Lilla Kizlinger – Photo: Fraktal Film

Both Hungarian films win Silver Bear in Berlinale Competition

The two Hungarian films in competition at the Berlinale international film festival have won Silver Bears this year, organisers said on Friday.
6. March 2021 8:56

The Silver Bear for Best Director went to Denes Nagy for his debut film Natural Light made in Hungarian-Latvian-French-German co-production. Based on the novel of renowned Hungarian writer Pal Zavada, Natural Light tells the story of Istvan Semetka, a Hungarian farmer who serves as a Sub-Lieutenant in a special unit scouting for partisan groups in WWII occupied Soviet Union.

In its statement, the international jury said the film was “appalling and beautifully shot, mesmerising images, remarkable direction and a masterful control of every aspect of the craft of filmmaking, a narration that transcends its historical context. A portrait of war in which the observant gaze of the director reminds us again of the need to choose between passivity and taking individual responsibility.”

The Silver Bear for Best Supporting Performance has been awarded to Lilla Kizlinger in Forest – I See You Everywhere directed by Bence Fliegauf. The film is a series of short stories about people revealing the secret of their lives.

“By the power of her interpretation alone, by her intensive presence, she pulls to the surface the hidden layers of the scene, actually defining the motive behind the film: the chilling menace of the world, what the children of today inherit from us grownups. Instead of telling us, explaining to us, she accomplishes the much more difficult task of raising in us the need to think about haunting, disquieting questions of our present. She enchanted us, and through enchantment, she made us think,” the jury said.

Congratulating the winners, Csaba Kael, government commissioner for developing Hungary’s motion picture industry, said the awards “are an excellent success at one of the world’s most prestigious festivals of international film”, according to a statement released by the National Film Institute. Kael congratulated Kizlinger and Nagy, describing them as two rising talents in European cinema.

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