Sweden’s “Vanguard” gained the Golden Nymph Award for greatest sequence on the sixty fourth Monte-Carlo Tv Competition Tuesday, whereas Sweden’s “On a Day in September” gained greatest fiction movie. Robin Wright acquired the Crystal Nymph Award from Prince Albert II of Monaco to acknowledge her profession achievements.
The ceremony made a clumsy begin when throughout a dance sequence between the co-hosts, British actor Ricky Whittle and French singer Shy’m, the latter suffered a wardrobe malfunction. The pair maintained their savoir faire and continued with the ceremony with out referring to the incident.
“Vanguard,” starring Jakob Oftebro, tells the story of real-life media mogul and technological trailblazer Jan Stenbeck. The lead author is Alex Haridi and the director is Goran Kapetanović.
“On a Day in September” seems to be at a gathering between German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and French Prime Minister Charles de Gaulle, which marked the delivery of the European unification motion. It was written by Fred Breinersdorfer and directed by Kai Wessel, and starred Burghart Klaußner and Jean-Yves Berteloot.
Oftebro gained greatest actor for “Vanguard” and Hélène Alexandridis gained greatest actress for “On a Day in September.”
The Jury Particular Prize went to “Good Cop/Unhealthy Cop” for the solid efficiency; South Africa’s “Don’t Give Up” gained the prize for greatest creation; and the Public Prize was picked up by “The Bombing of Pan Am 103.”
Judith Gentle, the president of the fiction jury, mentioned in her speech: “At this specific time in our world, the place we’re so divided and going through quite a few challenges, the place our cultures, the place our artistry and creativity is being questioned, and in some instances, erased, there isn’t a higher place to return collectively to remind ourselves and the world that it’s our artistry and our creativity that’s most wanted at the moment.”
The documentary prize was taken by “Chemical Submission, Shifting the Disgrace,” produced by Capa Presse in France, and the information program award went to “Witness – Please Get pleasure from Our Tragedies,” produced by Please Get pleasure from Productions for Al Jazeera English in Qatar. The Jury Particular Prize went to “Kids within the Hearth,” which was produced by Unbroken Era Manufacturing, Karandash Animation Studio and PFX.
The Prince Rainier III Particular Prize went to “Rewilding Sharks,” the Amade Prize was awarded to “Kids within the Hearth,” and the Monaco Purple Cross Prize was given to “L’ange de Boutcha.”