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Associated Press
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Romanian director Cristian Mungiu with the Palme
d'Or; presenter Jane Fonda is on the left
(AP)
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Romanian director Cristian Mungiu won the Cannes Film Festival's top prize
Sunday with "4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days," a harrowing portrait of an
illegal abortion in Communist-era Romania.
The low-budget, naturalistic film about a student who goes through horrors to
ensure that her friend can have a secret abortion beat out 21 other movies in
competition for the Riviera festival's top prize, the Palme d'Or.
The grand prize, considered the festival's No. 2 award, went to Japanese
director Naomi Kawase's "Mogari No Mori" (The Mourning Forest), a movie about
two people — a retirement-home resident and a caretaker at the center —
struggling to overcome loss.
Best director went to American painter-director Julian Schnabel for his
French-language film "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly," based on a memoir by a
French magazine editor who became paralyzed after a stroke and learned to write
again by blinking his eyelid into a sensor.
The jury awarded a special prize for Cannes' 60th anniversary to Gus Van Sant, who won the festival's top prize in 2003
for "Elephant." The American's impressionistic "Paranoid Park" focuses on a teenage skateboarder whose life
turns upside down when he accidentally kills a security guard.
Two films shared the jury prize: "Persepolis," Marjane Satrapi's moving, funny adaptation of
her graphic novel about growing up during and after Iran's 1979 Islamic
Revolution, which she co-directed with Vincent Paronnaud; and "Stellet Licht"
(Silent Light), Carlos Reygadas' tale of forbidden love set among Mennonite
farmers of northern Mexico.
Acting honors went to Russia's Konstantin Lavronenko, who played a troubled
husband in "The Banishment," a Russian drama about a couple whose marriage
disintegrates during a stay in the country. The prize for best actress went to
South Korea's Jeon Do-yeon, who played a widow struggling to cope with her
husband's death in "Secret Sunshine."
German director Fatih Akin's "The Edge of Heaven," a German-Turkish
cross-cultural tale of loss, mourning and forgiveness, won the prize for best
screenplay. Akin both wrote and directed the film.
Earlier this weekend, a Romanian director posthumously won a secondary Cannes
competition called "Un Certain Regard." Cristian Nemescu died in a car crash
last year at age 27, leaving his "California Dreamin'" incomplete. Jurors had
initially decided not to judge the film, which is about American soldiers in a
small Romanian village, but changed their minds when they saw it.
View the complete list of winners
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