz
EUROPEAN SCREENWRITER
Santiago Fillol and Oliver Laxe for Sirāt
Jafar Panahi for It Was Just an Accident
Mascha Schilinski and Louise Peter for Sound of Falling
Paolo Sorrentino for La Grazia
Eskil Vogt and Joachim Trier for Sentimental Value (WINNER)
EUROPEAN DISCOVERY – PRIX FIPRESCI
Little Trouble Girls, dir. Urška Djukić
My Father’s Shadow, dir. Akinola Davies Jr
On Falling, dir. Laura Carreira (WINNER)
One of Those Days When Hemme Dies, dir. Murat Fıratoğlu
Sauna, dir. Mathias Broe
Under the Grey Sky, dir. Mara Tamkovich
EUROPEAN YOUNG AUDIENCE AWARD
Arco
I Accidentally Wrote a Book
Siblings (WINNER)
EUROPEAN CINEMATOGRAPHER
Mauro Herce for Sirāt
Fabian Gamper for Sound of Falling
Manu Dacosse for The Stranger
EUROPEAN EDITOR
Yorgos Mavropsaridis for Bugonia
Toni Froschhammer for Die My Love
Cristóbal Fernández for Sirāt (WINNER)
EUROPEAN PRODUCTION DESIGNER
James Price for Bugonia
Jørgen Stangebye Larsen for Sentimental Value
Laia Ateca for Sirāt (WINNER)
EUROPEAN COSTUME DESIGNER
Ursula Patzak for Duse
Michaela Horáčková Hořejší for Franz
Sabrina Krämer for Sound of Falling (WINNER)
EUROPEAN CASTING DIRECTOR
Yngvill Kolset Haga and Avy Kaufman for Sentimental Value
Nadia Acimi, Luís Bértolo and María Rodrigo for Sirāt (WINNER)
Karimah El-Giamal and Jacqueline Rietz for Sound of Falling
EUROPEAN MAKE-UP & HAIR ARTIST
Torsten Witte for Bugonia (WINNER)
Gabriela Poláková for Franz
Irina Schwarz and Anne-Marie Walther for Sound of Falling
EUROPEAN SOUND DESIGNER
Johnnie Burn for Bugonia
Laia Casanovas, Amanda Villavieja and Yasmina Praderas for Sirāt (WINNER)
Gwennolé Le Borgne, Marion Papinot, Lars Ginzel, Elias Boughedir and Amal Attia for The Voice of Hind Rajab
LUX AUDIENCE AWARD
Christy
Deaf
It Was Just an Accident
Love Me Tender
Sentimental Value
EUROPEAN SHORT FILM – PRIX VIMEO
Being John Smith
City of Poets (WINNER)
L’Avance
Man Number 4
The Flowers Stand Silently, Witnessing



